Showing posts with label quilt projects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilt projects. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Teach Me to Machine Quilt from Pat Sloan

I knew the day would come.

In 1991 I learned the quilt stitch and for years enjoyed spending a few hours every evening hand quilting. Now twenty-six years later, instead of quilting a bed-sized quilt in two or four months it took me two winters. TWO WINTERS. In the meantime, I finished six or more quilt tops.

I hauled a pile of quilt tops to a machine quilter in January. It is now May and I have not got one back. And when I do, I know I had better have a wheelbarrow to carry what I am going to owe her.

The day has come...to learn how to machine quilt my quilt projects.

Luckily, the marvelous Pat Sloan has prepared a book for people like me, a step-by-step, illustrated, simplified, marvelous resource! She covers all the bases, including how to quilt with a walking foot and free motion quilting.
And if we still have reservations about tackling machine quilting, Pat includes multiple patterns for quilt projects and then walks us through machine quilting them.

Thank you, Pat! You have thought of everything.

Pat offers the above simple Strippy Table Runner, 16 1/2" x 36 1/2" to learn walking foot quilting. The instructions include hints like how to prevent bowing when joining long strips and using Jelly Rolls.


This adorable Mini Charm Star, 28 1/2" x 28 1/2",  is another walking foot project. Just think of the scraps you could use...the color variations...

I like applique', and am glad that Pat offers applique' projects, too. I know a lot of people who would love My Little Kitty, 12 1/2" x 15 1/2", which uses fusible applique, blanket stitching, and walking foot quilting. SO easy!
Another simple fusible applique project is Winter Bliss, 24 1/2" x 28 1/2", a sweet snowman hanging out with his friend. Pat guides readers in making the bias stems and the free motion quilting.
Larger projects include Cherry Pie, 65 1/2" x 81 1/2", which uses a combination of machine walking foot and free motion quilting. Michigan is known for its cherries and I am imagining a quilt with cherry print fabrics...yum!
Mexican Rose, 56 1/2" x 56 1/2", was inspired by a vintage quilt. I love floral applique quilts! The wide border is a chance to highlight an amazing fabric you can't bear to cut.
Blue Lagoon is a Rail Fence variation, 64 1/2" x 72 1/2". Pat quilted with free motion swirls to counterpoint the straight lines.

See more of the projects at That Patchwork Place here.

I am eager to try my hand at machine quilting again. I have done some projects but without Pat's knowledge under my belt, and I think I will be more pleased with the results after reading Teach Me To Machine Quilt!

I received a free ebook from the publisher through Edelweiss.

from the publisher's website:
Pat Sloan teaches everything a first-time quilter needs to know to machine quilt successfully, going step-by-step through walking foot and free-motion quilting techniques. 
Popular teacher, designer, and online radio host Pat Sloan teaches all you need to know to machine quilt successfully. In this third book of her beginner-friendly "Teach Me" series, Pat guides you step by step through walking-foot and free-motion quilting techniques. First-time quilters will be confidently quilting in no time, and experienced stitchers will discover the joy of finishing their quilts themselves. 
No-fear learning for quilting novices--Pat covers all the information you need to quilt from start to finish. 
Pat guides you through simple and fun practice projects, including a strip-pieced table runner and an easy applique design. 
Collect the entire skill-building library of Pat Sloan's popular "Teach Me" series of books.

Saturday, December 30, 2017

My 2017 Quilt Projects

2017 was a year of making quilt tops. I finished a few small projects, quilted on my Austen Album quilt, but mostly I did a lot of applique and created a lot of UFOs.

My big achievement was completing the 1857 Album quilt, a pattern offered by Gay Boomers of Sentimental Stitches.

Completed projects were small wall hangings. I completed several 2015 Row By Rows.



This row was from The Pincushion in Imlay City, MI
This row was from Waterford, MI. 
I bought this Jane Sassaman pattern and fabric when she spoke at a local quilt guild.
I just made a printed panel into a wall hanging for my son. He received the panel from a friend at Christmas.
 Of course, it features a Shiba Inu!
I repaired several quilts, including the first quilt I ever made. I replaced worn areas.
And I did extensive repairs to a quilt made by my grandfather's Aunt Carrie Ramer Bobb, which belongs to my Aunt Pat. I appliqued hundreds of 1" squares over fabric that had decayed and resewed seam after seam.
 
I made a number of mug rugs.

After finding some fantastic Neverland fabric I bought Marion Cheever Whiteside Newton's Story Book pattern of Peter Pan. I have been working on those blocks. I will next add embroidery.





And I am back to working on my Great Gatsby Story Book quilt. I am embroidering the completed blocks now. The designs are based on 1924 fashion illustrations.



I made Icicle Days from Bunny Hill using fabrics I won.
 I made two versions of this Big Block Quilt, one for me and one for our son.


 
 I loved this quilt when I saw it. 
 I tried projects from several of the quilt books I reviewed. Below is an embroidery from Stitches From the Harvest.
 And Distinctive Dresdens had me trying my hand at several blocks.


  

I only was able to do a few blocks of a Christmas quilt sew along.
 

And I finally made the vintage sheet quilt. I have had the vintage sheets for years.


This coming year I am going to break down and hire a machine quilter. I have too many quilt tops languishing in the closet!




Wednesday, December 13, 2017

Works in Progress: Quilts, Books, and More

I am slowly finishing Row By Row kits and patterns which I obtained two summers ago. This kit featuring goldfish is so pretty, complete with crystal air bubbles. 

 The quilt was made with fusible applique and machine quilting.
I am also getting back to making blocks for my Great Gatsby quilt. Here is Jordan, Daisy's friend the tennis star. The design is based on a fashion illustration circa 1924.
I still have embroidery to do on this block showing Jay Gatsby and Nick Carraway. The design is based on a fashion illustration circa 1924.
I have started the Peter Pan Story Book Quilt blocks, designed by Marion Cheever Whiteside Newton. I found a copy of the pattern on Etsy.

 Tink needs hair still.
 One mermaid's tail still needs appliqueing.
On my reading list right now:

  • Only Child is an e-galley from First to Read and concerns a family in crisis after a school shooting.
  • I just completed The Winter Station, based on a real plague in 1910 Manchuria.
  • Starlings is a book of short stories.
  • Self-Portrait with Boy was given high praise from a Goodreads friend.
  • As Bright as Heaven is historical fiction about the 1918 Spanish Influenza, set in Philadelphia.
  • I finished The Immortalists, in which children who learn the day of their death must decide how to live their lives.
  • Poetry for Kids Robert Frost is part of a series of books I have enjoyed reviewing.
  • West is a novel that intrigued me when I saw it on Edelweiss, as did The Which Way Tree which I saw on NetGalley.
Not yet downloaded from NetGalley are First Ladies of the Republic by Jeanne Abrams, Gateway to the Moon by Mary Morris, and Lear by Harold Bloom.

I am still reading giveaway wins Debriefing by Susan Sontag and Winter by Karl Ove Knausggard.


W.W. Norton shipped me this slender book. I am saving it for when I have a full afternoon free to read it in one sitting.
 And also still to be read is this LibraryThing book.
We have new siding and gutters! We changed where the gutters were, added rain barrels, and put gutters on the garage.
When my husband saw this Gum Drop tree in a catalog he remembered how his grandmother always had one. So we bought one!
It was so cool to see this Tammis Keefe linen towel ad in a 1958 magazine! I purchased reproductions several years ago and use them in my decorating. You can see one under the Gum Drop tree above.



My hubby has been making cookies! I went on a butter run today. He is enjoying making bread and baking and cooking now the yard and garden work is over. That gives me more time for reading!

The 1958 magazine had some cute illustrations of Christmas shopping. Don't you love how the lady is shopping in heels?
She changed her scarf color and how is wearing boots with the kids. Balloons in winter--that is novel.
I don't have much Christmas shopping to do and the big gifts are taken care of. For our gift to ourselves we bought tickets to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. We will take our son to two concerts at Orchestra Hall, and we bought tickets to the Neighborhood concert series.

What are you working on? How is your shopping and decorating going?