Infinity Blocks from SIL

Infinity Blocks from Cathy
Infinity Blocks from Cathy

These are the blocks that my SIL sent to me via DH-mail. I think i will be interesting to take a photo of all of the blocks together.

I made another couple over the weekend, but am writing for an even number before I photograph them. It is more interesting if I have a few to show you.

Inspiration Tuesday

Tile Circle Bench
Tile Circle Bench

Tile Circles

Tile Circles

This could be a response to last week’s prompt as well!

I really liked this tile bench. It was very cheerful.

Tile Circle, detail
Tile Circle, detail

Art Quilting Studio Signing

If you are an Orange County reader, then July 12 is your lucky day, because one of the artists from the Premier issue of Art Quilting Studio will be signing the issue. Stop if you can; I’d love to hear about it.
clipped from jennydoh.typepad.com

BARNES & NOBLE (HEARTS) ART QUILTING STUDIO

Mark your calendars! On Sunday, July 12th at the Orange Town & Country Barnes & Noble (791 South Main Street, Suite 100, Orange, CA 92868) …

IMG_7566
Cover artist Ruth Rae and I will be on hand to sign copies of the premier issue of Art Quilting Studio from 2:00 to 5:00 PM.

IMG_9077
  blog it

Creative Prompt Response #21

Creative Prompt Response to Percolate
Creative Prompt Response to Percolate

This drawing is different than some of the others. It has a little more detail – different types of detail and was a little more of a challenge. I took the prompt literally; that is a drip coffeemaker and not a percolator, but I often let ideas percolate while I am cooking breakfast. It is usually quiet.

Blog Housekeeping

Just a quick note to let you know that I am still working on fixing the blog. There is something wrong with the theme (Cutline, in case anyone is interested). It was behaving badly, so Deirdre changed it to this theme, which I know is not ideal in a number of ways. Yesterday we worked on rebuilding the right sidebar. I also looked at a bunch of possible other (free) themes as well as testing the old theme over and over to see if it was behaving itself.

In any case, we are working on it and will hopefully get back to normal soon. Thanks for your patience.

OK, I Submitted

New Fabrics, July 2009
New Fabrics, July 2009

I bought some fabric. It was cheerful; I had ideas for what to use it for and I just couldn’t resist.

I loved the pink stripe and pink flowers on the left.  They are cheerful. I, first, bought a half yard of each to go with the blue. As I was chatting with the cutting lady, I decided that they would both make fabulous tote bags, so I bought enough for tote bags. The others are fat quarters that I thought were cheerful. The funny part was that the cutting lady kept all the bolts aside so she could get some of the same fabric.

I need to get busy on tote bags as I now have the fabric to make four of them!

Cookies in the Tarts?

quilted cookies

SherriD has been encouraging me to include some cookies in the Tarts. I have a bunch of good reasons why I can’t or won’t. Mostly, I haven’t been successful at drawing them so viewers know they are a cookie. Of course, SherriD, resourceful quiltmaker that she is, found this quilt. I am sticking to my guns, but you can weigh in with your opinion below.

Longarming FOTY 2008

FOTY 2008 quilted
FOTY 2008 quilted

I spent time yesterday machine quilting the Fabric of the Year 2008 quilt at Always Quilting. It took me 3.25 hours from the time I started pinning the piece to the machine until I took it off. It was the fastest I have ever done longarming-all three times I have quilted a quilt on the longarm! I can’t really take all the credit credit for the speed, however. I did focus on the longarming, but the helper did everything for me except the actual quilting.

The quilting part is actually the speediest part of the longarm process. The other parts of the process are pretty time consuming. You have to, first, pin the quilt to the leaders on the machine afer you center it. When the bobbin runs out of the thread, you have to wind and change the bobbin and start up again, etc. While these tasks sound really straightforward, they add to the time it takes to move the process along.

Since I am not an expert, all of these tasks take me longer. I need to learn how to complete the whole process alone. In order to get the process straight in my head, I need time. I need time to think and make logical connections between the tasks while I am quilting.

Today was not the day to do this. They wanted me to quilt my quilt and get off the machine. They had a Kid’s Camp going and needed to have one of the girls finish her quilt after I was done and by the end of the day. As a result, anything except for the pinning and the quilting was done by my helper. I didn’t ask her to do this. She just, basically, muscled me out of the way and did it. It was fine. I have had a long week or so and was tired.

Quilting, detail
Quilting, detail

I am particularly fond of the quilting in the red next to the red circles with white background.

Quilting, detail 2
Quilting, detail 2

I stopped in this spot for some reason and snapped a picture so you could see an image of quilting and non-quilted spaces. See how tight the quilt is? You could bounce a quarter off of the top.

Back of FOTY 2008
Back of FOTY 2008
Back of FOTY 2008, detail of label
Back of FOTY 2008, detail of label

I make my labels by printing on fabric something that I type into a word processing program, like Word.

Back pinned onto leaders
Back pinned onto leaders

This is how the back looks after pinning it to the leader. I was looking down from the top.

Back pinned to leader, other side

Here is how the back looks from the other side when it is pinned to the leader. I am trying to collect pictures of the entire process in an effort to make a visual tutorial for myself, but it is taking me awhile.

Starting a row
Starting a row

After you finish a row, you have to cut the threads and move back the controller to the left side of the machine to start the next row. Before you can start quilting, the quilt needs to be rolled up to an unquilted section.

Adding a border to the quilt
Adding a border to the quilt

I don’t like borders that much, especially if the quiltmaker has just slapped them on to make the quilt bigger. However, I decided to add these borders so I would have something other than the piecing, which I like, to trim in order to square up the quilt. I wrote about this issue in a post from 2005 when I was binding Feelin’ Blue.  I added a grey that had been hanging around the fabric closet for awhile. The ladies at the quilt shop were a bit horrified that I was going to cut this off. They liked the grey.

It was something I tried and it worked ok. There was still one corner that got a little distorted. We’ll see how it looks after I put the binding on.

Creative Prompt #21: Percolate

My godmother used to make her coffee in a percolator. I used to watch, fascinated, as the liquid bubbled up in the little glass top. Even though I was constantly warned that I would be burned if I touched it, I couldn’t stay away.

Ideas need to percolate.

Quilts, sometimes, need to percolate.

See the Creative Prompt page if you have questions about this project.

Post the direct URL where your drawing, doodle, artwork is posted (e.g. your blog, Flickr) in the comments area of this post. It will keep all the artwork together.

There is more information on the recently updated Creative Prompt Page.