26 June 2013

Quilts at Joseph Schneider Haus

The only thing almost as fun as quilting, is looking at other people's quilts. I can never resist a quilt show or display.

I'm partial to antique quilts, in particular, and enjoyed walking through Joseph Schneider Haus this spring during their quilt festival display. You get to see some lovely antique quilts on display in this period home.

I really liked this quilt, which reminds me of the swirly hard candies my Mom used to buy at Christmastime. Somebody did a lot of careful handpiecing to make this beauty! Very pretty and colourful. It makes me think of the lines, "The children were nestled, all snug in their beds/ While visions of sugarplums danced in their heads."

I also love antique log cabin quilts, with the traditional red square in the centre of the block, to represent a fire burning in the hearth in the heart of the cabin. So I couldn't resist snapping a shot of this lovely old log cabin quilt as well.

I'm not sure how I would do with the swirly piecing in the circle quilt, but a log cabin quilt could be a fun project. In this quilt, I like the really strong contrast of the bright red centre square and the muted "logs".

I could imagine making a similar log cabin with flannel fabrics -- really cozy and cuddly for a winter night, don't you think?

More inspiration for future projects!







29 April 2013

... and a quilt for my Mother-in-law!

First of all, I want to show you the completed quilt top I made for my father-in-law, with the borders added. When Barry and Connor held it up in front of the window, it had a great stained-glass effect! I think it turned out well -- FIL seemed happy with it -- and now it's just a matter of getting it quilted. I have to pick up some batting and backing this week, and the machine quilter has promised me that she can get it done in late May, so that's exciting.

Next, it was time to finish up the quilt I'd planned for my mother-in-law, who is also turning 70 this spring. I wanted to use pinks, purples and blues because I understand those to be her favourite colours, so I had my son Scotty come with me to the local quilt store to pick out some batiks. He knows that Grandma likes gardening, so he looked for batiks that had flowers in them, and we decided to go with curved piecing, to suggest a bed of pretty blooms. What do you think? Does it look like flowers popping out all over the place? Or maybe moons in the garden?? 

Because our house is currently under construction, I ended up doing a lot of sewing in the classroom of my local quilt shop. It was amazing how many people, upon seeing the blocks go up on the design wall, said to me, "Wow, you must really love your mother-in-law!"

This quilt is also due to be quilted in late May, and I'm glad both MIL and FIL will have their quilts before summer.

Deep breath, stretch... and on to the next project!



15 April 2013

A quilt for my father-in-law


Behold! Here is a quilter in her natural environment -- a quilt shop. See me, enraptured by the bolts and fat quarters, inspired by the shop samples, seduced by the promise of another exciting workshop!

To tell the truth, I'm actually on the job, gathering info for the store's quarterly newsletter. It's kind of fun to write it, because I get a sneak peek at all the latest products and upcoming classes. But I have promised myself, I am not buying more fabric, kits or patterns until I have finished up the many projects I have already half-completed, and/or used up my bulging stash.

So when I decided to make my father-in-law a quilt for his upcoming 70th birthday, I turned to my stash. There, I found a gorgeous jellyroll of autumn batiks, purchased quite some time ago simply because I loved the warm colours. Time to turn them into something charming and masculine.

I played around with ideas for a while, skimming the Internet for inspiration, and came across a photo of a pattern much like this, which was described as "keys". I think it looks like puzzle pieces. Another quilter at the retreat said the blocks look like capital F's. Whatever you want to call it, the blocks were easily constructed using jelly roll strips, although I had to add in other fabrics from my stash in order to make enough blocks. One jelly roll is not enough to make a quilt. You really need two, or preferably three jelly rolls. In which case, you might as well just buy yardage. But anyway.

I pieced the individual blocks (ie, each pair of interlocking pieces) at home, then brought the blocks to the retreat, where I laid them out on my friend's design wall, worked hard to "randomize" them, then sewed them together. I had to buy some fabric to add borders -- I didn't have enough of anything that went with the quilt -- so in the next few days, I need to finish the borders off... by the time this post is published, it should be his birthday and he should have opened it! I will try to remember to add a pic of the completed quilt top.

Unfortunately, after he receives it, I'll have to take it back for a while -- I couldn't get a date to have it machine quilted before the end of May. But I hope that in about a month and a half from now, he'll be napping happily under it!

And I can feel good that my long-hoarded autumn batik jellyroll has been put to a good use. One more thing that has graduated from stash limbo to the paradise of completion. One step closer to being able to buy new fabrics again!