The quilt pulley system…

I’ve written before about the system I use to help me manage the weight of a quilt as I machine quilt. I should have shown more details in that first post. I know that because I had requests for more information. Here is a more complete DIY guide.

I first got the idea from Caryl Fallert-Gentry. Here she is at her machine:


QuiltPulley-01 copy

The idea is to use two quick-release clamps suspended from the ceiling to hold the weight of the quilt off of the table while you work. Her studio ceiling is very high so she added two metal poles with hooks on either end. I have 8′ ceilings so did not need the poles.

Here are the supplies you need:

  • 2 quick-release ratcheting clamps. Don’t get regular clamps with springs only—hey are hard on your hands.
  • 2 jacket-toggles—that’s what those yellow things are
  • Several yards of nylon cord—the kind you would use in a Roman shade (not shown) 
  • 2 big, eye-bolts for the ceiling (not shown). It’s a lot easier if you can screw them through the sheet rock, into wood. Otherwise you are going to need to look for something with a toggle.

 


QuiltPulley-02 copy

Here is what one eye-bolt looks like in my ceiling. This one measures about 7/8″ across.


QuiltPulley-05-750

I have a Sweet Sixteen. It sits in a table, front to back, not side-to-side like a home machine. My eye-bolts are positioned in the ceilling about 30″ apart, centered over the machine—one on one side, one on the other. They sit back from the front of the table about 12″.

If you machine quilt on a home machine, position one bolt (in the ceiling) behind the needle, about 12″. Position the other one 14″-16″ to the left of the needle (in the ceiling). 

Cut a length of nylon cord twice the length from your tabletop to the ceiling. That will be too long, but you can cut off the excess later.

Squeeze a jacket toggle open and run one end of the nylon cord through it and then up through the eye-bolt in the ceiling. Run it back through the squeezed-open toggle.


QuiltPulley-06 copy

Tie one end of the nylon cord to one handle of a quick-release clamp. My clamps came with holes that were perfect for this. You might have to drill a hole.

To raise or lower the clamp, squeeze the toggle and pull the other end of the cord. As you use the clamps, you will figure out how much of the excess nylon cord you want to cut off. I like to be able to reach it from a sitting position.


QuiltPulley-09 copy

In the photo below I don’t have the clamps attached to the quilt. The weight of the quilt is on the table and hanging ove the edge. It is harder to manage.

SweetSixteen-01 copy

In the next photo I have portions of the quilt clamped and held up off the table. Somtimes my quilts look this tidy on the table but mostly they don’t. I don’t always clamp the outer edges of the quilt. On big quilts I have to clamp areas more in the center of the quilt.


SS-WithClamps copy

I change the position of the clamps often as I have to as I move and turn the quilt. It’s easy and fast. The more you work with them, the easier it is to know where best to clamp the quilt.

When I’m not using the clamps, I pull them up to the ceiling and clamp the coiled excess cord.


QuiltPulley-10-750

So there you have it! This is an inexpensive and simple way to control your quilt as you machine quilt. I hope you have as much success with this as I have!

 

And the winner is…

Congratulations to Lynn, whose blog you can see here! Her number was chosen randomly by my MIL, Edith. I hope you enjoy making your own wonderful North Pole quilt :-). 

I want to thank all of you who commented and wrote such nice things! These designs have always made me smile and it's nice to know that they make you all smile too. If you are looking for a copy of the book, you can find it here on the Piece O' Cake website.

There are two other small projects in the book. They are cute and give you an idea of other ways to use the designs. 


North pole wall quilt 2


North pole snowflake

Christmas is coming, and I have a surprise for you!

Guess what came in the mail today? A package from That Patchwork Place to let me know that Welcome to the North Pole has been reprinted. Yay!


NPCover

This is a happy book! The blocks are easy to personalize and make your own which must be why this book is still well-received even though it was first published in 1997. I am both happy and proud that these designs are as relevant now as they were then. 

That Patchwork Place sent me a new copy of this book and I think that one of you should have it! Leave a comment below and a winner will be chosen randomly on Saturday (9/21/13). Be sure that you either leave your email as part of your comment or check back to see if you won. If I can't find you, I can't contact you to get your shipping address.

In other news, Christmas is coming and I'm not ready :-). More on that as time goes by.

 

 

Blue on blue…

I have always been told that quilters buy more blue fabric than any other color. I never did – I always bought more green. I bought red, and then blue. 

Over the last several years, that changed for me and I attribute that to the introduction of the first, colored iMacs. Do you remember when desktop computers were uniformly gray and hideous? I do. And then Apple gave us this…

BlueberryiMac-01

(Photo by Heather Robinson, taken especially for me! Thank you, Heather!)

Oh happy, happy day! Not long after its introduction, the blueberry iMac was followed by other candy-colored iMacs.

I lusted after the aqua iMac but never bought it because I already had a higher-powered mac and did not need this new one. Our son, Chris, did end up with a green iMac (because I could not make him want the aqua one that was, by far, the best color) when he went to college. Boy, that dates us both :-).

I did not get over aqua-iMac-lust and aqua started turning up in my quilts. Over time, aqua has become my go-to color. That said, I have had trouble combining some shades of blue. Specifically blue-jean blue with aqua. The periwinkle-ish blue jean color always felt off when I tried to wear (or pair) it with aqua.

But I am getting over that because I have been paying attention to the way these shades of blue live happily together in the real world:

BlueSky-TurqOcean-01

Whether natural colors (above) or man-made colors (below), these different shades of blue are happy together.

SouthwestBlueAndAquaJetbridge copy

It's funny how one thing leads to another, isn't it? And how, over time, you can look back and see what sticks with you. (Who remembers what doesn't stick :-)?)


 

 

 

Traveling home…

I try to focus on work on travel days. I'm away from home with fewer distractions and I can often get something done on the computer. Unless I get distracted :-).

I just got an email from TED and this talk was at the top of the page. I've read about Apollo Robbins and seen a video of him before and he is always entertaining. This talk was especially interesting to me because he's talking about what we notice (and don't notice) and how easily distracted we are.

 

I gave the same color lecture three times in Canada. It changes a bit each time but the core information remains the same. One thing I emphasize is that we notice contrast, what is different. I give ideas about how that works in quilts. I need to think about how to add what I just learned in this TED talk – there is so very much that we don't notice, even when we think we are being observant.

FYI – The weather turned lovely, cool and crisp again, on my last day in Canada and it is the same in Detroit. I hope it's cooler in Texas as well – but I'm not holding my breath. It's likely to be October before we see weather this cool and clear. But – we don't get feet of snow either so I am not going to complain.

 

More from Ontario…

I tried to post last night but the wireless connection would not let me upload photos. It happens.

Some of you know that I like to take pictures of my feet and manhole covers. I especially like 'sewer' covers because I see 'sew-er'. This may be my favorite: Danger Sewer! 

Feet-DangerSewer-02 copy

There are a surprising number of big interesting signs in Ontario. I was able to snap this one. What's funny to me is that the ladies I was with did not see this as an unusual sign – where to me it would be a landmark (for example, 'turn left at the paint can').


PaintCanSign-1

I have seen a lot of well-preserved old cars. They look like they are used all the time, not brought out for show. It's nice to see them on the road!


OldCars

I have finally realized that I am in the breadbasket of Canada. So many large, fertile farms. These look different from the farms in Texas and Oklahoma. It's the structures – they remind so much of Pennsylvania. Every one is photogenic.

B&BView-1 copy

The bright yellow fields are soy, nearly ready for harvest.

Exeter-GoldField-1 copy

A farm, dwarfed by the sky…

Exeter-PlowedField-1 copy

This may be the prettiest group of farm buildings… 

RedFarm-04 copy

I love the reds against the grays. It was lovelier on the other side. The short silos had walls of red. I couldn't stop soon enough to take that picture. How cool is it that the pipes above are painted in the same red. That has to be hard work, to keep them painted. I hope they know that strangers appreciate the effort.

I was in Goderich Sunday and Monday, yesterday and today I was in Kirkton, now I'm in London. These places are not far apart and I am driving myself in a rental car. I'm enjoying the driving.

Tonight has been mildly exciting. I got to my hotel in London at 5:15. I went to my room and had just started to unpack when I heard sirens. Tornado sirens. We are under a 'dangerous storms watch' so I took note. I got my purse, computer, iPad, and phone and went downstairs. The very nice manager said that yes, those were the tornado sirens and that he was checking out the situation.

I grew up in Oklahoma and live in Texas. I don't panic over tornados, nor do I ignore them. I asked where one would go for shelter in case it came to that and, luckily, that space was next to the bar. Yay! I got a glass of wine and not long after I, and everyone else, was ushered into a nearby dining room. We spent some time there while the storm blew past. Big thunderstorm, no tornado that I know of. 

I ate dinner while I was downstairs and before I headed up the nice manager let me know that more storms could come this way later tonight. I asked if they would knock on doors he said that, no, if it came to that, the alarms would go off. Good to know! I would much rather be mentally prepared. If nothing happens, great! If alarms go off, I won't be surprised. I may, in fact, keep the weather on for a while. Right now I'm enjoying the lightning and thunder out my window.