Show and tell… Steve’s Birds

Judy Ullman wrote to say that she is enjoying researching the birds and used a collage method on Mickey Lawler Skydyes fabric. Well done, Judy! You found a really creative way to use the patterns! Thank you for sharing and it will be fun to see what you come up with next :-).

Carolina Wren
Florida Scrub Jay

Show and tell… Circles!

From Joan:

I just watched and enjoyed your video about preparing circles, since I recently finished appliquéing 81 flannel circles unto flannel squares. This is what I did. (Much similar to your process with a couple of minor differences.)

Notice the Easy Needle Threader in background and Needle Caddy… more on the needle at the end of the post.

I used the perfect circle template from Karen Kay Buckley. Borrowed it from my friend Jackie. Hers came with a thicker acrylic 2.5” circle to draw around and all the plastic/teflon templates. Drew all 81 circles at once, then cut them 2 at a time with roughly 3/8” seams allowance. Then with all my cut 2.5” cookies stacked, I worked on 4 at a time. Sewed around outer edges, starting with a “knicker knot” (demoed by Sue Daley in another video for EPP—a PS from me at the bottom of the post) and left a longer tail to pull gathers. I found that a regular quilters knot pulled through too easily.

My first few circles I tied knot at end, but found it sometimes difficult to get the plastic template out after pressing, so I left the tail loose to pull while pressing and then again to make adjustments to pleats & gathers after template removed. Making 4 at a time proved to be perfect timing for me since it took about that long to press and then cool enough to handle. I only used water in a spray bottle to press, not starch. I pressed them flat one more time on my wool mat. Again I made stacks of 2.5” red flannel cookies. 

Notice the Travel Sandboard that Joan is working on!

Now begins the hand sewing. It started out a bit tedious since all the circles were red tweed print and all squares were a black dark check. So they come off as red on black. But I made sort of a game of it as I got into it. I had maybe 15 done when I decided to time myself without racing, just to see how long it actually took to sew a circle down. Each one took less than 10 min. My game became: stitch 5 in the morning before I started my day and 5 in evening while watching tv or before working on something else. Easy enough to do without getting bored. I made a little pile of 5 each and in no time I had all 81 done in about 10days. And it made it less tedious!! 

Now I get to start making the square-in-a-square blocks. They have been my nemesis for quite some time but after this quilt, I should have them conquered!! All the blocks will be different colored plaids, checks, so not tedious at all. I will put a wool batt inside and do some big stitch in blocks with maybe an X in center of each circle. Making it for my husband, he knows nothing at this point and he will love it. No rush for finish. 

So that’s my circle story. Joan

Thank you, Joan, for sharing your circle adventure! This is going to be a wonderful surprise for you husband. It will surely keep him warm :-). Also, your circles are wonderfully round and perfect. Nice!

The Needle Caddy pattern is free at pieceocake.com—click here. From Joan: “My friend Jackie made the needle caddy and gave it to me some time ago. Then she made more for group gifts; she asked if I wanted another…absolutely!! I keep that one in my wool appliqué supplies. So I have 2. Lucky me!”

PS: The knicker knot has been around a while. I learned it years ago and replaced it with my ending knot, which has also been around a long time. Both are good knots to use to end a line of stitches or at the beginning, when sewing coarser fabric like flannel where a quilter’s knot pulls through.

More Show and Tell Chickens!

Joan made more chickens, One for her and two to give friends at her upcoming retreat. Joan, you make excellent chickens!

Here they are & they have names…
Chris’s is a Plymouth Rock, then Foghorn Leghorn, Little Red Hen & BlueJay Wannabe!!

She said that tails were her nemesis, until she thought to put in a wedge and sculpt the tails after they were sewn in. Brilliant!!!!

Click here or on the link below to watch my chicken pincushion tutorial and remember Joan’s tip for the tail feathers :-).

Thank you, Joan, for sharing the tip and your cute chickens!

Show and tell: A Sampling of Santas

Cynthia Helton sent photos of this quilt that her mom, Shirley Ray Hatley Alford, started in 1995. Shirley passed away in July, 2007. Cynthia, thank you for sharing her quilt with us, I know you all must treasure it.

I remember Shirley! She was in my North Pole class at Sharon’s Quilt Depot way back in 1995 when the book, A Sampling of Santas, was new. Shirley was a lovely woman and I have a smile on my face when I remember her.

This is excerpted from the very well-written documentation patch:

Shirley hand appliqued the blocks and machine pieced them together. As her health began to decline due to breast cancer, Shirley invited Corinne Lageose to finish the hand quilting. Carolyn MIller sewed on the outer binding by hand. And Shirley’s daughter, Cynthia Rae Alford Helton sewed on the red berry buttons and other embellishments. This quilt was lovingly finished by Cynthia while sitting at the bedside of Shirley in July, 2007. This is Shirley’s Masterpiece!

If you are interested in the pattern, A Sampling of Santas is included in our ebook, A Slice of Christmas.

Show and tell: Chicken Pincushion…

Joan wrote with a story and here it is:

I just had to share this with you. I know you will get a kick out of it!!

So to backup…tonight is our quilt club meeting and we are having a hands-on demo, how-to EPP project. We will be somehow making ❤️ Hearts!! What paper shape it is, beats me. 
EPP is new to me, but I picked up a little kit and made a “Dilly” bag. It’s super cute. Hexagons. I think I may be hooked. Another skill, right?

Anyway, everyone that attends the meeting will get a little packet (to make a ❤️??) and if we want to participate in a gift exchange we can, but it has to have a ❤️ on it. I want to join in but it had to be quick and easy. (Because I just got home from Florida). I also wanted it to be useful but not another mug-rug. 

Enter the chicken pincushion from your last post. I love pincushions, can’t have too many of them (unlike mug-rugs😝)!! So I decided to give it a shot and put a ❤️ on her/his chest. Turned out so darn cute. 

I may have to make one for myself. For sure if my friend Chris Peterson doesn’t get it tonight in the drawing. She loves chickens, has her sewing room decorated with chickens. She made a rooster quilt. And I think she has a metal nesting box outside that she displays plants/flower pots on her patio. She’s a MN farm girl just like most of us and proud of it. Lives in town, so this is next best thing.

But wait! There’s more!

Yay!! Chris got the chicken and she loved it. It will go with her menagerie of chickens 🐓. 😝

Another funny (jokes-on-me thing) that happened while I was assembling the chicken was I sewed up the wrong side 😑 (across from the beak, same side as beak 🤷‍♀️??). They are small, so hard to see what side is what (can I think of any more excuses🤔), mine were 3” squares. Nice size. 

In any case, when I unfurled the chicken, the tail ended up under her chin (beak) and instead of a tail it looked chicken legs!!😝😂

There you go, a new twist on the pattern. Add 2 strips of wool with a knot at each end for funny legs/feet!! Could be cute or weird!! Maybe I’ll try one for real for myself. (Or my sister in Atlanta, she’s a chicken person. She wants the real chickens to feed/water clean up after!! Not me. I’m done with that; pincushions are better!!)

So that’s my chicken report. 

I will make a couple more for friends Jackie & Vicky for our retreat “up Nort” as they say. 

Happy stitches to you,

Joan

Many thanks to you, Joan, for sharing the story of your chicken! And may you, too, have many happy stitches!

Whimsical Garden show and tell…

Susan Keck sent me this photo of her Whimsical Garden quilt. This is her 2nd quilting project ever and she won best of show!

Susan, I’m proud of you for tackling this as a new quilter. You have sewing skills and it shows. Well done and may you continue to have many happy stitches as you start on Steve’s Birds, in wool!