Or Stay-cation, if you prefer since I didn't go anywhere. My kids have been at my mom's for the last 5 days. The boys are doing a soccer camp half day, and Sophie is just at Nana-Camp. It was planned months ago partly around my knowing that I needed to get a huge 112" custom quilt done this week. This is the second of these Civil War Chronicles that I have done, so I had a pretty good idea how long it would take! Pictures of this will go up next week. It's dreary and wet here and there is no light for taking pictures of a quilt that is nothing but pattern and print.
Speaking of patterns...This is an edge-to-edge I finished recently. The local client hand pieced it. It is rather an unusual pattern I thought!
So I did what I thought was "getting smart". Last week, I loaded this monster quilt. I figured I was pushing getting it done in one week, even with no kids here. I got a jump on it, quilting about 1-1/2 hour a day from Wednesday until Saturday. I'm telling you, every hour helps. Turns out, I worked long hours and finished the quilt early on Thursday. So at 8am, quilt finished, no kids around, what's a girl to do??!
I have been puttering with some free-pieced curved 5" blocks made from Cherrywood fabrics. I have about 35-40 of them done, but they just are not singing to me. Instead of continuing to make a mess of that fabric, I decided to get these blocks out. By all accounts, I started this in the early winter of 2012. I could have sworn it was before that. I have had a block of 32 pieced diamonds and 24 pieced/appliqued setting squares done for at least a year though. At least!
Yesterday I decided I would play with this quilt for 2 days and see how far I could get it. Many of the pieced diamonds looked like I'd pieced them with my eyes closed. Too many needed to be ripped apart and have their points re-matched. I'm anal like that. I spent nearly 5 hours fixing blocks! Then I started piecing the many Y-seams. At the end of yesterday, these 56 blocks were pieced into 20 larger units. By 8am this morning, there were only 10. Sadly by noon, I was down to 2 large units, and that is where I have officially lost steam. There are so many Y-seams in that last seam that I just don't feel like doing it! I don't have the last bit of the dark blue background on or do I really know what I am doing for a border, if at all. I am toying with a narrow color-washed partial border like I have shown. Whatever it is, I want it to draw the eye into the center star. The quilt top design is not totally completed either. I seem to have a few icky areas where too many points and bulk have come together in not such a sightly manner. Pondering how to address them. I also kind of hate the red butterflies, but am not so sure how to fix that either (yes, backing is cut away beneath them!). It's not so much the butterflies I don't like as much as it is the color. The quilt is not done, but progress was made.This afternoon I shifted gears to calmly hand applique on this beauty. I just love this quilt, and love working on it. This picture is from last week. I have nearly finished the 2nd side of the applique. The silk ivory ribbon is so incredible looking. Two more sides and I will start to think about how to quilt this. I am getting excited! Maybe while I am Lowell tomorrow for the Lowell Quilt Festival I will spy a backing fabric. I need a nice rose floral unless I get brave and go with the gold/mustard solid I found.
Two beautiful quilts! The red butterflies do seem to jump out at you - what about adding some colour to them with paint to tone them down?
ReplyDeleteGo with the gold/mustard solid, Margaret.
ReplyDeleteGo with the gold/mustard solid, Margaret.
ReplyDeleteGo with the gold/mustard solid, Margaret.
ReplyDeleteThat ivory ribbon is such a perfect addition to that floral applique border ... lovely!
ReplyDeleteHmm, on the red butterflies, is it possible to add an applique center to it so that just a smidge of the red shows as an accent? It's not a bad color, perhaps just a bit jolting with the large amount of it as compared to all that beautiful darkness.