Last weekend I lost my mind. It was bound to happen, but I thought it would happen when she was older. My daughter turned seven on Monday, and by Saturday, she was running my longarm!
Last month, at the Maine Quilt show, she conned me and her Nana to get her 3 fat quarters. She'd have bought more if I'd not put my foot down and insisted she just shop at the free stash store! So a couple weeks ago while her brothers were busy, she and I layed out this lap quilt. It finishes at about 50"x58". Last year she started a small doll quilt, and earlier this summer she got it out and finished the hand quilting. Mind you, this has huge stitches, and clearly looks like it was done by a 5-6 yr old. But she was proud and I was amazed by her attention span to finish the quilting. When this recent project came to fruition, it quickly grew from a dolly quilt to one for her. I was pretty sure right off that she wouldn't be hand stitching anything this large just yet. She doesn't yet use the sewing machine, so I cut and machine pieced this together in an afternoon. She stuck close by, bringing me pieces, making sure that they were in the right order for the pattern. I told her that if I had a couple client quilts off the frame by last weekend, then I'd let her try quilting it. It is always a crapshoot guessing whether I will have the machine free on the weekends or not. I knew we had 2 days to get 'er done!
I set her up with the easiest pantograph I have - Flutterby. She liked the butterflies. She's too short to quilt from the frontside, and it was too tricky doing it with a 12"x12" stool. If I had a 48" long stool, it would have been feasible. Another day. She did a great job manipulating this large machine. Albeit, many of the butterflies are bumpy and not perfectly shaped, but she does not really care. I told her I would quilt it for her, OR she could do it and then she could enter it at MQX if she wanted. Eye on the prize (have you seen this before??!), she chose to do it. She chose a nice Aqua YLI polished poly thread, which performed wonderfully...not a thread break whatsoever.The back is flannel and will be oh-so-snuggly when the cooler weather hits. After it is bound...sigh, add that to my list of to do's.
As for me, I have knocked 4 quilts off my backlog since the kids started school 4 days ago (that many have come back in the door though!). Working, working, working :-) I'll have some pics next time!~
They are so eager when they want to follow in your footsteps. Looks like it was a lot of fun for her. So many children don't have someone to teach them sewing skills. Glad to see another generation is showing interest. She has a wonderful teacher. Good job to the both of you. Chris
ReplyDeleteI hope you know how lucky you are! I read just a week or two ago about a quilt show in New England somewhere (CT maybe?) where each of the youngsters who entered actually won a Bernina! How cool is that! I'll try to find the story again and send it to you. What a sweet little girl you've been blessed with.
ReplyDeleteYou're never too young to start! Good going! Keep encouraging her and you'll soon need another machine! She did a great job quilting it!
ReplyDeleteLooks like you'll have to clear a spot on your wall for your daughter's soon to be won ribbons. Her butterflies look great!
ReplyDeleteAnd so a long arm quilter is born. Will just look at the pride in that smile! What a fan-tas-tic job she did!!!
ReplyDeleteThe highest form of flattery! Great job.
ReplyDeleteThat's fantastic, someone so young already so keen for quilting! Your daughter has done a beautiful job and with her gene pool and passion for quilting, many future successes will definitely be part of her quilting journey.
ReplyDeletewhat a beautiful slice of quality time for you both...she'll have that memory forever. and if she's your daughter, here's hoping she inherited the talent as well.
ReplyDeleteThe Vermont Quilt Festival honors it's young quilters thanks to the generousity of Janome
what a beautiful slice of quality time for you both...she'll have that memory forever. and if she's your daughter, here's hoping she inherited the talent as well.
ReplyDeleteThe Vermont Quilt Festival honors it's young quilters thanks to the generousity of Janome
Well done! Her first panto looks a whole lot better than mine!
ReplyDeleteThat's awesome! Maybe she can teach me one day.
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