Wednesday, September 27, 2023
Moving Mountains
Sunday, September 24, 2023
Mountaintops
Thursday, September 14, 2023
Passionate Handcrafters
The Village is celebrating their fall fair this weekend; it would be the perfect time to see this incredible work of art up close and personal at the Ross Farm....M
Photos: Upper Canada Village
Tuesday, September 12, 2023
The More They Sew, The Behinder I Get
This is also a terrific pattern for a charity quilt because it comes together so quickly. Linda enjoyed hand stitching the corners over the summer and then we pieced the rest of it by machine. I love how those corners so easily translate into a diagonal pattern.
And then Jane pulled out this beauty that she had made several years ago and wondered aloud if we could make it into two smaller quilts. Not the best pic because I was shooting into the windows, but it does give you a sense of the flimsy as a whole. It's a large quilt, larger than she needs, so she was prepared to give it a new life. Such a wonderful idea!Many of the prints in it are from Mary Engelbreight - lots of red and black and yellow - and she added in several funky additions.You can spend a lot of time getting lost just exploring all of the different colour combinations. Those tiny cherries are so Mary.A simple block where the colour combos make it interesting.The piano key borders are equally funky.So we ripped it in two, removed some of the borders and she went home to rework it in time for our deadline later this month.Thursday, September 07, 2023
The Struggle Was Real
On deadline to produce a 12" block for the Carp Fair's Community Quilt Block Challenge, it was time to get started. I'd been looking at the fabrics every day for a few months but just not getting any inspiration. All of my choices relied on more background fabric than I have and it was proving tough to switch gears. The struggle was real.
But, it was time to make something - anything! - so I landed on a modified Bear Paw. I checked the math to ensure that I could make eight HSTs at a time and made a test just to confirm that my dimensions were correct. Good thing, as I was half an inch too large, so I scaled things back. With the fabric restrictions I just was so leery of making a wrong cut.I laid everything out very carefully so that my seams would nest nicely all around the block (do I sound paranoid?) and in no time it was ready... though I have to say that there was a fair bit of lunch bag letdown when it was.Despite a little voice in my head (one of several 😉) I used the bees for the large centre squares because I wanted to see the bees, but the dark batik that I used for the claws would have been better there. Should have following my gut. Or, I could have switched the placement of the gold dot and the darker of the two creams used in the coordinating HSTs. Not surprisingly, I spent all night dreaming of patterns that would have been better suited.By the next morning it wasn't looking quite as bad as I had imagined, but still nothing to write home about. Ah well, hopefully it plays well with others. Ironically, I realized that last year I also made a Bear Paw block, but it was much scrappier. I much prefer a four patch in place of those large squares.Betty's block is very different to mine and very charming: a beautiful little schoolhouse set in the centre of radiating strips, and it's hand pieced. It has a scrappiness that I just love and will be a wonderful addition to the quilt. This was her inspiration. You can see how she mapped out the making of her schoolhouse and ultimately, the block. I much prefer the small pieces in her block to the sizes that I used. Apparently her block was not without it's challenges either - she ripped things out a few times and pressed her seams as she went, something she never does when she hand pieces.It's a real charmer, reminiscent of a farmhouse and the rural community that hosts and attends the fair. Jean was tickled with both of them so that's all that matters....M