My Mother's Quilt

I finished my mother's quilt on Sunday. It is for her birthday in October. She will be 77 years old. Hard to believe.
I apologize that some of these pictures are sort of dark. I just took them a couple of minutes ago and it is night time.






I also worked on Claire's pants tonight. They are almost done. I will start on her shirt tomorrow and hopefully finish it sometime this weekend.

My sister came through her surgery ok. Still no results on the biopsy. Hoping all is well with that. Thanks to those of you who remembered her in your prayers. She should come home tomorrow if all goes as planned.

Haven't posted in a few days...

I have been sort of busy. I wasn't home for long a single evening last week. Stuff going on every night between running errands, working, family stuff and worship team rehearsal. My time is going to be cut severely, indefinitely pretty soon. They are moving my shift at work from 8-4 to 9-5:30. I HATE HATE HATE HATE HATE that shift. Did I mention that I HATE that shift? Whenever I get scheduled for that shift I invariably fall into a pattern of getting up later and losing that hour in the morning as well as the extra time in the evening. I am NEVER out of the kitchen before 7 or 7:30 in the evening. I am so bummed. I spent most of Wednesday and Thursday in tears. I even considered closing my business because I already don't have the time to devote to it that I should, now I have even less free time to devote to it than I did. I'm not going to, yet. I am going to try and utilize the time in the morning, but I don't know how well that will go. I've tried it before, unsuccessfully. I was told, it could be 6 weeks, 6 months or 6 years, that I could be on this schedule, no one knows how long it will last. I'm not going to hold my breath.

In other news, I did manage to finish my mom's quilt yesterday. I hope to get some pictures made of it and post them here for you all to see soon. I still need to wash it and dry it. Hopefully this will be the breakthrough I needed to get busy on some other projects that need done. I spent four hours cleaning my house on Saturday, so it doesn't need a lot of cleaning right now. Hopefully it will stay that way for a while.

I wanted to ask you all if you would think about my sister, Janet, today. She is having surgery at 9 this morning. She's having a gastric bypass. They also found some sort of tumor when they were doing her pre-op tests, they think it is benign, but they still wanted to biopsy it. They did the biopsy last week, and depending on what they found it determined whether they could do the surgery lapiroscopically or if they would have to open her up. I haven't heard anything more as the last time I talked to her was Friday night. I'm hoping it's good news that I haven't heard anything else. So, if you could say a little prayer for her today, I'd really appreciate it, and I'm sure she would, too.

Road blocks...

Do you ever have so many projects that you feel like you are swimming in circles not knowing what to do next? That is the kind of weekend I have had. I started a new project last week that I was initially excited about and then found out how meticulous I have to be with measurements and such, and now I am not so excited about it. It's a quilt with 12 inch blocks. I was originally going to do 12 blocks with a border. Now I am thinking about changing it up some because I am not at all excited about doing 10 more blocks like the first two I finished. Not to mention my Mark-B-Gone pen is getting dried up and I need a new one. So... I didn't feel like working on that this weekend, so I didn't.
My cousin contacted me this week about a couple of "lil monster" tee shirts for her boys and I am waiting to hear back from her about those. If so I will need to put one more together for her older boy. So I pulled all of that out last week, but it sat on my desk all weekend because I haven't heard back from her, yet. So I didn't do that this weekend either.
I was going to wash the fabric for Claire's birthday outfit and forgot to include it with the laundry, so I didn't get that done this weekend, either. I may just have to wash it by itself.
I decided yesterday afternoon that I should try and come up with a top to go with the little skirt I just made so that I can list them together on Etsy. My original thought was to make a little blouse to go with it, but I didn't think I'd have the time to do that and get it listed by the time I would like to get it listed. So I thought I'd get a long sleeve t-shirt and embellish it to match. It's back to school time, right, they should have fall stuff out.... Not so much. I found one little top at Target that I thought might work, but I wasn't crazy about it, so I left it. I looked at Sears, JC Penney, Macy's, Gymboree, Gap, Shopko and Old Navy. Old Navy had the closest thing to what I wanted, but they wanted more for it than I wanted to pay. Sooooo.... that didn't happen this weekend, either.

So we decided to take this morning off from going to church... gasp, I know... So I thought, OK, well what can I get done to redeem this weekend? OK, I decided to sandwich the quilt for my mom's birthday and start quilting it. Hoping to get the quilting done today or tomorrow and then the binding by next weekend and that will be one more project off of the to do list.
So.... I ran out of quilt basting spray halfway through sandwiching it. So here it sits on my kitchen counter half sticky so I can't move it, right where my cat just loves to try and jump on the counter (she also has a glue addiction which makes this even more interesting) and here I sit waiting for Jason to get up so I can get clean clothes out of the bedroom and Hancock's to open so I can go get more basting spray so I can finish this darn quilt!

I think I need a do-over.....

I've been given an award...

Randi at I have to say... has given me this fun award....

"This award is for those bloggers who are nice people; good blog friends & those who inspire good feelings and inspiration. Also for those who are a positive influence on our blogging world. Once you've been awarded please pass it on to 7 others who you feel are deserving of this award."

Thanks Randi, I am honored.

Now, I am passing this along to....
Kirsten of Adventures of Zippy
Amanda of Crazy Mom Quilts
Roxanne of Craft Addictions
Natasha of Rickrack and Ribbons
Leanne of Leanne's House
Katherine of Four Friends and a Blog
Di of Di Mill

The "Charming" Little Skirt: A Tutorial


This is my first tutorial, so if you have questions please feel free to ask, especially if something doesn't make sense. I hope that I don't forget to explain everything. Please use this tutorial only for your own personal use and please do not sell skirts made from this pattern.
Sooooo..... Here goes.....

This little skirt is made from 5 inch squares of material. For mine I purchased two small charm packs of Moda's "Yuletide Blessing" fabric. For mine I used 32 squares. You could use more and the skirt would be fuller, but I wouldn't suggest using less unless you want a straight skirt instead of a gathered skirt. This makes about a size 4-6 skirt. Waist sizes from about 18 inches to about 22 inches. The length is approximately 12 inches.

Materials and tools needed for the job:
32 coordinating 5 inch squares of fabric.
16 inch piece of 1/4 inch elastic.
Thread to match fabric.
Small, sturdy safety pin
Sewing gague
Sewing machine
Iron
* A serger is optional, but very helpful.

1. Arrange your charm squares in a pattern that is pleasing to you. These will be the tiers of the skirt. Keep in mind that the square on the far left will be joined with the one on the far right as well. There should be 8 in the first row, 11 in the second row, and 13 in the bottom row.




2. Sew these together in rows, just as you would a row of quilt blocks. I used a 1/4 inch seam on my serger, that way all of the seams are finished as you go. If you don't have a serger, you can machine roll and whip the edges by doing the seam at 1/4 inch with a straight stitch and then going back over the edge with a zigzag stitch set to a small stitch length. Almost a satin stitch length. Let the needle catch the fabric when it goes to the left and go off the edge of the fabric when it swings to the right. This will bind the edge of your fabric. It is very helpful to have a narrow edge or stitch in the ditch foot for this. Let the edge of the fabric follow the "fin" in the middle of the foot. This provides a nice finished edge, but does require some time. If you are using purchased charm squares that have "pinked" edges, you may choose not to finish the seams. This is fine, but your skirt will not have as professional a look on the inside. The choice is up to you.




3. Once you have your rows completed, fold each of them end to end with right sides together. Stitch them with a 1/4 inch seam.



You should have 3 "tubes" of fabric now that looks something like this.



On all tiers press the seams all in the same direction.


4. Take your bottom tier (the one with the most squares) and decide which edge will be the top and which will be the bottom. Also choose a seam to be the center back of your skirt. With your stitch gage and your iron. Turn your fabric wrong side out and press up 1/2 inch along the bottom edge. Fold the raw edge back under itself so that the raw edge meets the crease and press it again. (Alternately you could press up 1/4 inch and then press up another 1/4 inch.) Pin this if you need to, but try not to use too many pins as it can sort of distort the shape and it may be harder to sew. Beginning at your chosen center back seam and with the wrong side of the fabric up, stitch with a regular straight stitch on your machine all the way around, keeping close to the inside edge of the hem. Take a few stitches back and forth across the beginning and end to lock the stitches. Congratulations. You just hemmed your skirt!





5. Now take your top tier (the one with the least squares) and decide which edge will be the top edge. Fold down 1/4 inch and press into place.



6. Fold down another 3/8 inch (at the minimum). 1/2 inch is even better, I learned this the hard way, after all the pictures were taken. and press this into place.



7. Decide which seam will be the center back seam for this tier. With the wrong side of the material up, start sewing approximately one inch to the right (from the inside of the skirt) of the center back seam. Backstitch to lock the stitches in place. Stitch all the way around until you are about 1 inch to the other side of the center back seam and backstitch again to lock your stitches. ****IT IS VERY IMPORTANT*** to keep your stitching as close to the fold of the material (left hand side) without going off of it. You are making a casing for your elastic and you have to be able to fit the head of a safety pin past all of the seams in the tier. If you go off of it, just go back over those spots, otherwise you will have wierd gaps when it is gathered with the elastic.





8. Take your bottom tier once again and using a long straight stitch (I set mine at 3.5), begin at the center back and sew a line of stitching 1/2 inch from the raw edge of the fabric and again 1/4 inch from the raw edge. Be sure to end your stitching without any overlap. Leave the thread tails a few inches long for this step and be careful not to catch them when doing the second line of stitching. Do the same to the top edge of your middle tier as well.







9. Take your bottom tier and take the two bobbin threads from one end of the stitching you just did and GENTLY pull on them. Slide the gathers along the stitching gently working them around the tier. You may also pull the bobbin threads from the other side if needed to gather the material.







10. Take both the middle tier and the bottom tier and place them right sides together with the bottom edge of the middle tier to the top edge of the bottom tier. The middle tier essentially will be inside the bottom tier. Keep working the gathers and spreading them evenly until the top edge of the bottom tier fits nicely onto the bottom edge of the middle tier and the edges are flush. Pin in place every few inches as you go, placing the pins perpendicular to the edge.





11. Return your machine to its normal stitch length. Stitch this seam on your machine with a 1/2 inch seam allowance beginning and ending at the center back seam and backstitch to lock your stitches. The trick to getting nice gathers is to keep them perpendicular to the line that you are stitching. GO SLOW and take your time, stop every few inches and straighten things up. I like to use my "needle down" setting on my machine. This means that every time I stop stitching, the machine will stop with the needle down in the fabric. This is helpful if you need to lift the presser foot in order to straighten your fabric. It will keep the fabric from sliding out from under the presser foot. If you don't have this feature, just remember to lower your needle if you need to lift your presser foot.



You should now have something that looks like this.



12. Use this same method to gather the top edge of the middle tier (now joined to the bottom tier) to the bottom edge of the top tier. Once this is done, you may finish the seam edges in any manner you please. If you are using a serger, I would suggest using a slightly smaller seam allowance than the 1/2 inch used to gather the tiers together. This way you ensure that you are not cutting the threads that are holding everything together. I did 1/4 inch seams on mine with the serger. DO NOT try to skip stitching the seams together on your regular sewing machine and try to go straight to the serger! I have done this on a different project and cut my gathering threads, it wasn't pretty! If any of your gathering threads are showing on the outside of the skirt it is ok to remove them after the seams are secured, if you like. Press the seams toward the top of the skirt, being careful not to crush the gathers.

13. Now take your 16 inch piece of 1/4 inch elastic and secure a safety pin to one end like this.



14. At the center back of the waist band insert the head of the safety pin in the opening that you left in the casing. It is important to feed it through in whatever direction you pressed the seams. If you don't, the head of the pin will get hung up in the seams and will be really difficult to feed through the casing. Slide the pin through the casing, sliding the material down the length of elastic. Be careful to leave a couple of inches of the other end of the elastic exposed at the opening, don't pull it into the casing or you will have to start this step over again. Keep sliding the pin through the casing until it comes out again at the center back opening.





15. Now, pull both ends of the elastic out several inches away from the skirt waist, overlap them and pin them together. You aren't worried about even gathers at this point, you need to have enough elastic exposed to get it under the needle of your machine.





16. Keeping this as straight as you can, which can be a bit tricky. Place this under the presser foot of your machine with the pin still in place. Lower your presser foot, then lower your needle by hand to hold the two layers of elastic together, and then carefully remove the pin. Stitch the two layers togther carefully on your machine. Make sure you go back and forth over it a few times to make sure they are securely attached. I use the forward and back stitch on my machine to do this.





17. Last step!!! Stretch the elastic so that the ends go up into the opening at center back. Stitch the opening closed being careful not to catch the elastic in the stitching. You may need to stretch the elastic a bit as you are sewing in order to keep the material flat. Make sure to lock your stitches at each end. Adjust the gathers evenly over the elastic and you are all done!





Have fun and let your imagination run! There are lots of possibilities for this little skirt. You can change the size of the squares to make it smaller or larger, you could add more squares to make it fuller. If you decide to try and make it fuller, I would suggest not going any more than a 3.5:1 ratio. That meaning, if the bottom edge of a tier were to be for instance 10 inches, I would not go any more than 35 (or 3.5 times the distance) inches with the piece that you are trying to gather onto it. There comes a point where you have too much fabric and it just won't all fit. Lighter fabrics can use a higher ratio whereas thicker fabrics should use a smaller ratio. Instead of hemming the bottom tier, it could be trimmed with lace or rickrack. I would do this step before joining the ends of the bottom tier strip together. You could do decorative stitching along the edges of the tiers. There are lots of fun things that can be done with it! If you decide to make one, I'd love to see it!

Do you ever...

have one of those weeks where the coincidences are just so wierd that you begin to wonder what God is trying to tell you? So I mentioned that book, right? The family that was local, all that. Well it turns out that for a while, one of the people in the book lived in Galesburg, IL which is not far from where I grew up. Not only that, but some others in the book moved for a while to Holland, Michigan, which is another area that I have been to (as well as not for from where Amanda lived in Michigan). You know, that was all wierd enough. But coincidence. Well today at church I was singing on the worship team and they were doing the announcements and mentioned the date of the church block party. No big deal, you know, whatever. For whatever reason the lady singing next to me, which I never even met until today, leans over to me and says "I have to sing in Silver Creek that day at the Dutch church there." I about fell over. That is the town and the church from this family in the book that I just read. I mentioned to her that I had read this book and she and I conversed for a moment about it and come to find out that her friend that goes to that church is a patient of the neurologist in town here who's family is chronicled in the book. I'm beginning to wonder who I'm going to run into at the grocery store tomorrow.... LOL

A brief aside...

I've been reading this book lateley that I checked out from the library. It is called "Ten Years to Live" by Henry J. Schut. I originally checked it out because I had seen it on websites as recommended reading and was under the impression that it was about a family that was dealing with Friedreich's Ataxia which is what my 16 year old niece, Allison, has. The disease that the family in the book struggles with is actually a different kind of Ataxia called Marie's Ataxia. "Ataxia" is just a general term that means loss of coordination. When I checked it out, I thought "hmm, this looks really worn for a book about such a rare disease" but I looked at the publish date, 1978. Ok, the book has been around for almost 30 years. When I began reading it, I understood why the cover was so worn. The family is local. They are from Silver Creek, Minnesota which is just a little way down the road from here. What is even crazier is that the author's son is a neurologist in my town. I haven't finished the book yet, but I believe that this family actually had some dealings with the founding of the National Ataxia Foundation. Small world indeed.

So I told myself....

that I was not allowed to have any more bright ideas for a couple of weeks. Of course it didn't work and I got one anyway. Why do I do this to myself? It will be a matter of whether I can carve out enough time and money to do that project by the date I want it done which will decide whether or not I go forward with it. Stay tuned....

I am working on another little project, something for Etsy. I am doing a little tutorial as I go. That is all I am going to say about it for now. Hopefully it won't take a lot of time to get the tutorial up and then the suprise project will be revealed.

I still have to finish my Mom's quilt and get it mailed to Illinois by the 25th of October, and finish Claire's outfit and get it in the mail to Texas by October 18th. My sister in law, Carrie, started a couple of Christmas stockings for Claire and Mady a couple of years ago. The front is all counted cross stitch and she did a beautiful job, I might add. She doesn't trust herself with the construction of the stockings themselves, however, and so she has entrusted it to me. I need to get those done before long, too. I was just sort of waiting for the fall fabrics to start coming out as she wants the backs of the stockings to be red velvet and that is a little hard to find this time of year. I hope I can get them done in time to send them with Claire's birthday gift.
Never mind my block swap quilt top by the end of October. I think I must be crazy to think about taking on any more projects, and yet I have a couple more in the back of my mind that I want to try and get done, too. The little tutorial project, that shouldn't take long, a scrap baby quilt, that if it gets done in time might go to Jason's cousin and his wife who are having a baby girl in Novemer, I think. Then I have another tutorial idea that sort of goes along with the first tutorial. And another project that I am still debating about trying. Do you think I'm nuts? Yep....
Tweaked it a little, still might mess with it some more...

A new look...

I can't decide if I like it or not. It is kind of loud for me...
What do you think?

Why is it?

Why is it that I seem to have a new idea for something to make every day, but each idea takes weeks to accomplish, if it ever gets accomplished at all? Never mind the $$ it would take to do them all...

Why is it that though I have yards and yards of fabric in my stash, none of them are ever the right yardage for what I want and I end up buying new?

Why is it that the next project is always more exciting than the current one?

Sometimes I just don't get it! LOL
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