Creating a Wonderful Life means teaching art, quilting, cooking, treasuring time with family and friends, and finding ways to make a difference. Thank you to the creative online community for sharing your ideas with all of us. And thanks for stopping by!
Sunday, June 24, 2012
Monday, June 18, 2012
A Finish!
I started this quilt as part of a Quilt Along with the group over at Old Red Barn Co. (I just looked at my previous post... back in November 2009! Yes, it was time to finish this!) It's made from fabric scraps from a stash sale and quilt show our little quilt group hosted, and these florals were the ones that didn't sell. Rejects. Unloved. Unwanted. Headed to the trash. That's why I loved them- fabrics I would never have purchased new, but ones I now wanted to rescue.
I sashed each wonky log cabin in a different shot cotton solid. The resulting blocks are 16x16 inches, and the quilt measures 81x 64 inches.
I asked Terry to long arm it with a large meander to keep it soft and cuddly.
I think there are lots of reasons why I love scrappy quilts. There's something so freeing about using up what most people would throw away. And I love to work without a pattern, just sewing strips together, ironing them to look neat, and then squaring the results with a square ruler. I did have to measure the width of the shot cotton strips, and then match the corners as I sewed the blocks together. I like all that freedom within a framework. And trash to treasure (at least treasure to me!) feels like it honors the "make do" tradition of quilting too. I love that.
Make it a Wonderful Day!
I sashed each wonky log cabin in a different shot cotton solid. The resulting blocks are 16x16 inches, and the quilt measures 81x 64 inches.
I asked Terry to long arm it with a large meander to keep it soft and cuddly.
The back is scrappy too. Big hunks of vintage leftovers.
The same scrappy bits were used for a scrappy binding...
I think there are lots of reasons why I love scrappy quilts. There's something so freeing about using up what most people would throw away. And I love to work without a pattern, just sewing strips together, ironing them to look neat, and then squaring the results with a square ruler. I did have to measure the width of the shot cotton strips, and then match the corners as I sewed the blocks together. I like all that freedom within a framework. And trash to treasure (at least treasure to me!) feels like it honors the "make do" tradition of quilting too. I love that.
Make it a Wonderful Day!
Sunday, June 17, 2012
Sunday, June 10, 2012
Sunday, June 3, 2012
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