Saturday, January 15, 2011

More scrappiness



Finished up all the hearts I had prepared from last weekend today, and even remembered to take some photos as I went along so I can do a mini-tutorial sometime soon on how to do them, if you should so wish.

Someone last week suggested that the offcut triangle squares looked like good churn dash starters - I've taken that idea and run (not quite in a straight line) with it - and made some shoo-fly blocks with them. Ten heart blocks yeilds five shoo-flies, but there will be more hearts in other colours, so more shoo-flies later this year. And the amazing thing is, I don't think I added anything to the scrap basket at all... Oh wait, I'm wrong - one cream square which I cut the wrong size...



I also did some quilting - a few ATCs with some threadplay, and then I quilted a couple of small pieces for upcoming challenges and swaps - yes, I'm being vague, you'll see them in time, I promise.

Thanks for the various comments about my thoughts on my blog - I have decided that for the time being, I will keep the two separate - I think if I were starting again, I would just make one blog and that would be that, but they've been separate for so long it seems weird to join them. (The family blog is older than Alex!) Also, I am trying to write more often in both places (especially here), so I don't want to get TOO many posts. The family blog doesn't get updated nearly as often, it's true, but that's partly because I don't take as many photos now that the kids are older, and partly because this year I've been doing the 365 project, so some of the photos I take around the house, etc go there instead.

I decided I would link the two a bit, though, so I have put a feed from my family blog in the sidebar on this blog for anyone who wants to see what we're up to. I couldn't make it put a photo and a couple of lines of text, but at least you can see when it's been updated, if you are interested in that aspect of my life.

I also gave this blog a title (though not URL) change (I did think about changing the URL, but it seemed like too much hard work - actually changing the title is simple, if you can think of a new one not taken, but all the associated palaver...) and revamped it for the season. And you can expect to see a bit more of other stuff besides just sewing (though I will keep it art & craft related, mostly) here in future. I think that will hold me for the time being!

Friday, January 14, 2011

More stitched (or partly stitched) ATCs



Although I've not been showing all the ATCs I am making - many are collage - a few which use stitch, I thought were more appropriate to share. These were both for a swap where the recipients of the cards chose the theme. The first was the TV show Carnivale - I used a transparency over a fortune telling playing card and stitched around the edge, but also FMQed the focus tree.

The other card's theme was Fat Cat, so I've gone back to one of my favourite (at this precise moment in time) techniques - FM stitching in a shape on an organza layer, then using the little soldering iron to remove the unwanted bits. I've also given him a funky variegated bow tie.

The other cards for the swap were paper collage...



I can't decide what I want to do about my blog - at the moment I have a family blog and a quilting blog - the problem is, I don't update the family one very often, and I do other art besides fibre art and quilting, so if I want to share that, where's appropriate. I wonder if the solution is a single, combined blog (quilty people can skip over posts about my kids if they want to) - but then, perhaps it would be too much stuff on a single blog, and there's such a huge archive (which I use a lot to search old projects) on the quilting blog. I dunno - will probably do nothing.

Thursday, January 13, 2011

More loveliness in the post



As I mentioned before, I've received a lot of lovely things in the post lately - and that's not even counting ATCs for swaps and private trades. Here's another of them - a beautiful scarf knit from Noro yarn - this is from Joyce (no blog), who has been in some swaps with me and reads my blog - I've sent her a few cross-stitch patterns I've finished with, and this was by way of a thank you. What a lovely thank you! My girls and I will probably all use it as we all like it. As does Alex, though perhaps when he realises how much pink is actually in it, he won't want to wear it in public...

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Seven Sisters



Another thing that was in the package from Sophie which contained my mini quilt was this great Seven Sisters block. This is totally not the sort of thing I'd make for myself (not patient enough!) so I can really appreciate it. I don't know what I'm going to do with it, though - it's not that big (the diamonds are tiny - another reason I'd never be able to do one for myself!), so it would probably make a very nice start to a mini quilt of some description...

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

Lost and Found...



Among the nice things I've had in the post this week (there are a number of them - more to be shown at some point!) was this lovely mini quilt, from Sophie. Quite a long time ago, Sophie was in one of my little quilt swaps (perhaps the first one) and was due to make a quilt for me, but then life got in the way - and during her big move from Michigan to Texas, the quilt got lost - she thought for good. Luckily, it came to light again while she was looking for something different she thought had been lost in her more recent move (within Texas) - and she finished it off and sent it along... Isn't it great? The little houses are 3" blocks, and they sit in a very dark blue background - I originally thought it was black, but it's not.

Anyway, I'm delighted she found it - partly because of course it's incredibly annoying to lose things - but mainly because I love it!

Monday, January 10, 2011

Cross-stitch update



Once the Christmas things were put away, I dug out my current (ok, one of my current) cross-stitches - this nice spring samper - and decided to work on that. I've had a couple of evenings of telly watching lately, so quite a bit of progress has been made on it since the last time I showed it (below). A while back, I was being very strict with myself and making sure I worked on some cross-stitch if watching telly (rather than getting the laptop out) so I tended to get more accomplished. These days, I'm making a lot of ATCs while watching, which is fine - it's creative time - but it does eat into that cross-stitching slot. Obviously, the solution is to add a couple more hours into my evening sometime between 10ish (kids mostly in bed) and 12ish (when I reluctantly head up to bed)...

Sunday, January 09, 2011

Strippy & scrappy



I have a box of strips and strings, as I may have mentioned before. Today's project was to do something with it - and lo and behold, several ideas were found in the course of blog-reading and surfing last night. Scraphappy had several ideas (which I may yet take up) and Sophie had a great string pieced heart - I decided to modify that, working with blue strips as this is blue month, and here's what I came up with:



some blue strip pieced rectangles, which I then added white corners to to make



hearts. I've done 3 and have done enough strip blocks for 10 heart blocks. I think I will either alternate the blocks with a different block or with another colour of string pieced heart - haven't made my mind up yet on that count.



I also have these (and will have more) - the offcut HST units from the bottom of the hearts - these are about 3.5" squares, so they will be large enough to be useful for something. Someday.

This also gave me the chance to sort out the box of strings - a few were decided to be too skinny and went in the bin, and a good handful were too short and relabelled "scraps" rather than "strips" (which means, into the scrap basket) - consquently, the scrap basket is a little fuller than yesterday... Ah well, better organised is good!

Saturday, January 08, 2011

Scrappy blocks - framed



Today I decided that I would do something with some of the little scrappy blocks I'd made so many of - I have plans (nebulous plans!) for a variety of different kinds of uses for them. I think they are a bit busy when set right up against one another, so I decided that I would frame them in solid(ish) fabrics to define them better and flesh out a larger quilt top from a handful of small blocks.

I also used this chance to begin to straighten out one of my baskets of hand-dyed fabrics. I have two - one is for fabrics that are multicoloured or use various techniques which make the fabric not (essentially) a single colour - stamping, overdyeing, sunprinting with lots of resists, shibori, ice-dyes, parfaits, complex cloths. The other is for the ones which are more or less one colour (many handdyes have a lot of variety in the depth of cover of colous - it's one of the things I like about them).

Anyway. I do have quite a few pieces of hand-dyes - I used to dye quite a bit myself, though not so much any more. And there are lots of smallish scraps - maybe 10" square or thereabouts - which can be hard to use as they aren't really enough to do a lot of things with (when I was making my canal houses recently I did use a number of large scraps as well, which was nice). So I began to sort the basket out a bit - larger pieces (Fat 1/8 and up) could be ironed and folded back into the basket (it's a large, rectangular basket) and smaller scraps could go in a neat pile for use in small projects or as ATC backs, while the medium scraps were cut into 2.5" strips and used to frame 20 of the 4" scrappy blocks.

I think it's worked fairly well!



I also worked on something else, a piece for the BQL Skinny Challenge, which I'll show later, perhaps tomorrow, which means there are now quite a few more small scraps in my scrap basket (check out "state of the scrap basket", in my sidebar, if interested). I also remembered that I have two (much smaller) baskets of other small scraps - a basket of hand-dyed scraps and a basket of batik scraps. I guess they need to go on the list for being used up in some way! And my bin of strips is getting very full - I'm hope my scraps guru offers some project ideas for strips (other than a standard strippy scrap block) this year - otherwise I'll have to come up with something myself and that's a lot like hard work!

Friday, January 07, 2011

Stitched Trees



I make a lot of ATCs - mostly in the evenings, while watching telly. I don't generally tend to show these on my blog, though perhaps I should as sometimes, there are large gaps where nothing is shown at all (you may have noticed, if you are a regularly reader, that I am trying to change that for 2011, mainly by breaking up all that I do into small chunks and posting one thing each day instead of lots at once and then nothing for ages). However, when I make some which are actually stitched or otherwise fibre, I do try to show them. These are simply stitched trees, in variegated thread, on a hand-dyed fabric background. I really must learn to stitch something besides trees...







Thursday, January 06, 2011

Off to the longarmer



Two quilts handed off to my friendly local longarmer recently - the first is this collection of Oriental Fans, from a swap a while ago. We'll not say how long ago, but the top was finished before the longarmer took a two year break from her business to live in India...



And the second is this top, a result of my participation in the Around the World Quilt Bee, which finished last summer. I added a couple of borders, both to pad out the size and to help tie in the orange which appears strongly in one block. I'm very pleased with it - round robins are notoriously difficult both in terms of timing (which luckily, wasn't something I had to deal with, as I wasn't the hostess) and matching and I think this top has come out of it very well. A million thanks again to Summer Sadie for organising it all.

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

Xmas tree skirt



Well, here's the finished tree skirt. It's still in my house because the friends it was intended as a Christmas present for have had to keep rescheduling our get-together - by the time we manage it, I doubt their Christmas stuff will still be up - oh well!

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

Cross-stitch nemesis



Someone asked for an update on the Christmas nemesis - the top picture shows where it was after last holiday season, and the bottom, a few days ago (I'm done stitching it for the season).



Not a lot of progress has been made, frankly, mainly because I had flu in December and even when I began to feel better, this was too intricate for my brain to handle - I probably lost 3 weeks of stitching time on this project that way - and when you only work on something for 5 or 6 weeks a year, well, that's a lot. Excuses, excuses! Anyway, perhaps next year will see more progress. I really should get the red angel's face done, as it's slightly disturbing that she's all blank...

Monday, January 03, 2011

Last productive day...



Tomorrow is back to work, so today was my last chance to spend a large chunk of the day sewing - so I did! I did lots of stuff, including a few things I won't show today - I'll save them for later in the week when I've not even been in the room...

One thing I did was do the January round of the Oh My Stars Block of the Month from Planet Patchwork - I actually looked yesterday morning to see if the round 3 instructions were up yet, and at the point I looked, they weren't. But they were there today, so I've done this piece to add to my Christmassy star sampler.

I also put together the snowball and nine-patch blocks from yesterday. Don't they make a nice little baby quilt? I'm pleased with the top and will put it away either until someone has a baby or until I decide to make it into a charity top. Not sure which it will be yet.




And just in case you wondered, here's what the scrap basket looks like at the end of the day today:



Still pretty empty, but as you can see, scraps are accumulating. I think I'm going to add a photo slot in my sidebar - "State of the Scrapbasket"...

Sunday, January 02, 2011

State of the Scrap Basket



It's not empty. But that's it - these have both come from another scrap-busting project I worked on today - the crumb scrap blocks are done - I ended up with 120 or so of the 4.5" blocks in the end. Not sure quite what I will do with them yet, but something.

This year, I am planning to follow along with the soscrappy blog and try to do some more scrap reduction - the basket may be emtpy, but there is still that box of strips, plus the small basket of larger pieces I showed the other day, plus a number of little drawers of squares ranging from 3" to 5" in size.

She is doing her scrap reduction in monthly colour themes, January being blue. One idea she proposed yesterday was to make nine patch blocks from 2" blue squares, and alternate them with 5" snowball blocks (blue corners on a white background). The 2" blue squares weren't a problem (I don't save 2" squares separately, but I do save 4" squares...)

However, I haven't got a lot of white squares in my 5" scrap collection, and while I could have simply cut some WOW into 5" squares, I decided to have a quick look elsewhere in stash and see if there was something else which would serve. And I found this - I think someone gave it to me, as I can't imagine buying it - it's not really my taste, but more than that, it's a bit thicker and obviously a little older than most modern quilting fabrics. Probably not vintage, though. I thought this would make excellent snowball backgrounds, and of course, it has the advantage of being used for a project when it might otherwise just sit in stash.





I was able to cut 24, 5" squares from the floral print. Perfect - I would make 24 nine patch blocks to go with, and alternate them.

And several hours later:



Tomorrow, perhaps I will sew the two stacks together!

Saturday, January 01, 2011

Scrappy Stacks

Well, no sewing done today because in our house, New Year's Day is when the Christmas decorations come down, the house is cleaned and some rearranging done (a tradition carried from my childhood, unlike the English custom of leaving Christmas decor up until 12th night).

However, as it's now January, I can show the blocks I made for the January block lotto, so I'm not without something to share...

Kate's Stack #3 Kate's Stack #2 Kate's Stack #1
Kate's Stack #4 Kate's Stack #5 Kate's Stack #6
Kate's Stack #7 Kate's Stack #8 Kate's Stack #9

I confess to pinching this code straight from the block lotto blog, which is why the small size pictures link to where the block lotto photos are held in Sophie's flickr.

This is a great block for using up some bright scraps, and it's very simple to do, so do come check it out!

Friday, December 31, 2010

Making scrappy blocks

Well, I made some more scrappy blocks today, and as so many of you have commented on the blocks in one way or the other, I thought I'd share my method (such as it is - there's nothing very formal about it!)

The very first thing I do, which I have no photo of, is grab a handful of scraps and sort them into piles - larger scraps to file elsewhere, big strips (again, these go elsewhere) small strips, small scraps (2-3"), very small scraps (1.5" or so) and impossibly small scraps (which go in the bin straight away). I then grab two small scraps - many of which are triangular or irregularly shaped - and join them together. These here are a little larger, but I didn't think to take photos until today, and most of the small scraps are gone already (yeah!!):



As long as the pieces I have joined have a nice straight edge (just one - I don't worry about the rest for the time being) I don't bother to trim them, I just press them open and attach another scrap straight away (I usually chain piece these, otherwise it's way too annoying back and forth to the ironing board and cutting board).



Like this. This is now three pieces together. Now, I could attach another piece along one of the straight edges, perhaps like a log cabin, but that's not my aim - I want scrappier and more irregular than that, so at this stage I will usually trim one of the sides somewhat diagonally to create a more interesting attachment point - like this:



The offcut gets thrown out, unless it's quite large, in which case it goes back in the pile of pieces to be sewn. Sometimes I will add a fourth piece in a similar fashion without trimming diagonally:



And sometimes, instead of adding a new, fourth scrap, I will attach two pieces together at this stage, and get something a bit like this:



Now, obviously, that has no straight edge, so I need to trim it. How you do that is up to you. You can be quite frugal and trim straight and near an edge, or you can be a little more liberal if you like. I tend to trim a bit more liberally, as it gives a funkier block:



Don't forget, I am usually working with a whole pile of scraps at once, not just one, and many of them are at different stages in the process, so I tend to alternate between sewing two pieced units together and sewing a pieced unit to a new scrap. And sometimes, if I have them, sewing two new small scraps together to make a new starter. After a while - 20 or 30 units - I take them to the ironing board to press, then the cutting board to trim.





Here you can see I've chosen to join this piece to another piece of a similar size and then cut the straight edge across the top. I don't get TOO worked up about size matching, I just want something approximately right, so there's not too much wastage.

Sometimes, I will go to trim a block and decide that it looks too much like a log cabin (good in their place, but not what I'm aiming for here):



Or just too boxy, or the pieces are too big:



I solve these problems by slicing the block in half somewhat randomly across the diagonal:





And then putting the halves back in the pile to be stitched. As it happens, I didn't actually sew these two together, but you can see how much more interesting they would be joined to one another than as part of the same blocks as their respective other halves...



Sometimes a block is a little unbalanced or has a rather large (in proportion to the other pieces) piece on one side - I might trim it a little unevenly to compensate for this. Also, the angled cut will make the subsequent attachments more interesting.



Sometimes, a block gets really big in one direction



and needs a little adjustment:



Here, both halves will go back in the pile to have more added (the left half is almost, but not quite, big enough to cut a 4.5" square from).

When it comes to trimming blocks from your larger pieces, you can do it however it works best for you - you can be very frugal and cut extremely close to one or two edges, which maximises the size of the offcuts - sometimes I do this, but sometimes I like to tilt the block more and just have more throw-away bits in the end.





With this block, I think all the offcut pieces were too small to use, except for the top one, which went back into the sewing pile.





This piece was cut more from the middle and less from an edge, but again, several of the pieces went back into the sewing pile - certainly the two side ones, can't remember about the top and bottom.

It doesn't matter if your pieced unit is quite a bit bigger than the square you plan to cut from it, as that simply produces larger offcuts, which go back into the sewing pile:





Sometimes, the offcut pieces produce the nicest/most interesting blocks,as you get lots of little tiny pieces in the blocks which you couldn't possibly otherwise sew - for instance in the blocks above and below:



Sometimes the pieces are a little larger, but they still all look nice.



Surprisingly, the seams aren't as bad as you might think - if you are careful to press them flat at each stage, they don't usually get too lumpy in the middle.

In terms of colour matching, I don't. I try to be as random as possible - simply taking the first piece of the right size to add to whatever I'm adding to. I do make some exceptions to this rule, trying to avoid adding a strip or piece of a given fabric directly to a block with another large piece of that fabric (I don't worry about this when joining two pieced units, just when adding new scraps to pieced units). I also try to avoid putting lots of black or white in one block as it tends to stand out.

One of the joys of scrappy blocks is that fabrics you would never dream of putting up next to one another actually look fine in a scrappy block.

So, if you've been thinking about doing something similar, perhaps this will help you on your way - happy scrapbusting and Happy 2011!