Showing posts with label quilting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilting. Show all posts

Sunday, March 13, 2022

That March Lion Is Roaring

 


We have all heard that wives tale about if march comes in like a lamb it will go out like a lion and vice versa. March started out beautiful here with wonderful 60 degree sunny days. Perfect for getting those early cool weather crops sown in the garden. And plant them I did. Then the lion roared. We got 7 inches of snow on March 11th. luckily for us very little was blooming other than a Nanking cherry or two and the small Cornelian Cherries. Time will tell the damage to fruit set but since both of those are very young trees the loss should be minimal. And the annual dance every gardener faces each spring with Mother Nature has begun. The gardener tries to produce as much as possible and Mother Nature keeps us humble by reminding us who is actually in control. Oh what arrogant humans we are and she does love to flex her muscles. 


Finished my scrappy quilt that was on the frame. Made a wonderful snuggly quilt with a nice soft flannel backing. A wonderful utilitarian scrap quilt and while not fancy it did use up some of the bins of scraps I manage to accumulate from different sewing and quilting projects over time. This quilt is a double quilt that I wanted for snuggling on the couch with or on the only smaller twin bed that I have in one of the spare bedrooms. All my other beds are queens. 

The next quilt is a baby quilt top that I have already made that I will do on the hoop. Then another queen top already made that will go back on the frame. I want to make some more scrap tops to use up again some of those fabric scraps that I have stashed. 

I have a couple older quilts that my late mother in law made decades ago that the fabric has just wore out from age and use. I am going to recycle the quilts and cut the binding off and recycle the quilts and use them as batting for new quilt tops basically putting a new top and backing on them. Nothing goes to waste! They were not pieced tops but rather cheater tops. You know the ones that look like pieced quilts but was just one piece of fabric. They were made to use everyday and machine quilted by her neighbor. The original battings are all in tact with no holes. With a little reworking these should last for another 4 or 5 decades and maybe my great grandchildren will enjoy. With 2 adult granddaughters it is possible.  I will make the point that my hand quilted quilts seem to hold up better than their machine quilted counterparts over time. No idea why. Unlike my mother in law I do make it a practice to always use quality fabric and new fabric as well.  

I am thinking a Dresden Plate and Double Wedding Ring will be my next two tops to sew. Again using up those scraps. I am open to any suggestions on good scrappy quilt patterns anyone wants to recommend. I will take some pictures of my baby quilt once I get it stretched and basted and ready to go into the hoop. 

I am also doing some canning and will post the pictures once I get done.  Having quilting jobs going is great as I can quilt while I am waiting for my pressure canner to build steam and cool off. Time is a precious commodity at my age and not to be wasted or taken for granted. Besides gas is too high to go anywhere. I think I will be doing lots of quilting and canning with the prices the way they are. This too shall pass hopefully and we have endured and survived hard times before.  Just will be planting a bigger garden. 

Hoping everyone out there is healthy, safe and warm. We remain grateful and blessed.

Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter

*************************************

I can also be found at 




Saturday, February 2, 2013

A Winter Goal


The temperatures have continued to dip as we slosh around in the remnants of the last snowstorm. O Wise One and Baby O are in our state capitol where Baby O is competing in the Voice Of Democracy essay contest. First prize is a $3,000 scholarship. She has already won the county and district competitions. With the flu running rampant in our area I decided that I would stay home and take care of the animals while they go. O Wise One being ex military enjoys visiting with all the soldiers and I felt he would enjoy that more so than I. So I packed them up in their finest and sent them off to the city. 

As for me between doing all the animal care alone and the projects that I have going that I have plenty to keep me busy. I hope to do lots of quilting : ) I find that when I have a quilt on the frame the way for me to get it done quickly and not linger is to set goals of how much I hope to quilt a day. Just small goals that are easy to fulfill daily.  


For this quilt I have set a goal of a block a day.


That is about 45 minutes to an hour each day to complete 1 block.


That will complete a row of 6 squares in a week.  If I can stick to that it will be completed in 48 days and ready to bind. 


I like having a set amount of time set aside everyday to do something that I enjoy doing. I enjoy putting on soothing gospel music or I have a bible audio and that is my time of worship and solitude as well. A time of quiet reflection and thought. 


Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter


Friday, February 1, 2013

Trying To Rescue A Classic


One of my goals in the next few weeks is to try to rescue this quilt. I found it in an old trunk after my mother in laws death. Everything on the quilt that was made of good sturdy cotton is still in tact. Everything that was made of this flimsy gingham material is now in tatters.


My thought is to take the quilt apart and try to remove the stars, set them on a solid square and applique and then reattach to the existing quilt backing and cotton batting and then re quilt. Any quilter out there have any suggestion I would love some input. 

Let this also be a lesson to those of you new quilters. ALWAYS use good heavy quality cottons or cotton blends. This is especially true if you are recycling clothing for quilt tops. 




Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter

Friday, January 25, 2013

For The Love Of Gypsy



Another top to quilt. Baby Hank has grown up with my scottie dogs. One of his first words was "Gypsy" our girl scottie's name. I am going to quilt this for him for Christmas next year for his twin big boy bed : ) I have buttons for the eyes and red gingham ribbon for bows for each dog. Another quilt waiting for the frame.....


A grandma's job is never done. 

Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter

Monday, January 21, 2013

Back To Work


Although I am still recovering from my bout of flu we are back to work here on the farm. O Wise One had the flu but for him it was only a 24 hour ordeal. Baby O never caught it! 

The snow is mostly gone now due to a warm up over the weekend to the 60's. It did not last long though because the mercury is supposed to fall again for the rest of the week. O Wise One continues to trap daily and is having pretty good luck this season but is amazed at the number of people trapping this year. With the bad economy I imagine everyone is looking to make extra money however they can. The pelt prices continue to remain pretty good though even with the large number of trappers.  


Baby O helped me stretch and baste a quilt yesterday. You can see here it is a large scrappy log cabin done in blues. This is an oversize queen quilt with a blue patterned flannel backing. I am making it for myself !! Or I say that until someone comes along and wants it. You can tell blue is one of my favorite colors and I had so much in my fabric stash that I felt I just needed to use some of it.  We stretched the backing and batting and taped them to the floor with masking tape. Then pinned the quilt top on top and basted it down to the other two layers. I don't always baste my quilts but on the really large ones it helps to stabilize it while getting it on the floor frame.  I was very happy with the job I did as you can see the quilt laid beautifully. No ridges or buckles to be found.  Notice the large white temporary basting stitches going through the middle of the quilt. Nothing like sewing on your hands and knees to make a girl feel her age. Thank goodness I had Baby O to help. What am I going to do when that girl goes to college? Wonder if I could find an apprentice....


Once I had the top positioned I took a large curved needle and crochet cotton and basted all around the edges and down through the middle of the quilt to hold it together until it is quilted with the final quilting . You can see the big curved needle laying directly in front of the ball of cotton on the quilt. I hear they have some sort of spray out now that glues to layers together basting them. I have not tried it though. Just another cost added to quilting that is probably unnecessary. After all I have manged to quilt lots of quilts over the last 30 years without it.


Once basted we removed the tape and transferred the basted quilt to the frame. And another quilt awaiting many hours in that old rocker adding stitches to. 

Before I really start this one I have a top at the sewing machine that I am still working on too. And I am still cutting up strip for rugs out of all those old jeans and T shirts from Baby O's closet clean out. So as you can see I am slowly recovering from my flu and moving slowly but still moving. 

Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter

The Chicken Chick



Monday, November 26, 2012

Another Quilting Project Completed



I've posted in the past about this quilt on the frame. It is a king size quilt that was brought to me to be hand quilted by the relative of a neighbor. I HATE to quilt for other people because I always feel so guilty about what I have to charge them to do it. Therefore I almost never do it. Every now and then someone will talk me into it and that is the case with this one. It is a quilt top depicting all the states with their shape, state flower and state bird all done by hand in embroidery. It also has a block with a large blue star for each state. 



The good news is that this monster is finished : ) Hand quilted, the sides are bound and it is ready to go to it's forever home. 




Notice the center medallion depicting the USA.




I shudder to think of the number of stitches that went into this quilt in the hand quilting alone not counting the embroidery. I just did the quilting as it was brought to me as a finished top. 




It certainly made a very vibrant and colorful quilt. I have two quilts with this same pattern that my husband inherited from an elderly aunt. She did not embroider the states but rather did them in embroidery paint. For some of you younger girls embroidery paint was popular back in the 60's and 70's. It was a permanent paint that came in little tubes that you squeezed on to your quilt design to permanently color it.   


For someone with a blue and white or patriotic decor this quilt would be perfect.



Lots of work went into this quilt by both the owner who did all the embroidery and myself who did all the hand quilting.



This is meant to be a Holiday gift for a family member  of the owner. I hope that they treasure it for  a lifetime and get great joy from it. 

Now back to that wedding quilt for my son and his new bride.

Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter

Link To Clever Chick Blog Hop

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Quilter's Knot



Recently I had a comment left on a post by a follower that I wanted to answer.


Kathy writes:


I didn't realize I could plant peas now (Missouri). I'll do that. I have another question-about your quilt. You're hand quilting this. What do you do to start the thread? Is there a knot and if so, how do you hide it?

Her question was about the quilters knot. This is how I was taught to do a quilter's knot. After a little practice I can do these in just a second.











How To Hide It








Hope this helps!

By the way this time of year there isn't lots going on and I love questions like this. It helps give me ideas for posts that the readers of this blog really want to read about. So keep those questions coming.



Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter 




Wednesday, January 4, 2012

My First Quilt Of 2012

I have my first quilt of the season on the frame. It is a beautiful Embroidered quilt with a hexagon representing each state with the bird and flower. I did not make this quilt but am quilting it for a friend. I do very few quilts for other people. I always feel so guilty about charging people so much for hand quilting and I think usually probably  never charge enough. Besides I have plenty of my own to do.
I am quilting this one along the edges with stars to match the stars in the quilt and in the ditch along edges of the squares. It has a natural muslin backing.
Hoping to finish it in six weeks to two months but we shall see. I set aside atleast an hour or two each day just for quilting. I'll take pictures when I am finished.

Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

A Frugal Quilter


Yesterday was a mending day here in Hickery Holler. A day set aside to catch up on the mountain of ironing and mending that I had let collect over the last month or two. In the pile to be mended was the quilt below. A quilt made by O Wise One's grandmother Edna. The quilt dates back to the Depression and is like no other quilt I have ever seen. The entire quilt is sewn by hand.  


Each square is made up of 4 triangles. Each triangle was sewn front and back together and stuffed with none other than old stockings and socks. Then sewn up individually. The finished triangles were then sewn together (whip stitch) by hand.  Then the ramaning triangles were sewn around then edges to form prairie points.


Once all the triangles were pieced together it was hand quilted a 1/4 inch from each seam.


Giving you a patchwork front and back on the quilt. It absolutely amazes me the tiny whip stitches throughout this quilt. I have such admiration for the women of this era. Raising large families of childen on the farm during the Depression.



O Wise One's mother born during the Depression made everyday quilts  from polyester during the 60's. These quilts are not much to look at but are heavy and last forever. That polyester is indestructible. They wash well and are the quilts that go on picnics and events where we want to spread something on the ground for the babies.


But some of the quilts that are near and dear to my own heart are my grandmother's own scrap quilts. These quilts were from cut up clothes and scraps from her children and later grandchildren. Pieced simply usually in a nine patch variation and hand quilted in the same  Baptist Fan quilting pattern of all her quilts. She quilted from a roof frame that hung from the 12 foot ceilings of her old white farmhouse. The clothes were first stripped of their buttons and zippers. These items could be reused in other clothing. There were always jars of buttons sitting around waiting to be sewn on the odd shirt  or dress missing one.


The batting was sometimes old blankets or broken electric blankets with the wiring removed that could be patched and reused as batting. Sometimes it was the traditional cotton batting.  


Other times it was quilts like this one above where the top fabric had wore out but the batting was still intact. She would simply make another top and new backing and reuse the worn out quilt as batting.



Occasionally there were quilts made for special occasions ( marriages, new babies) that were made with special designs and new purchased fabric. But as you can see in the one above still with that Baptist fan quilting design. Her guide for this pattern a piece of strings with knots every inch and a piece of chalk. All of these quilts made frugally to keep their families warm yet surviving decades after their deaths. Many still in use. A testimony to their strength, imagination and creativity even in times of great turmoil and financial hardship. A lesson to many of today's quilters of how to make a quilt with very little expense.


Blessings from The Holler

The Canned Quilter
Related Posts with Thumbnails