Look, ma, a mask!

Look at what I finally got around to doing tonight. When you’re not actually leaving the house there isn’t much motivation, but we’re starting to get out and around more so it needed to be done.

The first with the white thread was my test run. If you all recall my many years of whining on my podcast, I’m not really fond of doing stuff like this. I tend to get testy around anything that smacks of garment sewing.

That being said, I knew even I could handle this simple version.

I’d looked around for patterns and downloaded one from AccuQuilt (since I’ve been on their site a lot lately, ahem). Well, dang, the AccuQuilt pattern left out the very important step of leaving a hole for turning it right-side out after you’ve sewn in the elastic. As I hadn’t read ahead when I first sat down to start sewing this puppy up, it wasn’t until I got to the third side that I thought, “Aren’t I going to need a hole?” Sure enough, I was supposed to start sewing a few inches into the first side…something the pattern had neglected to remind me. So I ended up leaving my hole in the end where the elastic is, which made it all sorts of fun to try to turn. And then, of course, I did manage to sew through the elastic when I was doing the edge stitching, so I had to do some ripping and adjusting.

Before tackling the second one, I watched Jenny Doan’s tutorial on YouTube. Same design, but watching someone go through it was helpful. Plus I changed my thread to match the fabric (now that I was committed to making a decent one). The second one went swimmingly (no reference to a pattern needed at all) and looks much better.

I’ve cut the third one—I got three out of one fat quarter. I have a lot of fat quarters that haven’t found their way into projects in years so this will be a great stash buster. Who’d-a-thunk back in my podcasting days I’d ever say “Need a stash buster? Make face masks to protect you from rampant contagion!”

If I weren’t so darn hungry I’d knock out another few tonight. However, my daughter’s making dinner so I think I’ll go downstairs and hover to see if I can casually speed things along. More masks later!

If you’re interested in Jenny’s tutorial…

Meanwhile, back at the ranch...

I was able to grab about an hour and a half in my sewing room today, which was enough time to finish piecing the top of the baby quilt I had set aside in order to play with the AccuQuilt. No sense in making myself new projects while I still had the baby quilt guilting me from its place on the design wall.

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If I’m in the mood tomorrow, I’ll do the backing and basting on it. I hate hate hate doing on backing, although for a baby quilt it’s not as bad. (I hate dealing with large pieces of fabric.) I hate only slightly less the basting process. So I’ll have to stay on top of myself to keep myself from procrastinating at this stage.

And then it’s been an awfully long time since I’ve machine quilted so I have to do a couple of practice sandwiches first just to make sure I’m back in the grove. I think I’ll just be doing a mid-sized meander on this puppy. We’ll see what I get in the mood for once I’m working on the practice pieces.

I used this as an opportunity to test out some pins I’d gotten in a couple of Sew Sampler boxes recently. One was a small collection of double pins for doing seams. I’ve never used those before, so I figured, what the hey. The only seams I was trying to match were with the cornerstones.

I’ve decided I hate double pins.

I went back to the way my mommy taught me to pin seams.

 
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Then I tried another set of pins, this time with cute unicorn tops.

There were only 10 in the package, and they’re somewhat thicker than the pins I typically use.

They’re cute, but not particularly functional in my sewing life. I could see, someday, if I ever make any of those adorable pincushions I keep seeing patterns for, sticking these in it and gifting them. So I’m not getting rid of them, just not using them much.

Anyone have cute ideas for what to do with them in the meanwhile?

Wheee!!!! (And a very happy early birthday to me!)

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It arrived!


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It has a spiffy green bag that will help protect it somewhat from the free-floating Auggie hair in my sewing room.


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All pristine and shiny new. Almost as pretty as a brand new box of crayons.


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It came with the 8” block GoCube, which is a set of mix-and-and match dies to make a boatload of traditional blocks. Each die comes with a block pattern, and then there’s a booklet of patterns in the GoCube box.


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It also came with this book of patterns by Eleanor Burns for a sampler quilt using the dies in the GoCube. I don’t know yet that I’ll do the sampler—I don’t usually like samplers, but this would be an easy and fun way to get used to using the dies in a variety of combinations.


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I was unreasonably tickled by the fact that they have little green ribbon handles on each of the die cases in the GoCube.


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And look at all the other stuff that came too!

The package includes the 2 1/2” strip die and the long cutting mat to go with it.

The pennant dies were a freebie because I’d spent over a certain dollar amount (ahem). I’ve been wanting to do banners appropriate for the various holidays to hang on my mantle in the family room so, bang! (Now I have no more excuses.)

I added the purchase of the 5” die myself. I have a lot of pattern books using jelly rolls and charm packs so I figured having a 5” die as well as the strip die would make it a lot easier to use up some stash. Yes, I’ve been cutting my own right along, but this will be a lot more time-efficient.

(And yes, you can see my shelter-at-home-office-wear slippers. I think I’ve worn real shoes three times in the last four weeks.)


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The AccuQuilt was delivered shortly after lunch. Other than pulling it out of the packing box, I made myself wait to play until I was done with my work day. At the end of my day I was waiting for someone to call me back after he got out of a meeting, so at that point I treated myself to watching the instructional DVD that came with the GoCube.

(And yes, you can see the webcam that I spend most of my day using on end-to-end Zoom calls, sigh.)


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By the time my colleague called me back I’d finished the DVD and read through the Eleanor Burns sampler book as well as the other smaller pattern book that came with the package (it was apparently a very long meeting!).

So once the call was done, bingo—I was off and playing!

I decided to use a charm pack I’d gotten in a Sew Sampler pack that wasn’t a favorite, and then I pulled the half square triangle die because it was exactly the right size to put a 5” square over and get a clean cut. (It was actually a little close on the edges of the die but it worked.) I chopped up the whole charm pack, pulled a few of the triangles together and sewed them together into a pinwheel.

It took me maybe 15 minutes to cut the whole charm pack and I think it only took that long because I’m a newbie. It took about 5 to sew the block together.

OMG, LOOK AT THOSE FREAKING POINTS!!!! And this was without any pinning until the very last bit where I sewed the two sides of the block—I pinned the middle seam. But I don’t know that I would’ve had to. It went together like a dream.

I’m so happy.

(Editor’s note: It’s is just entirely possible that the author of this blog may have already ordered two more dies—one with three different bird types, and an owl die. Because we all know how she feels about pudgy birds.)


Getting Ready for My New Toy

I got a notification last night that my AccuQuilt Go has shipped! Woot!

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Meanwhile, this came in today’s mail.

One of the ideas it has in it, which hadn’t even crossed my mind yet (although I’m sure I’d have gotten there eventually), is to make fabric from sewing a bunch of scraps together and then sending it through the cutter with a die for an extra scrappy quilt. Wouldn’t that be fun? I know it would mean counting the seams as extra layers and such, but what a hoot.

This book cover made me think I may have to eventually buy the Sunbonnet Sue die just for nostalgia’s sake. When I was little, Mom did my bedroom with Holly Hobbie curtains and such (look up 1970s Holly Hobbie for examples). I don’t think she made it, but I remember her talking a lot about how entertained she was by a quilt pattern that showed all the ways Sunbonnet Sue dies—sort of a take on the “Oh No, Mr. Bill” thing (for those of you who get that pop-culture reference; another thing to Google if you don’t).

Later, Mom started a sampler quilt that had a Sunbonnet Sue that represented her, and Overall Sam that represented Dad. I wasn’t interested in finishing the quilt after she passed, but I put each of those blocks in an embroidery hoop as a frame and they hang on the wall of my sewing room. I’ve associated Sunbonnet Sue with my mom ever since.

Normally, something like Sunbonnet Sue wouldn’t be my thing. But those emotional connections run strong and make us do weird things, don’t they?

Lock-down Day 35 (and I finally spent significant time in my sewing room)

Yep, it’s been over a month of almost total self-isolation (with a couple of weeks of quarantine thrown in there to boot). Finally, my energy level and my mental bandwidth were at the point this weekend that I could get into my sewing room for a couple of hours at a stretch!

One of my daughter’s two cats, Copernicus, made herself right at home immediately. The other cat, Nikola, is hanging out on the top step of the basement stairs hissing and growling. Since he’s a black cat and the lights are off in the basement, ther…

One of my daughter’s two cats, Copernicus, made herself right at home immediately. The other cat, Nikola, is hanging out on the top step of the basement stairs hissing and growling. Since he’s a black cat and the lights are off in the basement, there’s a bit of a Halloween atmosphere in that area of the house.

My daughter came home last night to bunk in with us for the forseeable future. We talked back and forth for a couple of weeks about the risks but it came down to the fact that, if any of us is going to get sick, she’d rather be here with us than a three hour drive away. It’s nice having both my kids under my roof during these uncertain times. Plus they both know how to cook now.

With my husband still being sick, and my son spending most of his time in his room gaming with his buddies, it’s nice for me to have someone to talk to in the house again. And she was suitably excited for me about the AccuQuilt.

Once I get my delivery of 1/4” elastic and some interfacing, she and I will be making face masks for the immediate family. I thought about making some for donation but until we know we’re a virus-free house, I don’t think that’s a great idea. I know I can wash them, but there are so many steps between getting them washed and having them wrapped for delivery in a sterilized environment (especially with four furries now in the house), I just think it’s too risky.


Anyway, back to the sewing report!

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You may recall awhile back that I’d cut a bunch of fabric for a baby quilt for my newest little baby niece. At the time she hadn’t been born yet, but she’s with us now! She was born the same weekend we all went into lock-down so we haven’t been able to give her hugs or kisses yet—just a wave from 10’ away when I dropped off some diapers in their driveway, and a bunch of photos. Not knowing exactly when I’ll be able to get this to her, I decided this weekend to at least get the top pieced. Today I got the blocks made. Each block took me—literally—5 minutes to piece together. So stinkin’ easy. I didn’t even bother with pins.

When I first started laying the pieces up on my design wall I was all sorts of sweating the randomization and the directionality of most of the prints until I remembered, “Sashing! There’s sashing!” So that takes a lot of the pressure off fabric placement, although I managed to avoid having two next to each other anyway.

As for the directionality? I decided to lean into it and intentionally put the prints going every which way. There’s no “top” or “bottom” to this quilt.

The photo shows the completed blocks laid out and the sashing strips just laid into the rows (not sewn yet). When I squared up the blocks I lost a little bit so I had to trim up the sashing strips to match. Once I get those sewn in I’ll take new measurements for the horizontal strips because there are cornerstones which will also likely need to get trimmed down.

I’m hoping to get the top fully pieced tomorrow, and then work on finishing up next weekend. Felt really good to dig into some serious sewing time!

A Little Bit 'o Self-Indulgence...

So yesterday’s post ended with the teaser that I was going to share my very early birthday gift to myself. Yep, the birthday isn’t until the very end of August. But I figure, when will I get more time for quilting than I have now while I’m forced not to travel or be in an office or have a slate of meetings I’m driving to and fro from? Sure, I’m on Zoom, sometimes all day, but when I’m done with a Zoom meeting I just shut off my webcam and leave my desk, and two steps later I’m in my sewing room. Heckuva commute.

You know I’ve been thinking about it, so I finally bit.

Here’s the big, very easy hint:

It was on a big sale, plus orders over a certain amount get a free pennant die as well. (I’ve been wanting to make holiday banners for my mantle so that will be nice.) I also bought a 5” die, since a lot of my books and patterns are for jelly rolls and charm packs. I have a smallish collection of scraps (drawers, not bins) and it will be nice to have a fast way to cut them down into easily usable pieces. I’m looking forward to playing with the Eleanor Burns book that uses the 8” Cube dies—that should be fun.

I don’t know how long it will take to get to me, but I’m both excited and nervous about starting to play with it.

‘Cause here’s what I sure do know. If there’s a way to mess up cutting something with the AccuQuilt, I’ll figure out how to do it.

More on the Stratford Puzzle Mystery Quilt

Look, ma, I finally got on the sewing machine again!

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I just completed Month 5 of whatever-year-it-was Cotton Cuts Puzzle Mystery Quilt that I’m doing in the Stratford colorway.

It took me awhile to get the 5a part done—if you’ve been following along at home, that’s the one that I had to sew and re-sew not once, not twice, but apparently three times. When I unsewed it on Saturday and then sewed it back together correctly on Monday morning, I saw tell-tale signs of another ripped out seam along the third side of that same dang red triangle. How did I manage to get it wrong so many times? And I don’t even remember now getting it wrong the first time!

I just have too many very smart things going on in my head. It makes me do stupid things in quilting. That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

I’m mostly proud of myself for actually getting into my sewing room today. I’d had the intention ever since I went to bed last night. “Tomorrow I’ll sew. I’ll have time after work.” Well, yes I did. But then my husband took another couple of steps backwards in his recovery, again, and then my son came down with something—stomach, not sure about anything else. So I was in a bit of a funk, and trying to figure out if I should quarantine myself, and trying to decide what to tell my daughter about coming home this weekend…and I just wanted to curl up in front of the TV with something big and chocolate. But instead, I made myself a good dinner, cleaned up the kitchen, got critical stuff out of the bedroom so I could bunk in my daughter’s room again tonight just so my husband can get a good night’s sleep without worrying about keeping me up, and at 8:45p finally made it into my sewing room. Normally I don’t start sewing that late but I knew I only had eight straight seams left to sew before I could call month 5 finished, so I got it done and dusted before 9p.

Hallelujah. And I do feel better having kept my commitment to myself to sew today.

And tomorrow’s post will have a little update about a self-indulgent very VERY early birthday gift I’m giving myself…

'Rona update and more reading

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The only sewing I’ve gotten done since my last post, almost a month ago now, was unsewing: ripping out the seams from the pieces I’d sewn on backwards, referenced in that past post. I got that done this past Saturday. I’d planned to sew them back together on Sunday but I just wasn’t feeling it. I think it may have been low-grade depression sinking in. I was coming off a week of being down with something, though not sure it was actually The Virus, because they’re only testing people in certain populations or if you end up in the ER.

My husband came down with something about two weeks ago—same issue, but he was pretty sick. So he quarantined himself from the rest of us which meant I moved into my daughter’s bedroom (she’s still up north) and started sharing the kids’ bathroom with my son. Although the room is quite comfortable, I felt displaced, plus my son mostly stays in his bedroom and without my husband around, I spent almost all day alone. I had tremendous sympathy for everyone who is always in that position—and I’m an introvert!

Then I came down with something, somewhat different symptoms, but definitely sick. I had headaches and the cough and the over-reactive lungs (not drastically so), but the biggest issue was fatigue. I could only spend about an hour at my computer every day before I needed to go back to bed. At that point my son pretty much locked himself in his room as the last man standing. Last night, I was past contagious stage and feeling much better, so my husband and I took ourselves off quarantine from each other; I’m back in my own room and my own bathroom, and I suspect my son and I are both a lot happier now. It’s amazing what a difference that made to my mood.

However, low energy aside, I did have a very productive two hours on Easter Sunday completely cleaning out and reorganizing our pantry. With three of us living at home now, and all sorts of people running out for groceries at random times and having to buy whatever was available, the pantry had gotten to be a complete mess. I feel much better having that back under control and was quite pleased to be able to use several items that had gotten buried in the back of shelves to make dinner last night. I also think some bread-making is going to be on my schedule as I found a lot of flour. A. Lot. Of. Flour. No idea.

Reading-wise, I have a few updates. I abandoned the Eric Metarxas book on William Wilberforce (Amazing Grace). It irritated me because Metarxas completely hero-worshipped Wilberforce—nothing the guy did was ever wrong, even when he was a child. I was annoyed. I was surprised because the Luther book was eminently more readable and was more even-handed in his treatment of his subject. I think Amazing Grace was an earlier book so his style hadn’t developed. Anyway, glad I’d gotten it from the library so I could set it aside with no worries. (And now, of course, it’s still sitting on my dining room table as libraries shut down and stopped taking returns a few weeks ago.)

I’ve been doing a lot of reading, so that’s what I can write about at the moment. Top of the “really enjoyed” list is The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz, by Eric Larson. I’ve read several Larsons and have enjoyed most of them immensely. He does nonfiction extremely well. That was the only reason I picked this book from my Book of the Month Club because I’ve never been all that interested in a biography of Churchill. But, true to form, Larson did it with excellence. It focuses on the first year to 18 months of Churchill’s serving as prime minister, through the worst of the blitz. It is a pretty incredible story. And Eric Larson doesn’t hero-worship his main characters. He obviously has a lot of affection and admiration for Churchill but he also addresses the problematic aspects as well.

I’ve read several fiction works as well, but haven’t been blown away by any of them of late. I read both Akata Witch and Akata Warrior by Nnedi Okorafor, the author of the Binti trilogy I loved so well. These two, however, read more awkwardly; I just couldn’t quite embrace these, although that was mostly in comparison to Binti. I did still enjoy them as some light fantasy reading. I also finished (in two days) my other Book of the Month Club pick for last month, The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn. It was just meh for me. It was well-written, but perhaps I’m just getting tired of the unreliable narrator trope. It was clear she was doing Girl on a Train with a Hitchcock Rear Window twist. Even given it was an homage, it could’ve been more original. Still, if you dig the unreliable narrator and like something with twists, you may certainly enjoy it more than I did! I’m about to start another Book of the Month Club book (I chose two for April as I felt like I’d probably have a lot of reading time!): The Library of Legends by Janie Chang. I have high hopes for this one as it ticks a lot of boxes for me: Asian history with Asian legend/folkore, a little bit of fantasy, a little bit of adventure. I’ve really enjoyed a lot of books in this genre in the past (cf The Astonishing Color of After, Pachinko) so hopefully I won’t be disappointed.

By the way, I’ve been doing Book of the Month Club for several years now. I’ve tested out a bunch over the years but this is the only one I’ve stayed subscribed to. If you’re interested, here’s my referral link: https://www.mybotm.com/wq8wna0bwoo?show_box=true.

I’ve added a widget to the side of this blog (the web version) in which you’ll see my “currently reading” shelf in GoodReads. It’s usually a mix of work and play. I’m trying to get better again about actually writing reviews but they don’t tend to be long. I don’t track quilt books in Goodreads anymore—though I probably should. I used to when I was buying a lot more books, so that I wouldn’t end up with duplicates. Now I might buy one or two a year (just ordered one yesterday, in fact).

Hopefully my next blog post will be back to quilting!

#CVSI Coronavirus Sew-in and some reading

Too soon?

As you may recall from last week’s post, I had expected to be busy with work events all day yesterday and most of today. Then we had our first couple of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Rochester.

Bam. Everything cancelled.

To be honest, I’m more concerned about the repercussions if I pick it up and then spread it than I am the consequences of getting sick myself. But after the last few months in which I was sick for a significant period of time in December, then again in January, and then again in February, catching every single bug that made its way through, I am feeling a bit fatalistic about the fact that I likely will catch this. My theory is that working from home for nearly 20 years lowered my immune system and now that I’ve been “released to the wild” with this new job, around boatloads of people every week, my body doesn’t know what to do with itself. And, frankly, I’m just sick of being sick. So I’m doin’ it hermit-style.

I also have one staffperson with a compromised immune system and a second one with 5 kids under 10 at home so, after the school system in the suburb in which our offices are located announced their closure for the next two weeks, I told the staff to work from home for the foreseeable future. They’re both very grateful. I’ll probably still go into my office on occasion because heck, I’ll be the only one there, and I’m taking advantage of all this “found time” to work on finally getting my filing system into shape.

In any case, yesterday (Saturday) I mostly read. I was oddly sleepy all day. I finished The Bookshop on the Shore by Jenny Colgan. It’s a cute enough chick-lit book. Although it’s partially a romance, it focuses more on the main character herself, her relationship with her son and other children who come into her care, and her friendships. The romance almost an afterthought, which I prefer. Good characters, fun writing. It’s a sequel of sorts to The Bookshop on the Corner, also cute. Both are good reads for when you just want to relax, enjoy, and not be challenged.

I also read most of this morning. I’m still reading Children of Virtue and Vengeance, by Tomi Adeyemi. I actually hope to finish that this afternoon. So good! As soon as I finish that, the next book on my library stack is Amazing Grace: William Wilbeforce and the Heroic Campaign to End Slavery, by Eric Metaxas. This one has been on my to-read list ever since I read Metaxas’ Martin Luther last summer. He writes a great biography. I actually wasn’t all that interested in Luther until someone recommended the book to me so I thought, “What the heck.” And I ended up thoroughly enjoying it. I’m also about halfway through The Bat by Jo Nesbo. This is a highly reviewed mystery series with a Norwegian main character, detective Harry Hole (pronounced Ho-lay). Since I’m really into wonderfully noir TV mystery series from various Scandinavian countries available on Acorn TV, I thought it would be fun. I’m having a little difficulty really getting into it, though. Fortunately I got it through my local library (using Libby) onto my Kindle so I don’t have any money invested in it. We’ll see how it ends. If it ends well, I’ll probably read the second book in the series to see if character development brings it up a notch or two.


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And did I sew? Yes, I got about an hour in this afternoon. I’m not as sleepy-tired as I was yesterday so I thought I’d be able to get a solid session in.

I got month 4 of the way-overdue BOTM done.

I know—as a block on its own it’s fairly wild. But I think I can imagine how some pieces may come together in the end. I like doing a BOTM this way rather than other ones I’ve done where you do four of one block one month, 2 of another one another month…this has me intrigued. “How is that weird-butt piece going to fit in?”


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I then got started on month 5. But my husband came in to talk to me partway through and after I finished piecing the second step, I realized I’d done it backwards. And immediately it stopped being fun for me. So, abiding by my new rules, I put it down and walked away.

After all, I’m going to be home all week now…

#RDOSD: Random Day Off Sew Day

Or, perhaps more accurately, “Sew for a couple of hours.”

I took today (Tuesday) off because it was the only day this week I didn’t have any meetings scheduled and I’m working straight through this coming weekend. “Day off” is a bit loosely defined as I did work for a little bit on some critical things, but not for all that long, and I felt more relaxed once they were taken care of, so it’s all the name of reducing stress.

I started out my day off with a serious reading session. I finished the novel I’ve been working on, The Girl with the Louding Voice, a debut work by author Abi Daré. It was my Book of the Month Club pick from a couple of months ago. It was very good, although I felt like there were some inconsistencies here and there. Still, especially for a first novel, I don’t have too much to quibble with. Excellent sense of character, location, and time. I do recommend it, if you’re looking for a good read.

As soon as I finished that, I picked up the next novel on my stack (this time from a library so I’ve got a time limit!), Children of Virtue and Vengeance, by Tomi Adeyemi. I didn’t realize I’d entered a bit of an African novelist phase but there it is. This is the second book in her Legacy of Orisha series, and since it was just released in 2019, I expect I’ll be left on a cliff-hanger until the third book comes out. I’ve read enough fantasy in my life to know they usually come in threes. The only difficulty is that I read the first book probably a year ago, so it took me a few chapters to remember all the whos and whats. I highly recommend these books, as I do the Binti series by Nnedi Okorafor. They’re both young adult fantasy series but oh, so good!

After lunch, I granted myself a nap. With the drastic weather changes we’ve had the last few days my sinuses have been making their presence known, so I’m not sleeping well. Fortunately, Auggie is also worn out today after my son took him on a long walk with friends yesterday, so there was no mid-nap barking at squirrels to wake me up.


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Then I was ready for sewing. Or, rather, cutting. I now have all the pieces cut for the baby quilt. I had just enough scrap fabric left to do a small handful of 2 1/2” strips—I may do some coordinating piece of some sort, depending on when I get the main quilt done.

I got the blocks out to do another of my BOTM projects from 2018 (pictured in a previous post), but my headache came back. So it’s laid out in case I get a second wind today or have unexpected time some other day this week.


Auggie enjoying the open window in my sewing room.

Auggie enjoying the open window in my sewing room.

Time for more reading and a cup of tea. It’s nice that it’s rainy out—keeps me from feeling too bad about not taking advantage of the 50-degree-weather by trying to be outside.


A little bit on a Saturday

So the nice thing about having a clean sewing room is that I can actually sew for a few minutes when I get them. Today I did my usual morning Saturday things but by the time I got home from the grocery store and had lunch, I was ready for a nap. No idea why—I feel like I’d slept fine last night and I didn’t overly tax myself this morning. However, since I didn’t have any pressing reason not to take a nap and since tomorrow will be a full work day again (visiting a church in the morning and doing a Q&A with them during adult ed time, then attending a church dinner with a different church tomorrow night), I succumbed. I didn’t nap for too long but it was somewhat helpful.

However, it did cut into my planned sewing time.

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That being said, after doing the easy Tetris puzzle work of the die-cut blocks of the month yesterday, I felt ready to tackle something very, very complicated: a baby quilt that’s all big squares and rectangles, LOL. The baby is due next weekend, if she’s on time—which her mother is anxiously hoping she will be at this point. I’m doubting I’ll get this done by the time the little one comes but it’s a quick-to-piece pattern so it shouldn’t take all that long.

I got about half the cutting done today. Isn’t the sloth on the left just adorbs? That’s the fabric that grabbed me—I’m using it as the backing too. I just went with the rest of the prints from the line and added in a couple of tone-on-tones for the sashing. No real thought went into this. In fact, I think I’m even using the pattern that was hanging as a store sample above the line, although I’ll give myself a little bit of credit as the sample was done in other fabrics. See? I can think for myself, at least a little bit. Still, it’ll be stinking cute and I don’t feel the need to have a ton of pride in the “Lookie what I can do” department when it’s done.

After all, as I said a couple of posts ago, my main goal is to just have fun these days. And this is fun, mostly because I keep grinning at the ridiculously cute fabric.

Okay, time to figure out what I’m making for dinner—probably one of my “open the package and toss it in the oven to cook” pre-fab dinners from Wegmans—I’m still a little sleepy. Besides, that way I can get to the sit-with-a-novel-and-tea-while-it-cooks part of dinner preparation a little faster.

Not sure what my schedule is this week but I’m going to have to grab some time off at some point as I’m booked all next weekend. So if all goes well, stay tuned for Random Sewing Reports in the middle of the week!

#CDSI: Comp Day Sew-In

It’s Friday, and it’s a comp day off that I’ve been hanging onto by the skin of my teeth. Oh, so many meetings could’ve gotten scheduled today and, in fact, I briefly did schedule one that’s time sensitive and then decided I really needed to be true to my decision to take today off, so I emailed the person and rescheduled for Monday. That’s soon enough.

I’m writing the first part of this blog first thing in the morning as I’m waiting for a plumber to show up to replace our kitchen faucet. For a variety of reasons I won’t go into here, we can’t do it ourselves, much as that irked my husband to no end. In any case, while he’s here I’m keeping the dogs in my home office/sewing room with me so they’re not all up in his grill as he’s on his back under our sink. Auggie, in particular, would find that endlessly fascinating.


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  • So my first #CDSI task is reinstalling a whole bunch of download add-ons I had in my Electric Quilt program up until I reformatted my computer about two years ago. Fortunately EQ keeps everything you’ve ever bought online so you can just download it again. While I was at it, I took advantage of a sale they’re having (15 more hours as of this writing!) on Stash Fabric collections and bought all four 2019 collections. With the sale, I essentially got all four for the price of 2 3/4. And then I played with EQ for a bit until the plumber was done. Opening one of Kimberly Einmo designs and then messing around with randomizing the color and mapping it to fabrics from Stash? Oh, what fun! That entertained me for quite some time.


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A couple hours later: Paid the plumber, ate breakfast, did a little work and a little reading, ate lunch with my son (he’s living at home with us again for a bit while he’s in transition), and practiced my Spanish. I’m using the Rosetta Stone app. We have a lot of Spanish-speaking churches in our denomination so I wouldn’t mind being able to at least sound like I’m making an attempt, even if I never get fluent. I’m not sure I have the patience or time at this point to shoot for fluency. Meanwhile, ella tiene una bicicleta roja. (I’m sure that will come up in conversation frequently.) Now—off to sew!


Success! I spent a couple of hours sewing—woot! I decided to work on blocks from the 2018 Cotton Cuts BOTM. I only ever got the first month done, and month 2 started. Today I finished month 2 and month 3. Here’s the silver lining of being WAY behind on a BOTM—I don’t have to worry about spoilers!


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I’m trying not to have misgivings about the random triangles that were left over. Nothing is missing from either set of blocks so I’m just going to pretend they were a door prize for opening the envelope.

#CDSI complete! Off now to have dinner with a couple of my sisters.

Boy, it was nice to be playing with fabric again.

Trying to jumpstart my quilty but cutting myself some slack

Yep, life gets away from you. But it’s all about taking the small steps, right?

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As you can tell, it’s been a long time since I posted—it’s been a long time since I got back in my sewing room. In fact, the day I made the last post is the last time I did anything at all quilt-related.

This (still-relatively-new) position hit me like a ton of bricks. Although I’m not feeling as overwhelmed now—I can actually answer a lot of questions now, with a reasonable confidence that I know what I’m talking about—I’m still having difficulty sorting out the schedule.

In fact, this morning Outlook sent me one of their little analysis things about my working habits in February. 3 days. I had 3 days where I didn’t work “outside of working hours.” Now, to be clear, “working hours” don’t always apply in my world as I’m working with churches and volunteers so a lot happens on weekends and evenings. But regardless of definition, I’ve not been good about making sure I’m taking commensurate time off.

So I’m writing this blog post on a Monday morning, after I realized I have calls all afternoon and into the evening, and could legitimately—and should legitimately—take some time to myself for a few hours before the calls start.

When I decided to take the morning, I thought, “What would feel the most satisfying to do right now?” And the answer came immediately, “Cleaning my sewing room.” It was fun to open up the couple of Sew Sampler boxes I hadn’t gotten to and put away the goodies inside, and it feels really good just to be touching fabric, rulers, and rotary cutters, even if I’m not producing anything with them. As for the rest of the cr*p stacked on the cutting table? It was satisfying to stash it away where it belonged so it wasn’t in my face every time I walked in the room.

I’ve designated Friday as another day off to make up for another busy weekend, and I’m hanging onto it by the skin of my teeth. My plan for at least part of the day? Mess up this cutting table again but for realsies!

That being said, I’ve also cut myself some serious slack in my quilting expectations. My last post was about a quilt I was going to make for my niece’s wedding. That wedding is at the beginning of April. About 6 weeks ago, I admitted to myself there was no freaking way I was going to be able to get that done, even if I vastly simplified the pattern. I also have a new baby niece on the way in early March. Their baby shower was a couple of weeks ago. I’d bought fabric and a pattern for that one too. Finally decided I wasn’t going to worry about getting it done in time for their shower. Will I get it done by the time the baby is born? Who knows?

I’d have loved to give them quilts. But it would have so totally stressed me out, it wouldn’t have served the purpose that quilting is supposed to serve in my life. For the time being, I’m only quilting if it can be relaxed and fun.

New Rules:

  • Being more attentive to my creative life as emotional and mental recovery

  • Consequently: Taking time to play with fabric and/or thread (embroidery counts) every week

  • Only do either of the above if they’re relaxing and fun, not stressful and obligatory.

Now that my sewing room is ready for some fun, I have to decide what I’ll work on. Do I do a new, fun, fast, easy project? Do I work on the BOTMs I have stacked up? Do I finish up a UFO or two, to get them out of my head? I’m trying to decide what sounds enjoyable, not what I feel I should do. What are you working on?

The Lost Is Found!

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Or, at least, partially found…

After I finished posting that last blog post I was reading through older posts to see how many times I had actually gotten in my sewing room, and I found reference to having received the fabrics for the wedding quilt. Once I saw the picture of them, I immediately found them on my shelves. They blended in too well with the rest of the fabric!

I also found my print out of the design, which is based on Judy Martin’s Shakespeare in the Park. I’d resized it, though, and hadn’t done the borders the way she had hers (I just want to do a simple binding to help it look a little more fresh and clean). Unfortunately, I only printed off the design and the fabric requirements, not the block design or cutting instructions. I still have hopes it exists somewhere in my computer, though! I shall persevere!

One step forward, three (or more back)...

So once again I’m taking baby steps towards getting quilting back in my life. I cleaned my sewing room this afternoon…well, just don’t look closely at that one corner…and was ready to print off the design I’d created on EQ a long time ago for an upcoming wedding quilt so I could get my head organized around it. I could swear I’d also taken advantage of a big sale online at one point to pick up some fabric for it.

That would seem like a step forward, right? Cleaning up, sorting fabric, getting ready to go?

I booted up my computer, only to find that somewhere along the way I’d had to reformat and not only was EQ8 not on there, but neither was the design file. Gone.

And even though I cleaned my sewing room, I can’t find that fabric anywhere. Did I even actually order it? Apparently only the Shadow knows at this point, ‘cause I sure don’t. I’ll have to spend some time online tonight digging around my various fabric site accounts to see if I can track down whether or not I did order it and I just can’t figure out where I stashed it when I came. That being said, I only have one wall of shelves on which I keep fabric. Can’t have gone far if it does exist. Goes to show my level of distraction this past year.

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Plus, in the detritus on my cutting table, I found where I’d stuck my little container of embroidery supplies for my embroidery sampler quilt I’m working on—and remembered that Auggie had used it as a chew toy at one point so the lid doesn’t stay latched on the container and one of the corners is entirely gone. (Luckily he only chewed on the outside because the inside could’ve been bad news for him!)(Second parentheses: Auggie has also gone through three TV remotes and a few pairs of rubber-handled scissors in recent months. Definitely in his teenager phase, the dope.) So I have to track down a new solution for that, although it’s not a stopper of making progress. Just a little less convenient.


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Last weekend I took Friday and Saturday fully off. Other than when I was out of state on vacation at the end of August, it’s really hard for me to get a full day off from work, let alone two in a row. I was also alone that weekend as my husband went to visit my daughter to go hiking in the Adirondacks. It was a gorgeous weekend. I intended to do some sewing. Instead, I nested. I spent most of Friday repotting every indoor plant in the house. Believe you me, they needed it. And they’re all looking really enthusiastic now. Saturday I had some other more mundane housework to do, but it was such a beautiful day that after I got that squared away, I hopped in my car and went to three different farm markets to get seasonal decorations for outside and inside the house. I had a great time. Those two days made a huge difference in my spirit, even if I didn’t ever get into my sewing room.


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My other exciting news? I’m finally back in a heel for the first time since my foot nonsense began!

No, it’s not a particularly stunning nor even interesting heel, but it’s just enough to make me look that little bit more dressy-professional when I’m out and about doing my thing. These are Trotters brand and they’re made for people with a wide variety of foot problems.

I got them from the Healthy Feet store. I also got a pair of light leather flats that were incredibly comfortable and supportive but the leather was discolored so I’m sending them back for an exchange.

I don’t recall if I mentioned this in my last post but my podiatrist told me I have arthritis in the entire foot. Most pain now comes from the center top and that’s what’s been causing the bruising and swelling. Cortisone shots and Aleve to the rescue. Digging through my stacks of shoes I’d amassed trying to find anything that worked is what finally sent me online, willing to pay a whole lot more money for a much smaller shoe wardrobe but paring it down to what won’t make me have to ice my foot at night. I just put about 10 pairs of shoes in a donate bag—all of them almost worked, at least enough to fool me into buying them and trying to wear them a few times in hoping they’d eventually wear in or whatever. But I’m done playing these reindeer games.

So that’s an update. Such as it is. I’m out of town the next two weekends—first for vacay with my husband, second for work—so I still won’t be getting much, if any, sewing done. But I hope to at least get my head organized again around that blasted wedding quilt, as well as a very exciting baby quilt I just recently found out I get to make! (I have the pattern and fabrics for that one all neatly stored and labeled in a bin, so no worries about that one getting lost!)

Progress on the "Hunting and Gathering" front

So I spent most of this week moving our offices to a new location. In 90 degree, 90% humidity weather. Although we had some volunteers, I was still lifting and hauling furniture and cartons and such for a few days straight as I packed, we moved, and I unpacked. Needless to say, when the weekend got here, I was toast. It was time for a relaxed, straight-up weekend off. I even cut errands to the bare minimum.

(Top pic: old office mid-packing. Middle pic: new office after moving in. Bottom pic: panorama shot of new office with everything put away. Eventually the side with the round table with be set up for teleconferencing and the side with two chairs in the upper right corner will be set up as more of a living-room feel for smaller meetings. My actual workspace is all in the far right—same amount of space as I took up in the last office, despite this being four times the size! The administrative office is separate, and smaller, but still bigger than we used to have, and we have a small reception area leading to both offices. It’s a great space and I look forward to when we’re finally able to afford to fully furnish and decorate it! One step at a time….)

I did manage to get in some much-needed friend-time. I’ve recently reconnected with a high-school friend, who had married another high-school friend right out of high school. I actually knew her now-husband better than her in high school because he and I were in several classes together starting in elementary school; I saw her less often. Now that we’ve reconnected, though, I said to her, “I’m wondering why I wasn’t closer friends with you in high school!” It wasn’t that we weren’t friends—we were more along the lines of friendly acquaintances. When we were together, we got along great. We just weren’t together all that much. We’re fixing that now. She and her husband raise Siberian Huskies. They have 18 adult dogs and do their own breeding, very carefully, and only once a year or less. They have very strict rules about only having one female have two litters total, if that, because it takes such a toll on the mom’s body. They’re also very careful about who gets one of their puppies. They’re basically dog-lovers first who then offer some very loved, cared for puppies into the world on occasion.

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They currently have a litter of pups who are about 3 or 4 weeks old and in need of socializing. And I was in need of puppy breath. So my BFF/BQF Katie (another one of our circle who all grew up together), Katie’s daughter and I went out to visit the puppies on Saturday.

I discovered that Husky puppies aren’t quite as face-oriented as Springer Spaniels (the puppies I grew up with) or Golden Retrievers (the puppies I’ve had as an adult), so getting my fill of puppy breath was a little more work with these little guys. But going nose-to-nose with them garnished enough nose nibbles and face licks that I got enough to get by. They were absolute sweeties. And hearing their carers/owners talk about their pack was a joy—they clearly love them so much.

Boy, did I need that puppy breath.

But this is not, all signs pointing to the contrary, a dog blog.


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Because I was toast, I just couldn’t get my mojo up for any actual sewing again this weekend. Instead, I managed to push some UFOs forward in a non-sewing way.

I dropped the two jelly-roll race quilts off at an LQS for machine quilting. It felt good to get them off the hanger in my sewing room.


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I looked at the LQS for fabrics for backings for the other two pieced tops I have ready to go, but didn’t find anything that appealed and I was running late for meeting my friends for Puppy-a-looza so I bagged it for then. As I was driving home, my face covered in puppy licks, I realized it was too late to stop at any other quilt shops that afternoon. Given how little time I have to actually go shopping, I decided I was going to have to risk doing it online.


Backing for shabby-chic sampler quilt

Backing for shabby-chic sampler quilt

This afternoon I did a little looking around at various online fabric places and finally found what I think will work at The Fat Quarter Shop. It’s tricky trying to match colors in a physical quilt with what you’re seeing on your computer screen, but since I wasn’t going for an exact match and rather a “coordinate with” type of fabric, I think it should work. Plus, it’s only the back.


Backing for taupe sampler

Backing for taupe sampler

I’m not 100% convinced I have binding fabric for either of these two quilts but I decided that’s a problem for another day. I didn’t have enough puppy breath built up in my system to try to take care of that today too.

Not even a seam…

No sharp things were involved in today’s short stint in the sewing room.

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This weekend is completely unscheduled but I also know better than to assume that would mean hours in the sewing room. Groceries needed to be gotten. Clothes needed putting away. And my main focus these last few days has been wrangling my work task list into something less overwhelming, so yes, I spent a little bit of time “working,” although it was all in the name of stress relief. Feeling like things may be dropping through cracks was giving me grief, so a few hours on the weekend spent making sure my organizational system is in order is basically self-care at this point.

So I managed about 20 minutes in the sewing room. Since I was also having an attack of the sleepies at the time, I decided it was safest not to work with rotary cutters or needles. So I measured.

These two UFOs will need a trip to the fabric store to procure backing fabrics. Measurements were taken and math done.

The UFO on the top already has backing fabric but I had lost steam by then and didn’t even feel up to measuring and math.

Tomorrow is another day.

Well, a little is better than nothing…

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Going into the long weekend of the 4th of July, I had dreams of actually getting a chunk of time to spend in my sewing room.

It was not to be.

I think I managed about a half hour. But still, that was enough time to put together the backing for the other of my jelly roll race quilts to be taken to a long-arm quilter.

Gee, look at that. I sewed one whole seam. Look at me go.

(Believe it or not, I had ironed the fabric. So much for that.)


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And yet, despite the snail’s pace sewing, I still seem to find a way to collect for my stash. I’m blaming this one on those two wonderful books I posted about a few days ago. They have some wonderful designs for 2 1/2” strips! So, yes, when Missouri Star Quilt Company had some Laurel Burch on one of it’s daily deals, I bit.

I’m about to crack open the book with a cup of tea. It’s all about the dreaming, after all.

A girl can dream...

Judging by today’s mail, one might think I actually plan on doing more sewing soon.  

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Unfortunately, this is a travel weekend so nothing is happening again for awhile, but at least I have pretty new books to help me dream.  

#CDSI (Comp Day Sew-In)

I did it! Look at me! I spent time in my sewing room!

It’s amazing what happens when you actually clean your sewing room, doesn’t it? With it all ready to go, it didn’t take much convincing to get myself back into it.

It wasn’t an incredibly productive day, but it was productive enough.

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If you recall, I’d once again signed up for the Cotton Cuts Puzzle Mystery Quilt for this spring, a pattern named “Stratford.” I’m doing the Juliet colorway, which is 1930s-inspired. I’ve been collecting the monthly shipments in a pile in my sewing room and finally sat down to knock out the Month 1 clue today.

They come with a swatch sheet to keep track of which fabrics are which throughout the process, clear instructions, and the pre-cut fabric pieces. It’s the Legos of quilting. When I’m functioning at as little brain-power as I am right now, this is exactly what can get me to my machine. They’d be really fast to put together if you wanted, but I am moving very slowly these days so it was a bit of a meditative approach for me this afternoon. Just what the doctor ordered.

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Those pieces eventually (meditatively) became this…

So unusually sweet for me.

I may have to give this one away when it’s done, we’ll see. Meanwhile, it’s nice to work outside of my usual color choices. Especially when someone else has done all the thinking for me.

I decided to take all the months’ clues out of the envelopes and put them in the bin (they’re in plastic bags within the envelopes). In doing so, I found the advertisement for the fall Mystery Puzzle Quilt. So I bit. I’ll be doing the large again (72x54) like I am this spring.


 
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It’s named “Cosmos” this time, and I’m doing the Reiki colorway.

I love the aqua batiks—those aren’t at all unusual for me to use. The salmony-pink is a little outside my typical zone, though, as I’m not a pastel kind of person, so once again I thought this would be a good opportunity for me to do something a little off my normal beaten path.

And I doubt I’ll have much more time in the fall than I do now, so the Lego Approach to Quilting will once again come in handy.

 
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The final bit of sewing I got done before I hit a wall (and it hit hard!) was to get the backing pieced and pressed for this jelly roll strip quilt that you may recall from way back when.

Not very exciting, but one step closer to having another finished project. Once I pay someone to nearly-finish it for me, that is.

I have a second jelly roll strip quilt I did at the same time that I thought I’d also prep today but, like I said, the wall got to me before I could do more than pull it off the shelf and locate the backing fabric I’d set aside to use for it. Still, knowing what my next sewing needs to be once I get back in my sewing room will make it that much quicker. It’s a fast back to piece (cut 4 yards of fabric in half, sew it back together in a different direction, good to go).

And with Mom back where she’s supposed to be, all is right in Auggie’s world.

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