Saturday, January 21, 2017

The Geese are flying!

Temecula Quilt CO has a super duper way to make those geese
fly right off your machine.  

And then here is another way those geese blocks can be used.
Robert Kaufman's  website has inspiration in color


Generations quilt patterns has a different method of build geese blocks
Quilters Cache has a paper pieced method

So many ways to make those geese fly!


So we come to  Ocean Waves QAL MamaSpark

Ocean Waves Coloring Grid 


Friday, January 20, 2017

Another UFO Bites The Dust!

Oh yeah, I'm on a roll--well, maybe, not knocking them out of the
ball park yet, but I've tackled another UFO and
Nailed IT!  Yes, under the belt, bit the dust, finished--
So excited to have another quilt top ready for the quilter--
don't know if she's ready for me though!

I begun work on this summer of 2016 with the
Bonnie Hunter Gals sewing group and then we headed back
to home base and the box of finished blocks set idly by
in their cute little container.  This pattern is
"Hopscotch, Butterscotch" from
Bonnie Hunter's book 
Adventures With Leaders & Enders

I love the piano keys border--I tried to use different fabrics
in order to use up scraps--
here's to another UFO being a FO! 


Thursday, January 19, 2017

Wool Work Project

Do you like to do wool work?  Or Maybe you would like to learn how
to do wool work.  Here is your chance to participate in this 
free monthly block program.  On the 2nd Friday of each month, until the end of the year you can download the pattern.  

Please note you have 30 days to "click & print" out each pattern before the next month's block is released!  After that 30 days, it will only be available to purchase as a pattern/kit.  Be sure to check back often and print off your patterns!!!!  Buttermilk Basin also has kits & threads available!  Enjoy the world of wool stitching!

Here is the first pattern--and you're off to a good start!
Happy stitching!

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Can I Share?

I LOVE my group meetings--whether it is a weavers' or quilters
gathering, I'm always in awe of the hands that make beautiful things.
At our January weavers meeting, we didn't have much show and tell
but what a delight it was to praise those who did accomplish
a goal--like Karen, a new weaver several years ago--and all she
wanted to learn to do was weave a baby blanket!
Okay, Karen, show it off!
Her first baby blanket!!

She was worried about this small mark of "creativity"--what was the cause?
Most likely, she skipped a few warp threads when she passed her
weft shuttle through--we call it a 'design element' and
she'll pay more attention the next time she throws the shuttle.
and the 'tracking' in this is absolutely bonus!
Tracking comes in plain weave with the twist and ply of the yarn--
washing brings out that element.  Who worries about pattern
weave when you can get such lovely tracking?

Lisa is learning to use her ridged heddle loom for braids or bands--
she wants to use this length for strap for her yoga mat--fabulous!

and then there are the quilters!  This lovely batik pineapple pattern was
on Judy's machine--she was quilting this for her church's raffle--

The applique was added as an after thought--
doesn't matter in my book, I'm there for those raffle tickets
when they're available.

Karen is planning her baby quilt for new addition.
Here are her fabrics

and this will be the pattern--from Elanor Burns book--Trip Around The World.
It will certainly be a lovely quilt for the new baby.
This video gives you an insight as to the process, using strips.



Annette was doing her hand stitching with her English Paper technique--
she is working on her flower garden quilt.
This is an easy take along project

Camilla brought along her finished Texas quilt--we exchanged the
5" squares of Texas theme fabric in the fall--(have to say, mine
are still in a bag--who knows where!)

Great quilting theme with Texas stars!  Okay, we are off to a good
start for 2017!  

Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Natural Jeans......................

I don't usually subscribe to these magazines, but I have a couple
of subscriptions so I can send the paper version to my 96 yr. old
mother, who doesn't have much entertainment but
watching television and reading magazines.

I thumbed through the issues and this one peeked my interest--
what?  someone is bringing  indigo back to farmers.  As a person who
worked as Education Curator on an Louisiana indigo plantation, this
article came to life for me.  
Indigo is different from all other natural dyes (apart from shellfish purple)in that it needs no mordant (a substance used to set dyes on fabrics); it is insoluble and is deposited on the fibers as microscopic particles without needing to form a chemical bond with them. The chemical properties of indigo dye remained baffling well into the 19th century. It was so mysterious and challenging to work with that, in many cultures, folklore arose around the dyeing process. In Bhutan, pregnant women were not allowed near the vat in case the unborn baby stole the blues, and women in Morocco believed the only way to deal with a particularly challenging vat was to start telling outrageous lies. All this trouble was worth the final result. Once dyed, indigo is so colorfast that it can last for centuries or even millennia.

The process from turning the leaf form into this powdery blue magical dye was laborious.
Slaves spent their time walking through the blue sludge every day turning their hands, feet and
every body part that touched the plant, blue.  Even today when you work with indigo,
you will come away with blue hands.  It is always like a magic act when you
use indigo vat to dye--
But, this is the only natural dye that will give you BLUE!
Here we have an industrious company bringing farmers together for
this venture.
They even sell their dyes to independent dyers like me.  
You like that pair of jeans you wear, then you can thank
an indigo vat!




Monday, January 16, 2017

How's Your Day Going?


Are you feeling blue?  Down in the dumps?  Stuck in a funk?
Could this be your Blue Monday? 

The holidays are over, New Year’s resolutions have been broken, and you can’t seem to shake your cold. Tired and overwhelmed, or just downright depressed? You're not alone. Blue Monday — typically the third Monday of the new year — is called the most depressing day on the calendar.
Started as part of a publicity campaign by Sky Travel, this notable date was first published in a press release by psychologist Dr. Cliff Arnall, who at the time worked at the Centre for Lifelong Learning, part of Cardiff University in Wales. Arnall devised a literal mathematical formula to arrive at the Blue Monday theory. It factors in weather, debt and time since Christmas, timing of New Year’s resolutions, low motivational levels, and the urgent feeling that you need to take action. It also reflects that Monday is regarded as the worst day of the week with many dreading the prospect of returning to work.
But the third Monday in January may be redeemed in some eyes. The Guardian calls Arnall's mathematical formula "arguably hokey." As The Guardian reports, "This dubious bit of math was used to give academic weight to a press release put out by Sky Travel to encourage people to cheer themselves up with a holiday."
How to combat the blues on Blue Monday? Arnall advises via the Daily Mail: people can "use the day as a springboard for a higher quality life. For example keeping Christmas spending to a strict budget next year will make you less depressed in the last week of January."

    Conversely, the happiest day of the year falls around midsummer. On the upside? There are some Blue Monday enthusiasts who believe it actually falls on the Monday of the last full week in January — which would mean we'd celebrate it next week. So now you have time to prepare.

    Sunday, January 15, 2017

    Yankee Diary


    Each month in 2017 you'll get a pieced or applique pattern for a Civil War reproduction sampler inspired by several patriotic quilts from the time.

    Barbara Brackman has been reading the diary of Caroline Cowles Richards who worked on many quilts in Canandaigua, New York, in the 1850s and '60s. She wrote about them in her diary, which also gives us insight into life for fortunate girls in the mid-19th century.

    We'll go to upstate New York for our time travel in a Yankee Diary. Sarah and Carrie begin the War in parallel fashion, a little bit spoiled, a little bit self-absorbed. Both matured under very different circumstances.
    the last Wednesday of January,
    which is January 25, 2017---to see the first block.





    It's Time--

     It’s time to think about greeting cards I’ll send out this year.  Most years, if I’m not feeling pressed, I’ll create my own cards.  One ye...