Wednesday, June 13, 2018

The Color is PURPLE!

I'm not a purple person, but I have so many friends that are!


If you have been following along, you will find this is the sixth bear in the
colorful game from Clever Chameleon--

What does it mean if you like purple?  Dress in purple?  Eat purple foods?
Dye your hair purple?  Just love the color Purple with all your might!!

Purple combines the calm stability of blue and the fierce energy of red. The color purple is often associated with royalty, nobility, luxury, power, and ambition. Purple also represents meanings of wealth, extravagance, creativity, wisdom, dignity, grandeur, devotion, peace, pride, mystery, independence, and magic.
The color purple is a rare occurring color in nature and as a result is often seen as having sacred meaning. Lavender, orchid, lilac, and violet flowers are considered delicate and precious.
The color purple has a variety of effects on the mind and body, including uplifting spirits, calming the mind and nerves, enhancing the sacred, creating feelings of spirituality, increasing nurturing tendencies and sensitivity, and encouraging imagination and creativity.
Purple is associated spirituality, the sacred, higher self, passion, third eye, fulfillment, and vitality. Purple helps align oneself with the whole of the universe. Different shades, tints, and hues of purple have different meanings. Light purple hues represent feminine energy and delicacy, as well as romantic and nostalgic feelings. Dark purple hues evoke feelings of gloom, sadness, and frustration. Bright purple hues suggest riches and royalty.
Light purple or lavender is a feminine, graceful, elegant color that has long been associated with refined, wealthy women. While the color purple represents royalty, lavender represents beauty and femininity. Lavender is considered to be the “grown-up” pink. Its lighter lavender shades have a sacred place in nature, with lavender, orchid, lilac, and violet flowers considered delicate and precious. The color lavender suggests uniqueness and specialness without the deep mystery of the color purple.

Monday, June 11, 2018

Fall Into A QAL

Summer days are long and HOT!
Here is a quilt along that might give you some
'cool' thoughts as you work your way through
the blocks


Inquiring Quilter is hosting summer long whimsical
blocks, which are released from a different designers
every two weeks 

Just take a look at this hedgehog--isn't he cutest thing?!
fun to create and the idea came from Vanda imagination

Janda Bend has designed a harvest basket--what will fill your
basket?  

Saturday, June 9, 2018

EPP--We Might Join In..................


Oh Boy!  I'm in trouble!  I saw this delightful EPP 
(English paper pieced) block on Temecula Quilt Company
blog--love their creative quilts--mostly small wonders!

Not only was the block fascinating, but when you look at 
the overall quilt--WOW!  remarkable!--
We have a couple of our expatchers doing EPP, but they
are doing hexagons--you can get some great looks
but  EPP didn't turn me on until I saw this!
I found a couple of You Tube videos that are
helpful with the stitching--








Thursday, June 7, 2018

Are You A Block Head?

Here is Round 2 of Block Heads--I didn't participate in the
first round, but this sounds like a fun way to sew this summer.
Each Wednesday for the next few weeks, a different designer
will post their design for the week--
WOW!  Such a chance to make some wonderful blocks
from creative people...


Moda Block Heads 2 Details:

  • Free PDF patterns post every Wednesday beginning today, June 6, 2018
  • The Moda Cutting Table blog will direct you to the designer’s page who will be sharing that week’s block
  • I’ll be posting my version of the week’s block each Wednesday.  On the week’s when the block is my own design I’ll also be sharing tips and tricks for piecing and fabric selection. (The other designers will share those ideas when they post about their block designs).
  • There is also a Basic Instructions PDF you can download now with instructions for some of the techniques used in this year’s blocks.  Find it here.

Here is the first block--continue onto Lynne's blog
to pick up the PDF

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Tour-de-Sock!


Tour De Sock is off and knitting!! 

Have fun and raise money for a worthy cause in this speed-knitting competition based on the famous bike race with a similar name! Competitors will race to finish a pair of socks in each of six stages earning points for finishing the fastest. Registration fees (less paypal and shipping expenses for prizes) will go to Doctors Without Borders to help continue their excellent work of providing medical care to those in need around the globe
Please join us in the Ravelry Group for any off-season news. Registration for TDS 2018 is open!
Such fun knitting socks as fast as you can--prizes are involved too for the finishers.  I'm not much into winning prizes--I just like the chance to knit special patterns by great designers and assist in a worthy cause--Happy stitching, y'all!!

Thursday, May 31, 2018

Treasures............

We all have treasures--to each person a 'treasure' means something different,
unusual, very pricey or antique, something passed down generation to
generation.


Judy M places some treasure on this batik quilt that
she made for herself!  she is always sewing for someone else,
so she says, "This One is For Me!"

This was a free pattern she got from 


A definite treasure is this kit from Brenda's Mom,
who passed away.  Brenda found it in her Mom's
house--


Oh, such rich reds!  


Already to be sewn together--it will be a treasure for
years to come--when Brenda can bring herself to work
on it--her Mom is missed so much!


Sandy was sharing her latest 'treasure'--
her cat collage that she learned from a recent class
under taking.


Finished!  This little hanging is worth  a 1000 words


A placement of flowers, butterflies, and special fabrics
bring this guy to life.

Here is a photo of Sandy beginning this adventure.



The pattern came from Laura Heine





Tuesday, May 29, 2018

Another Cowl, It Is!

I'm working on this Japanese knit pattern from Deborah
Tomasello--I think I'm addicted to this way of knitting.
You get cables without a twisting the stitches, you get lovely motifs
I'm using my handspun cotton with size 6 needle.
Pattern Cowl #46, 104--This is so much fun to knit--
I've put off knitting other patterns just to sit and do this!



I'm getting a very lacy look with the size 6 needles so I
decided to go down to #2 to see what happens.
By using #2 size needles, I'm getting a much closer knit and
I think I like the look

Notice the cable running up the middle--The question was
asked "What makes this Japanese knitting?"
1--Unlike the western use of written instructions, the Japanese use symbols and graphs for all of their knitting and crochet patterns. This means that their patterns can be read universally with no language barriers.

2--twisted stitches, manipulated stitches, wraps… where the ‘stitch’ may take several rows to be realized. Also, the Japanese knit cables have special patterns in and around, more so than more common cables with say, reverse st st around. 

3--The Japanese interpretation of knitting stitches.” Many of the stitches are similar to other stitches found in Western stitch encyclopedia’s, however, in many cases, the finished product looks just a little bit different than others. This is also the case with Estonian knitting. The Japanese tend to use mock cables to a much greater extent than most, and, often in a slightly different way, so that they create a “texture” look 


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...