Showing posts with label Blue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blue. Show all posts
Friday, November 6, 2015
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Wedding Ring Quilt
The current quilt on my frame is on hold temporarily so that I may prepare another piece of work to enter into an upcoming show. Technically not a judging show, the Airing of the Quilts is a show of local quilt owners and artists displaying their prized possessions. This year will be my first attempt to have my wedding ring quilt accepted for display.
The past few days I have spent repairing any small flaws, ironing the quilt, and trying to get out some dreaded chalk marks when the quilt was hand-quilted. I am trying the Mr. Clean Magic Erase to get these orange marks out, but it isn't working as miraculously as I had hoped. I do have a few more methods to try getting them out. For future reference, don't use Dritz quilter's chalk, especially in orange!
The next goal for this quilt is to have it documented by the Oregon Quilt Project. Quilts are inspected and logged into the Oregon Quilt Index. I can truthfully say that this is a quilt made with fabric that was purchased in an exclusive Oregon fabric store, made in Oregon, by an Oregonian. I chose the wedding ring pattern to give myself a challenge, and the first quilt I ever fell in love with was a wedding ring quilt. Although blue isn't my top favorite color, I chose it because it is my husband's favorite color. The blues remind me of the summer sky and ocean as we were married in July at the beach.
This quilt was meant to be a queen size for our bed. Unfortunately, it is better suited for a full size. I didn't purchase enough fabric initially to make that extra row of rings. It is currently kept in an airtight bag to preserve the color from fading now.
I love this pattern, and hope to make it again with black as the background and bright colors for the rings. It is a challenging pattern, this particular quilt has heard a few four letter words that I don't repeat in front of kids! But like a solid marriage, it is a work of patience, tears, and love.
The past few days I have spent repairing any small flaws, ironing the quilt, and trying to get out some dreaded chalk marks when the quilt was hand-quilted. I am trying the Mr. Clean Magic Erase to get these orange marks out, but it isn't working as miraculously as I had hoped. I do have a few more methods to try getting them out. For future reference, don't use Dritz quilter's chalk, especially in orange!
The next goal for this quilt is to have it documented by the Oregon Quilt Project. Quilts are inspected and logged into the Oregon Quilt Index. I can truthfully say that this is a quilt made with fabric that was purchased in an exclusive Oregon fabric store, made in Oregon, by an Oregonian. I chose the wedding ring pattern to give myself a challenge, and the first quilt I ever fell in love with was a wedding ring quilt. Although blue isn't my top favorite color, I chose it because it is my husband's favorite color. The blues remind me of the summer sky and ocean as we were married in July at the beach.
This quilt was meant to be a queen size for our bed. Unfortunately, it is better suited for a full size. I didn't purchase enough fabric initially to make that extra row of rings. It is currently kept in an airtight bag to preserve the color from fading now.
I love this pattern, and hope to make it again with black as the background and bright colors for the rings. It is a challenging pattern, this particular quilt has heard a few four letter words that I don't repeat in front of kids! But like a solid marriage, it is a work of patience, tears, and love.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Blue Scraps-Handquilting
Quilting is not an inexpensive hobby. Fabric can cost $5-10 per yard, plus the batting and backing. It can cost well over $50 or more to make a simple quilt.
This is where saved scraps come in; it greatly reduces the costs of the quilt top (maybe even the backing or batting) when saved from previous sewing projects. I don't have a large a large scrap stash because I use my scraps to gratify the quilting urge when finances are lean. Now is such a time, and it's quite amazing what can be produced with what is already on hand.
I have produced a few scrap quilts, some donated to the Linus project, and others given to family members. The great challenge in scrap quilts is to get them to appease the eye. It requires coordination of the right colors and of course ensuring enough scraps will make the right size product.
My latest scrap project was very gratifying. It blended many scraps from other quilts that had a lot of calming blues. I like blue, but it seems that I have done so much with it lately. This quilt has eaten up a lot of my scrap stash in blue so I can count on not feeling that obligation to do another blue quilt anytime soon.
This quilt will be about 54" wide by 67" long, not quite a twin size, but a large lap quilt. Since the size is just too much to quilt on my machine, I am hand-quilting it on my Ulmer quilting frame. I have only used this frame once for my prized wedding quilt, but it is a tool I will use for the rest of my life (at least as long as I can quilt).
Next post hopefully will show the finished product!
This is where saved scraps come in; it greatly reduces the costs of the quilt top (maybe even the backing or batting) when saved from previous sewing projects. I don't have a large a large scrap stash because I use my scraps to gratify the quilting urge when finances are lean. Now is such a time, and it's quite amazing what can be produced with what is already on hand.
I have produced a few scrap quilts, some donated to the Linus project, and others given to family members. The great challenge in scrap quilts is to get them to appease the eye. It requires coordination of the right colors and of course ensuring enough scraps will make the right size product.
My latest scrap project was very gratifying. It blended many scraps from other quilts that had a lot of calming blues. I like blue, but it seems that I have done so much with it lately. This quilt has eaten up a lot of my scrap stash in blue so I can count on not feeling that obligation to do another blue quilt anytime soon.
This quilt will be about 54" wide by 67" long, not quite a twin size, but a large lap quilt. Since the size is just too much to quilt on my machine, I am hand-quilting it on my Ulmer quilting frame. I have only used this frame once for my prized wedding quilt, but it is a tool I will use for the rest of my life (at least as long as I can quilt).
Next post hopefully will show the finished product!
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