Tuesday, May 2, 2017

Constellations-- Green

Hi everyone, and welcome back to the Constellations quilt!  Our color for this month is green, the color that is exploding across the country right now, as trees leaf out and the last of the winter is swept away.  The important thing for this month's color is to choose greens that have enough contrast with the dark blue background, so that nothing gets lost and you end up with a spectacular star.  My greens both have a yellow undertone which makes them stand out nicely.  This month, too, a large section of the quilt we be completed, so let's get started right away!

Here's our block for this month:


This block is Nameless.  Really, that's what it is!  This poor unnamed block is a Clara Stone block from 1906.  To make it, you'll need two greens and a background, plus an accent for the center square.

Cutting:

From the background, cut:

2 4-1/4 inch squares
2 3-7/8 inch squares
4 3-1/2 inch squares

From the first green (the outer star):

2 4-1/4 inch squares
4 2-5/8 inch squares

From the second green (the inner star):

3 4-1/4 inch squares

From the accent:

1 3-1/2 inch square

To complete the quilt section, cut from the background color:

4 2-1/2 by 6-1/2 inch rectangles
2 2-1/2 by 8-1/2 inch strips
2 1-1/2 by 12-1/2 inch strips
3 2-1/2 by 14-1/2 inch strips

On to construction!

Construction:

First we are making the center unit, then the units for the sides.  For the center, take one of the lighter green 4-1/4 inch squares and cut it twice from corner to corner to make 4 smaller triangles.  Take the background 3-7/8 inch squares and cut them each in half once from corner to corner to make 4 triangles.


Arrange the green triangles that you just cut around the accent square as shown, and stitch to the sides of the square.  It helps to finger press a small crease in the centers of the sides of the square and the long sides of the triangles, then match these to get good placement for the triangles.  Press toward the green triangles, making sure that you have 1/4 inch beyond each of the points.


Next, arrange the background triangles as shown and stitch to the sides of the square you just made.  Finger press the center of the triangles and match to the points of the yellow square.  Press toward the blue, and be sure that you have 1/4 inch beyond each of the points.  This unit should measure 6-1/2 inches square.

Making the sides:

Cut the two remaining dark green 4-1/4 inch squares in half from corner to corner twice to make 4 triangles each, for a total of 8.  Attach 2 of these triangles to each of the 2-5/8 inch lighter green squares as shown. 


Make 4 of these units.  Press toward the darker green triangles.

Next, take the 2 lighter green 4-1/4 inch squares and the 2 background 4-1/4 inch squares and cut each of them from corner to corner twice to make 4 smaller triangles.  Stack these smaller triangles as shown and stitch together along the centers.


Notice that these are opposites of each other, and you need to make 4 of each.  Press toward the background triangles.

Finally, add these triangle pairs to the square and triangle unit you made just previously, laying them out as shown and matching seams.  Don't worry too much if all of the triangle points don't meet exactly.


These finished units should measure 3-1/2 by 6-1/2.  Make sure you have 1/4 inch beyond your points for the seam allowance.  Press toward the square unit, or press open to reduce bulk, as these points will match up with the square in a square points in the final block.

And that's it for the units!

Assembly:

Lay out all of the units and the 3-1/2 inch background squares as shown, being careful to put the background triangles along the outside. 


Join the units into rows and the rows into a block. I highly recommend matching the points and pinning so that they don't shift in the final construction and they match up nicely.  Give it a good press, stand back, and admire!  Your block should measure 12-1/2 by 12-1/2 to finish at 12 inches in the quilt.



To complete this quilt section: 

And now for the exciting finish to section 4!  Choose 4 of the 6-inch stars you made last month.  Keep the other 4 for a different quilt section.  Join one of the 2-1/2 by 6-1/2 inch pieces of background to one side of each of the 4 stars.


Join two of the stars together as shown, offsetting the background strips so that the stars are offset and not aligned.  You should have two sets of two stars.


Designate one set of stars to go on the left and the other on the right.  Add the 2-1/2 by 8-1/2 inch strips to the bottom of the star sections. (This is the quilt sashing for the next row.)

Next, take the 2 1-1/2 by 12-1/2 inch strips and add them to the sides of the green star block, then add one of the 2-1/2 by 14-1/2 inch strips to the bottom of the entire star block unit.


Join the left side double star unit to the left  side of the green star unit, and the right side unit to the right side.  To complete the section, add the remaining 2-1/2 by 14-1/4 inch strips to the right and left of the section.  Press well and admire!


This section should measure 14-1/2 inches by 34-1/2 inches.  Don't worry if it's a little off, and above all don't trim anything.  The next section completes the second row and all the adjusting you may need to do can be done then.

That finishes section 4!  Here is a pinned together progress photo of all of the sections:


It looks so great already! I promise it looks better in person when it's not being sun bleached, and I'm sure yours is already spectacular as well.  If you have finished this much, about 42% of the quilt is already finished!

Thanks for coming along to make this block and quilt section.  Hope you are making good progress.  Come on back on June 6 for the exciting conclusion to row 2!

Sharing at Linky Tuesday, Let's Bee Social, and soscrappy for RSC17.

Saturday, April 29, 2017

A few more steps

Hi everyone!  How was your week?  I bet you can guess how mine was.  Just a little while longer and then this night mare semester will be over.

So, here's what I accomplished this week:


Yep, these are the remaining  multicolored Steps to the Garden blocks.  I'm feeling a little iffy about the block made with the bright gumball fabric.  They look like flowers to me, but I'm afraid the block might not fit with the others. To check, I took a picture of all 12 of the blocks together:


I laid them out on the grass because they're garden blocks, and because it was really nice outside.  In retrospect I should have put the gumball block in the middle to check how it fit in, but my brain was not working really well.  I blame all the pollen in the air.  Still not sure about that block.

The only other thing I worked on this week (besides student papers)  were a few more blocks for the strings quilt that I'm making for donation:


I'd swear I made a fourth one, but it does not seem to be there!  These blocks are super easy but they take a *lot* of strings.  If you want to use up some fabric, make one of these quilts.  I threw in some other florals I had to help fill out all the strings I need as well.  I'll be happy to get rid of those. And someone please remind me to stop saving such narrow strings!  The pattern for this quilt is in Amanda Jean Nyberg's new book No Scrap Left Behind.

Since we kind of have a "floral" theme, how about a couple of pictures from the garden?  It turns out that the ugly bushes in front of the house are all azaleas:


Who knew?  I'm still taking them out, though, because they really have been neglected and look pretty bad.  But one thing I'm not taking out is this tree:


It turns out that the pink trees at the back of the property are pink dogwoods!  I'm not sure I'd ever seen one of these in person.  It's so pretty!

That's the dispatch from here!  With all the azaleas and other flowering bushes around here, I'll be dodging the bees while we're working outside this weekend.  Hope everyone has a great weekend! 

Sharing at soscrappy for RSC17 and Oh Scrap!

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Spring Cleaning-- Magazines and other paper

Hi everyone, and welcome back to the Spring Cleaning series!  I'm happy you're here!


Today we are tackling the paper monster--magazines, patterns, and other paper, like paper piecing templates and pattern pieces.  If you're like me, there is a lot of paper in a room that's all about fabric!  For me, this problem is much more about storage and organization than about volume.  It's not really that there's too much, but that we don't know what to do with all that we have.  We'd all rather sew than file paperwork, right?

Right up front I want to show you the number one thing that helped tame the paper monster in my sewing room.  It's this basket:


The basket is about 10 by 14 inches and a couple of inches deep. This gives me a place to pile up magazines, catalogs, and paper until I'm ready to deal with it.  That way it doesn't get strewn all over the room, and when I want to I can take the whole basket and deal with it at once.  Plus, I know where to find catalogs when I want to look at something pretty. I also admit to throwing patterns and templates I've been using in the basket instead of putting them back right away, because creativity doesn't stop to file paper.

With that, let's get started!

**Just a reminder--there are no rules except the ones you create for yourself!  Keep everything if you want to, or throw it all out--it's totally up to you!**  I was reading an organization book in preparation for this series, and the author kept saying, "you must. . ." do this or that.  That rubbed me the wrong way entirely.  The only thing you must do is pay your taxes.  Everything else is up to you.

Where did all of this even come from?

For this step you will definitely need some brown paper bags to recycle any paper you want to dispose of.  You may also want some organizational aids like magazine holders, binders, and plastic page pockets.

Magazines:

Who hasn't heard the siren call of magazines?  They're so pretty and colorful, and some of them have nice ideas.  The problem is that they just keep coming!  The key here is to decide what you want to do.  Do you want to keep whole magazines, or are you willing to tear them up to save individual patterns or ideas?  A mixture of the two is okay, too.  Or maybe you don't want to keep anything.  That's okay too!

If you are keeping whole magazines, it's absolutely worth it to go through them using the same methods described in the Books post.  At the very least, going through them lets you see what you have.  When you have the collection you want to keep, storage becomes the issue.  If you have a lot of magazines, the same storage methods as books apply--shelves, crates, baskets, or storage totes.  Anything where you can keep the magazines together works.  You might want to sort them to keep titles together so that you can find a specific issue quickly. 


With few exceptions, old magazines have little value, but if you want to try to sell them, some used bookstores will take magazines, and I have seen bundles of older magazines for sale on Ebay.  I don't know much about selling on Ebay.  I do know that there are some fees involved, but you may find it worth a try.  Otherwise, please recycle!


If you only have a few whole magazines to keep, or if you want to sort and separate a larger magazine stash, magazine holders will keep them together and allow you to store them on a shelf.  You can buy these, of course, but you can also make them fairly quickly from cereal boxes. (Family size cereal boxes might be needed for some magazines to fit.) There is a tutorial HERE, and a pretty entertaining video that shows how to make a larger one HERE.

Pretty pattern from 2008!  Probably why I still had a 9-year-old magazine!

If you are willing to tear out patterns and ideas and recycle the rest of the magazine, the best thing I've found to do is use three ring binders and plastic page pockets to save the paper you tear out.  Scanning them and storing them digitally is also a good option, but it does take some time. (Maybe you could bribe someone to do this for you.)  I've also found that I never look at scanned in papers, so I seldom do it. You could also use folders to store the pages (either manila folders or pocket folders) or shoe boxes, though I've found that paper doesn't survive well in those.  The binders and pockets are a small investment in a lot more happiness.  You can get these pretty inexpensively at big box stores.

Yes, I made quilted covers for some of the binders.  Don't judge me.

Then it's just a matter of going through the magazines and pulling out what you want to save!  This can take forever, but it can also be a lot of fun.  Stop when you get tired and pick it up later.  Breaks can save your sanity! Save all the pages for one pattern in separate pockets, and be sure to save any templates or extras that go with the pattern.  Then pop the pockets into a binder and you have a personal pattern book!

What I did:

I saved a few whole magazines, including my stash of Mark Lipinski's Quilter's World. (See above.) And I used a cereal box magazine holder, so I feel very virtuous.  I tore patterns out of the rest and recycled the remainder, saving the pages in pockets and binders.  I had separate binders for inspiration and different kinds of patterns, which is why I have several.  (They aren't all full!)

Printed Patterns:

Printed patterns are fun to have, if only for the inspiration.  It pays to dig out all of your patterns and decide what to keep and what not keep, using the same process as the books.  Recycle anything you don't want any more. Sadly, there is really no secondary market for printed patterns.  You could try selling them through your blog or Etsy, but you will be competing with the designers who are selling their own patterns, often the exact same ones.  Really, the only things to do with patterns you no longer want is offer them to friends, give them away on a guild table, or recycle them.


For the patterns you keep, there are many storage options.  You could scan them into the computer and store them digitally, which would get rid of the paper entirely.  If you don't want to do that, clear plastic shoe boxes stored in the closet work well.  Some stores also sell decorative shoebox-sized boxes for storing photos that would look nice on a shelf.  If you have only a few patterns, a smaller magazine holder on a shelf would work well, too. What worked best for me was the binder and pockets, just like the magazine patterns.  Just pop the whole pattern into a pocket and store the pockets in a binder.  It fits nicely on a shelf and keeps everything together.

Paper templates of all types also fit in these page pockets and can be stored in binders, either with the patterns or in a separate binder of their own.  Remember the alphabet letters I made for my grandson's birthday? (HERE)  I stored the paper letter templates in a page pocket to keep them together and protected in case I want to use them again.  Even thin plastic templates can be stored in these pockets and binders.


What I did:

I got rid of a lot of paper patterns that I know I'll never make and recycled most of them.  Some went to friends.  The patterns I kept went into pockets in a binder separate from the magazine patterns.  Scanning them in to the computer would have been a good option, but I didn't want to spend all the time to do it only to have to print it out again if I ever make the quilt.

Triangle paper, English paper piecing templates, and other specialty papers:

Many handy things for creative pursuits are made of paper!  The important thing for these papers is keeping like things together.  That is, all the EPP paper templates should be kept together, for example, and all of the various other specialty papers should be kept with others of the same kind.  If like things are kept together they're easier to find.  Baskets, magazine holders, shoe boxes, etc., all make good storage options.  Can I suggest some pretty baskets or decorative boxes?  Just because you have to store them doesn't mean they have to look bad.


Quilting designs and longarm pantographs on rolls should also be kept together.  I gather that the big problem with the pantos is keeping them from getting crushed.  I don't have any of these, but I will suggest saving the cardboard tubes from paper towels or wrapping paper to roll them up on (these can be trimmed to size), then either storing them upright in a basket or on something like a wine rack or shoe rack.  If you have a lot of them you could also stand them up in a decorative crate or box where they'll hold each other upright.


What I did:

I put all of my triangle paper packets in a magazine holder, and put all of the EPP papers I have (that I seldom use, to be honest, but I don't want to get rid of) in this pretty box that I got cheap from a big box store.  I don't have many other specialty papers, but I did also store some scrapbook paper in another magazine holder.

Miscellaneous other paper:

Somehow we accumulate a lot more paper!  There are the free patterns from guild meetings, paper templates, inspirational photos, and various other bits that you just don't want to get rid of, like business cards, layout drawings you've done, or cutting size charts.

The solution here is to separate them into categories.  Inspirational photos, layout drawings, and other things you want to see right away should go on a cork board or other pin board somewhere in the sewing space where you can actually see them.  Free patterns can go in with the other patterns, either in a binder or a box.  Paper templates and the like can go in separate plastic bags (the ones from the paper patterns you recycle are great for this) and then in with the rest of the patterns.  If you have a lot of paper templates, you might consider a separate binder or storage box just for them.


What I did:

I have some things pinned up, and others got sorted and stored in the binders with similar papers.

Whew, that was a lot to sort through!  I hope you made some progress on your paper. Remember--no guilt!  You get to have as many papers, magazines, and patterns around as you want.  Just keep them in a way that makes you happy and lets you sew in peace.

Thanks for stopping by the Spring Cleaning series! Next week's topic is notions, rulers, and thread, which means sorting out lots of little things.  I hope you're up for it!  As always, if you have suggestions for other people, share them in the comments!

Sharing at Let's Bee Social.

Saturday, April 22, 2017

The loneliest number

Hi all!  How was your week?  I am still getting slammed and I'm really exhausted.  Feels like I've been really tired for weeks.  Maybe I should look into that or something.

Just a very short post today to show off my single, lonely RSC challenge block:


At least it has a pretty background!  That's the dogwood tree that grows next to our deck.  It's pretty, but sadly, it has to come down because it's just too close to the house.  Luckily, there is another one out front, so we'll still have flowers.  And there are tons of others in the neighborhood, too, all of them in bloom from all the rain we've been having.  (So you know I'm sneezing a lot, too!)

I really like this block.  I think the fabric for it is perfect and looks great with the greens.  I've also finally got a cutting chart and sewing order that makes these relatively fast and painless.  When I'm done with this quilt I'm half planning to write up an official pattern for it because I'm expecting it to be spectacular. (She said modestly.)


And that was the sum total of what I accomplished this week!  I feel like a slug.  I did do some cutting, though, including the cutting for two more multicolored Steps to the Garden blocks (like this one).  That will give me a dozen blocks, which makes me happy because even if I don't make any more blocks I'd still have enough for a quilt.


Before I go, I want to plug my Spring Cleaning series a little bit.  There is a post about books up right now, and Wednesday there will be a post about cleaning out magazines and other paper.  Hope you'll check it out!


Hope you're all having a wonderful weekend and that all your RSC projects are humming along.  I wish I could have a nap right now, but we have so much to do this weekend.  T.S. Eliot was right-- April really is the cruelest month!

Sharing at soscrappy for RSC 17.