Sunday, June 17, 2007

Sock Progress

On the bottom is the first sock made with the April Rockin Sock Club yarn. I found another pattern since I didn't really care for the lace in the club pattern. But, I promised to finish B.'s pair...they are Simple Socks on 2 Circulars from Cat Bhordi's book. I'm almost to the heel on sock #2, and I'm *really* tired of K2P2 ribbing!



B. worked long and hard to finish the ripping-out project...That is the pile of thread left once all the layers were separated. Now it's time to quilt it again! I found a golf pantograph that should make it a quick finish - if you call over 2 years quick!


Happy Father's Day from baby K:

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

A day for Bunnies

Baby K is 10 months old! At this point, she won't sit still for pictures, so I positioned the bunny as best I could and snapped away.




Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Classes at MQS

I took a class called "Everyday Feathers," with Cindy Roth. Here is a sampler she made...



Then I took a class called "Beautimous Blocks,' with Nichole Webb. (Look for her boook of the same name from Homestead Quilting.) Her motto is "Quilt Like a Rock Star!" Totally fun gal - she wore a tiara in class, it was a blast. (Amy - the block on the left is what I think of as ferns... thinner and more wavey than feathers)


More quilts from the show. This is "Plain Ol' Nine Patch," by Kathy Ellzey. It's a small quilt, probably 10 by 20 inches, and it was in the thread challenge. Yep, all that color is thread and quilting designs!!

The picture I took of this whole quilt is pretty blurry...I need to take a deep breath and hold still when I take pictures I guess! You're just trying to hurry and stay out of people's way. All the animals were paper-pieced and the quilting was different in each block, very complementary to whichever animal it was.


Monday, June 11, 2007

More Quilts

Here is another Theme quilt from MQS. It's called "Tumbling Through Time," quilted by Carol Kimble: I loved this art quilt so much that I've been dreaming about it! It's called "St. George's Trophy," quilted by Helen Baczynski. The background is a dragon pantograph, and the front is a dragon pelt. The tag hanging off reads "1 dragon slain, 1 maiden saved." I thought this was the most creative piece I've ever seen! And for Amy..."Neferkitti," quilted by Janet Fogg. Love those cats!!

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Back Home!

What a week!! I left for MQS on Tuesday and had a fabulous time...wonderful classes and amazing quilts. Then, I got a call on Thursday that Baby K had a rash over her whole body and had been fussy all day. Poor thing! Daddy took her to the doctor Friday morning - strep throat. Yikes! So, they were miserable for about 48 hours, and of course the antibiotics had kicked in by the time I got home, so all is well.


MQS Report:

This quilt is called "Sugar and Spice," by Renae Haddadin, a winner in the category "Innovative Custom." The detail is breath-taking. Here you see the quilted cable/feathers in different color thread on a black background. Then, you see the other side of the quilt which is done on white fabric. It was spectacular.Next is "Northern Lights," by Janet Fogg, first place in the Theme category (theme was Timeless Stars, and the block patterns had to have been published in the Kansas City Star newspaper.) You can almost see the quilted snowflakes in the sky. The piecing to create the magnificent wolf was incredible.

Finally, here is the Viewer's Choice winner: "Turnabout" by Claudia Pfeil, a quilter from Germany. As you can see, many of the winners are quilting intricate feathers in metallic threads on black backgrounds. I love the color gradients in this piece!

More to come...I took 100 photos!!!

Saturday, June 02, 2007

Talk amongst yourselves

Baby K woke up at 4am with a temperature of 102.5! We took her in to the doctor, even though she has no other symptoms - first child syndrome ;-) Diagnosis: fever. Treatment: alternate tylenol and motrin every four hours. Of course, she only wants to be held, and even then she will cry for thirty minutes at a time...which is not a big deal in the grand scheme of things, but until now, she has been the happiest baby you've ever met, so this is a challenge for mom and dad!

Scattergories
Instructions: Use the 1st letter of your name to answer each of the following…They MUST be real places, names, things…nothing made up! Try to use different answers if the person in front of you had the same 1st initial. You can’t use your name for the boy/girl name question.


Your Name: Andi

Famous Artist/Band/Musician: Annie Lennox (the Eurythmics)

4 letter word: Axle

Vehicle: Acura

TV Show: Amazing Race

City: Albuquerque

Boy Name: Armand

Girl Name: Allison

Alcoholic drink: Apple martini

Occupation: Airline (flight) Attendant

Flower: Aster

Something you wear: ascot

Celebrity: Alex Trebek

Something found in a kitchen: aluminum foil

Cartoon Character: Alvin the Chipmunk

Something You Shout: Ahoy, matey!

Friday, June 01, 2007

Binding Tutorial - Part Two

At this point, you have most of the binding sewn down, and two tails that we need to sew together.

Lay the longer right hand piece, right side down, on top of the shorter left hand piece. Place one or two pins toward the edges if needed. Sew from the top left corner to the bottom right:


Once the pieces are sewn together, you can flip them together into one continuous piece. At this point, it will be very obvious if you sewed in the wrong direction!! You should have a smooth piece that will exactly fit the remaining edge of your quilt. Trim the seam allowance, and finish attaching the binding.Once the binding is attached to the front, I hand-stitch it to the back. If I were to attach the whole thing by machine, I would first attach it to the BACK of my quilt, then bring it to the front in order to cover the first seam. You can use a decorative stitch or a straight seam with matching/invisible thread for this option.

Binding is one of the tedious steps - but it has to be done in order to have a finished quilt! Quilt show judges pay particular attention to this - they also want to see the mitered corners sewn down on the front as well as the back. And some longarmers will attach the binding to the front of the quilt for you, which saves some time if you can afford the extra cost.

Binding Tutorial - Part one

I finished Elizabeth's Yellow Brick Road, and now I hope to sew on 320 inches of binding in the next 24 hours!

First, we have been outside with baby K a little bit.

I had some wonderful teachers: Mary K and Faith, who work at my mom's shop. I think this is a fairly standard method for creating straight-grain bindings.

To start, I measure the perimeter of the quilt, and add 20. My current quilt measured 74 by 87, which is about 320 + 20 = 340. Divide this by 40, and that tells you how many strips to cut for your binding. I cut nine strips at 2.25 inches (two and a quarter). Sew them together on a diagonal (see part 2), trim the seam allowance and press in half.

I then take this looooong folded strip and sew the raw edge to the FRONT of my quilt, using a quarter inch seam. I start sewing in the middle of one side of the quilt, and leave at least a 10 inch tail.

When you reach a corner, stop a quarter inch from the edge, turn the quilt, and sew off through the corner:To make a mitered corner, fold the strip vertically to the top of the quilt:

Then bring it down, keeping the fold even with the edge of the quilt. You will have a little triangle "pocket" when you are done. Start sewing again using a quarter inch seam.

When you have turned the fourth corner, stop sewing, leaving a substantial gap, and bring your quilt to a cutting surface. Fold both tails so they meet somewhere in the middle. Cut the extra binding so that one inch remains on the left, and 1.25 inches remains on the right.

You are oe ready to sew the tails to make a continuous loop! Go back to the directions for part two.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Thursday 13

I haven't pulled out my UFOs, so here is the quilt rack in my living room: Thirteen quilts!


(I had a small problem with Photoshop...I hit save before I changed the file name, so then I had to paste the cropped part back into the original, and you can see the seams. OOPS!)


Anyway, here are some details...

From the right - my pineapple quilt from the 2006 longarm challenge, a four-patch, and two versions of Ricky Tims Caveman quilts.


Next, we have a zoo quilt (you can just see the corner on the right), then a bright Batik pinwheel with a checkerboard border, my Christmas bargello, and Stack-n-Whack treasure boxes.


Finally, from the LEFT this time, my Grand Canyon photo wall-hanging, the black and orange is the back of a Halloween banner, the circles from my Jane Sassaman class, and a Big Baby Star whose binding needs to be finished and mailed off as a baby (actually toddler by now!) gift!!




And here's an extra...Baby K's big smile!



Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Pool Time

I spent yesterday in the quilt studio with my mom. I was working on the Yellow Brick Road - a graduation present for Elizabeth. I hope to have it done by Saturday...done as in quilted AND bound! I have a pantograph picked out, so the quilting should be quick and easy.


Baby K kicked back in the pool...


Grandma bought her some pool toys and we pushed her around in the floaty seat for a while.


The Knitting Diva is having a contest centered around the question, "What makes a good knitting blog?" (interchangeable with quilting blogs, in my mind) The common denominators seem to be pictures and sharing your life. I know I enjoy seeing everyone's WIPs, so I try to share mine as well. I wish more quilters would share designs...even if it is a sketch of something they do freehand. I guess that could open up the door for copyright issues, but in an ideal world, that's what I'd like to see more of!

Monday, May 28, 2007

What I've been doing on my summer vacation

Yay! Saturday was a totally lazy day. I played on the longarm and finished a sample for the shop. Mom pieced beautiful taupe triangles and I did a simple continuous curve design. Here's a quick sketch from Microsoft paint...trust me, the stitching looks better in person, but this gives you an idea.

The points below the triangles show how I moved from one to the next as a continuous line.

Then I was a couch potato for the rest of the day, because I discovered this show on Bravo:



It's called "Shear Genius" and it's a reality show about hairdressers. Fabulous! My favorite was a challenge called "Hair through the Eras." Each person had a historical period that they had to design a hairstyle for...from Medieval times, to Victorian, Elizabethan, 1920s, 40s and 60s! Really fun.

Sunday was another relaxing day. We went to church in the morning, then out to my brother-in-law's house for a holiday barbecue. It was an all-American menu: hamburgers, hot dogs, potato salad, fruit, and root beer floats!

Then I came home and curled up with a book - Nineteen Minutes, by Jodi Picoult. It's about a school shooting, which is a disturbing topic, especially for a high school teacher. But, the author handles everything well, and it's an interesting read.
On the agenda for today - binding the orange quilt, piecing the blocks for the Yellow Brick Road, and another swimming date for Baby K at Grandma's house. This time I will remember the camera!!

Friday, May 25, 2007

School's out!

I know some parents dread this day, but it's wonderful from the teacher perspective! I have to go in for an hour or so and post the final grades and turn in my keys and then I'm free to concentrate on quilting! And I'd better get to it...I have three shop samples waiting for the longarm!! my only complaint is that I don't have a local source for my favorite thread (A&E PermaCore) and they no longer make thread charts, so I have to bug my friend all the time to match colors before I order online. Big Hassle!!!

Since I have no fiber content, I will leave you with two gems.

Potentially addictive, simple game: Boomshine!

Quaint prints from Sweden (and baby K's birthday is coming up, hint hint): Isa

Saturday, May 19, 2007

Saturday Sewing

I finished quilting the Orange Delight! I used one of Linda V. Taylor's pantographs. This is the back:

Maybe I can get the binding on this week. I have until June 4th to finish...the foreign exchange student whose gift it is leaves then!

Baby K has been very interested in Daddy's sock progress...

I am working the gusset decreases:

Obsidian from Blue Moon Farm has a wonderful variety of rich browns, blacks and flecks of grey. Perfect for a man's sock!

Here's Baby K's latest trick - Climbing!

Enjoy the weekend!

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Thursday 13

13 things to do this summer


Our last day of school is next week – yippee!! Here are a few of the things going on…

1. Basketball! Season tickets to the WNBA Phoenix Mercury. We’re going to the playoffs this year…hope springs eternal.
2. Graduation parties. Tis the season. Kinda strange when baby K is just 9 months old and all our other friends have kids in college now!

3. Machine Quilter’s Showcase in Kansas City. I am scheduled for three full days of classes with very talented longarm quilters.

4. Continuing education with my school district. I am going to learn “Blackboard” which is a program that a lot of colleges use. Maybe someday I will be an online instructor!

5. Back to work at Cotton Fields. My parents are taking a trip to China and I’ll fill in at the shop a few days while my mom's gone.

6. Family vacation to Minnesota. Any hints for a plane trip with a baby?!? Yes, we’re taking Benadryl. We hope to see my brother and my great uncle in the Twin Cities, then we’re going to spend sometime in the great outdoors at a friend’s cabin north of Duluth.

7. Weekly movie date with a teacher-friend. Diane and I met at the New Teacher orientation in 2000, and by chance our classrooms are right next door to each other. Most of the time our schedules have coincided so we eat lunch together every day.

8. Quilt Camp in the Pines! It will be my fourth year. My roommate is so fun, and a very talented quilter. I am taking classes with Jennie Rayment, Martha Nordstrand and Karla Alexander.

9. Swimming. Mom and Dad have a pool, and Baby K enjoys bathtime so much that I think she will have lots of fun.

10. Reading. I haven’t reserved a copy, but I’ll have to get my hands on the final Harry Potter book in July.

11. Knitting. With several plane trips on the horizon, I am hoping to get several pairs of socks done. Then maybe I can get back to the sweater vest that is almost finished!

12. Quilting. I have several tops lined up for the longarm and a few things to finish piecing. (hahahaha, the UFO pile might be NEXT week’s Thursday 13!)

13. Lesson Planning. This is one of those eternal inhabitants of a teacher’s to-do list. I taught AP Government for the first time this year, so I need to go back and revise everything now that I have some experience with the subject! Of course, August will roll around and I will be saying, where did all that time go?!?

Monday, May 14, 2007

7 random things

I got tagged for this meme by the Knitting Moose. I've seen it around the Q4P ring, so if you haven't participated, consider yourself invited to the party!

1. I have a freckle on my eye...right in the iris. I worked at Los Alamos National Laboratory one summer, and a friend was doing a study on identification systems, and he took a picture of it.

2. I have never been a picky eater - mushrooms, onions, spinach, just bring it on. However, I will not eat beets, mainly because my mom hates them and I don't see the need to try them as an adult.

3. My mom made me cut my hair short when I was about 13 years old because I had the habit of chewing the ends while I read. And I read ALOT!!!

4. Once or twice a year I indulge my sugar cravings and buy a Costco birthday cake...vanilla cake with chocolate mousse filing and buttercream frosting. It takes about 10 days for B and I to finish it. This was also our wedding cake!

5. I have a better-than-average memory for numbers. It makes grading math papers really easy and quick!

6. I read my favorite blogs in the same order every day. It's basically the timeline of my discovery of them along with how I typed them into my Yahoo 360 blogroll!

7. Florence Nightengale and I share the same birthday - October 13th. Nothing unlucky for me about that number!

Sunday, May 13, 2007

First Mother's Day

I have two socks on the sticks. On the left is the April Rockin Sock Club yarn in my alternate pattern. On the right is more STR yarn, colorway Obsidian, for B's first pair of handknit socks. I am trying the circular needle method, and so far, so good. I can't tell if it's the easy pattern or the circular method that is allowing me to go so fast...I think I have spent less time on B's socks and it certainly looks like the same length on both pairs at this point!

Here is my Mother's Day bling...it's actually a white gold and diamond pendant, I guess the flash makes it look yellow gold!


Yesterday we had a mother daughter luncheon. Baby K was very excited to hear the entertainment...a barbershop quartet. She had been napping on my lap and perked up with a smile when the men started singing!

And just for fun, here are some bathtime pictures. Her toys are foam letters that spell her name. She likes to have one in each hand, and one in her mouth too!

With seven teeth showing, we have to practice good brushing habits...

Two more weeks of school, woo-hoo! B. and I made reservations for our summer trip to Minnesota. Now we have to figure out how to survive a 3 hour plane ride with the baby... Plan A is Benadryl, but I don't know how far we'll get with the three ounce limit ;-)

Friday, May 11, 2007

Bunny Show

Baby K is 9 months old. She has seven teeth, crawls everywhere and can stand easily. Sometimes she can even guide herself along the couch.

Posing with the bunny is a challenge, because everything goes in her mouth! And I need a super-high-speed camera to get just the right pose, since she doesn't stay in one position very long...


I was finally able to click at the right moment!

We've been invited to a mother-daughter luncheon with Grandma tomorrow. She certainly will enjoy showing off her little princess! Happy Mother's Day!