Thursday, June 16, 2016

A New Start, Hoffman Challenge Progress and Other Crafts

Hi all -

Sorry I've been remiss in my blog posts. My main focus has been my Hoffman Challenge quilt, but I haven't made a lot of progress because my heart just isn't in it. But I'll go into that below, where you can skip it if you're also doing the challenge and don't want to see what I'm doing.

First, I do have a couple of completed non-quilting projects. The first is a pair of fingerless mitts that I really love:


These are from the Sweet Pea Mitts pattern by Lisa Swanson in the book Lace One-Skein Wonders. I planned on keeping these for myself from the start and I really like how they turned out. Here's what one looks like on my hand:


I think these will be nice to wear in the house in the winter when it gets really cold. My house doesn't heat really well when I'm not running the pellet stove, so I spend most of the winter in the 50s. Great when you're having hot flashes, but a bit cold when they go away. Anyway, I'll still be able to quilt and knit with these on in the winter.

My other project is a book I made at a friend's 60th birthday party. She had won a bookmaking class at a silent auction at her church and decided to use it for her party. She made a bunch of covers ahead of time for us to choose from, all of the supplies were provided and we tore the pages to the right sizes and sewed the books together. First you sew pages together into "pamphlet signatures" (I think that's the right term); then you weave the exposed thread at the back of the signatures together to make a spine. Here are pictures of my book:

Front
Back

Spine

My weaving wasn't as neat as I would have liked, but I was using waxed linen and it was over 90F outside, so the thread was getting gooey and sticking together. At least, I think it was the heat. But I'm still really pleased with how it turned out. Here is a picture showing how the threads look on the inside of the back section:


And here you can see how the back side of the cover is a page inside the book:



The back cover does the same. The teacher brought us a really nice paper to use for the pages. She says it will hold up to painting or whatever else we might decide to do to embellish the inside pages. I love the feel of it! I think it turned out really cool, so I've ordered some supplies and plan on making books for my nieces and maybe my nephew, although he probably won't be into it like they will be.

On the quilting side, I did start a new project while my Hoffman Challenge quilt was blocking (more on that below). This project has been on my mind since I saw the pattern in the September 2015 issue of American Quilter. The pattern is Dance by Wendy Mamattah:


When I saw this, I knew I had to make it for my niece, Terra, who is passionate about African dance. In fact, I'd been admiring this artist's work for a while and wondering how I could make something like it for Terra, so I was really thrilled when I saw the pattern in the magazine. I just didn't have time to make it before last Christmas so it's been waiting for me get going on it for this Christmas. It took me a while to pick fabrics, but I think I like what I have right now. Here's the background piece I picked:


This is part of a piece that I dyed in a class years ago. I don't know if you can tell in the picture, but the background is a pretty light green. I like the colors and also like how the colors are heavier on the bottom, grounding the quilt. I had planned on trying to paint a background since I knew that Terra would appreciate a hand-made fabric, but I really need to experiment with that first and then I remembered my hand-dyes so looked through those. I think this will work well.

The on to the dresses. I've been collecting African fabrics at quilt shows and through Web sites that give people in Africa opportunities to support their families for a while now, so I dug through those and picked a couple of my favorites and also dug through my Cherrywood solids for a skin fabric. Here's what I ended up with:


I'm pretty happy with these, but reserve the right to change my mind as I go along. I've also enlarged the pattern:


so I'm ready to start putting it together when I finish my Hoffman Challenge quilt. I didn't go any further than this because I would have needed to get out my lightbox, but I need my cutting table (the only place I have for the lightbox) for trimming my Hoffman Challenge quilt before adding the binding. My lightbox is pretty big, so I didn't want to get it out just to have to put it away again.

So, that's all of my non-Hoffman Challenge work. Scroll down if you want to see what I've done with my challenge quilt.































In my last post, I had just finished the quilting of the borders of my challenge quilt. Now I had to quilt the yin-yang symbol itself. It was difficult for me to decide what I wanted to quilt there because I knew it wouldn't be seen because of the busyness of the fabric. I wanted my quilting lines to reduce the impact of the butterflies, if possible, but not distract from the quilt itself. I settled on a wavy diamond grid from a stencil that I have. The grid reminds me of a butterfly net, corralling the butterflies in the symbol. So I got out my pounce powder and started marking:


I thought it looked pretty good:


I got out some black Glide to use in the black areas and white Glide to use in the white areas. I wanted a fairly heavy thread to push these butterflies back a bit. What I didn't notice was that, while the markings look great on the black background areas, it disappears on top of the butterflies. So when I started quilting, I kept getting lost. So my quilting ended up not being on the marked lines and I lost a bit of the evenness of the grid. Also, when I went back to add more marks, my wandering lines made it impossible to line up the stencil again. So I threw in the towel on evenness and decided to just freehand the net. I took my trusty Clover white pen and a ruler and drew straight lines where the grid should go, then quilted over those with wavy lines. After finishing the black side, I took my blue pen and drew lines on the white side so I could quilt that area in white. I had hoped to quilt the white lines as seamless continuations of the black lines, but my wanderings before drawing the lines made that not work out perfectly, but I lined things up as best I could. Here's some of the white quilting lines with the registration lines:


It's not perfect, but I like the effect and I don't think anyone will notice but me. And it's consistently inconsistent, just like we like. Now it was time to block the quilt to prepare for binding. In my frustration with the lines, I'd tried all sorts of marking tools on the quilt, so I ran it through the washing machine to try to get all of that out. I'm a lazy quilter, so I never try the markers on test fabric before going for it so it's always a question of how things will turn out in the end. Luckily, most of the lines came out. The only lines that didn't were the straight lines I drew around the perimeter for lining up the border quilting. And it was nice to have those straight lines to look at while I was stretching the quilt for blocking. Here it is while blocking:


I recently picked up some cheap interlocking rubber floor mats at Costco because I'd seen those suggested for blocking knitting, and they worked really well for my quilt, too. Here it is now that it's dried and removed from the mats:


And a close-up where you can hopefully see the marks that didn't come out along the edge:


But the middle looks good so I'm okay with it:


Now on to the binding. Then I'll have to quilt the little circles in the yin-yang symbol. I was guessing they would need some quilting and they were really puffy when it came out of the wash so I'll fix that. For those, I'll use monofilament thread to quilt around the outline of the butterflies and probably use swirls as a background fill to make the butterflies pop more. Then, time permitting, I'll probably add some embellishment. It's pretty plain so it needs something. I'm thinking a circle of twilling (a knotted hand stitch) between the yin-yang symbol and the border quilting in black perl cotton. Then I just saw a method for making 3D butterflies in an old issue of Quilters' Newsletter Magazine that might be fun to add. The could be butterflies who escaped the net. We'll see what I end up with.

That's all for now. Hope you're all having a great start to summer! The pine trees are dropping their pollen right now at my house so I'm surrounded by bright yellow pollen that doesn't play well with my allergies, but that should be done in another week and then I can start enjoying the great outdoors again.

Nancy




5 comments:

  1. Nancy your challenge looks great! Can't wait to see it finished.
    BarbCA

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  2. Wow lots of variety in projects on your blog this time! Everything is interesting and pretty. Your Hoffman entry is great and thanks for the Costco blocking tip. That's a good idea.
    Karen Fitzpatrick kfstitcher

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    1. Thanks, Karen! I lucked out that the floor mats were even on sale. Gotta love that!

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  3. I'll have to try the floor mat tip!! Your Hoffman challenge quilt is wonderful. I like the quilting motif you chose for the lime green background.--Terry

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