Saturday, December 19, 2020
Festive Holiday Gloves...
Wednesday, December 2, 2020
On Needles and Pins...
And a glass Dollar Tree toothpick holder became the base for this pin cushion. These are so easy and fun to make. Several of these little treasures will be donated to The Shoppe which will be the gift shop at Country Road Quilters' upcoming 20201 quilt guild show in Ocala next November. The show was rescheduled from 2020, so we have lots of time to fill The Shoppe with little pretties for show-goers to peruse. And you might want to check out the 2021 opportunity quilt Anniversary Crown at the guild website.
Sunday, November 1, 2020
DIY Sewing Machine...
And I just wanted to show you this unusual visitor to our barn. I've never seen a snail quite like it before, so had to snap his photo and look up some information on it. Mainly I wanted to see if it was toxic to animals since we have several. It's a Rosy Wolfsnail. They are somewhat exotic and are considered invasive since they dine on other snails and slugs and can eradicate the snail population. Have you seen one like it? Florida certainly has its share of unusual creatures.
Tuesday, October 6, 2020
A Quilter's Hideaway...
The mushroom roof is colorfully beaded and and the house is tucked away, safe and sound in a beautiful location. I'm pretty sure I'll be stitching happy in my little cottage! This was a fun and creative project which is just what I needed as there are no big quilts underway at the moment. It helped to counter some lethargy that seems to have creeped in lately. Our group has some more fun small projects coming up so I'm looking forward to them.
Sunday, September 20, 2020
Wonderful Watercolor...
Sunday, August 23, 2020
Stuck in a Corner...
While cleaning and organizing in the sewing room, I found one corner that I couldn't get past without getting busy on a couple of projects awaiting me there. One project I'd been wanting to get to is this journal cover using a piece of original owl fabric made by Celeste Beck of Goatfeathers Studio. I received it as part of our Fiber Art Bee swap of hand-painted or stamped fabric pieces. I love the imagery and wanted to feature it on a cover.
There are a couple of coordinating pieces she made to go with the owl-one is on the back (shown below) and another may become a pocket inside. Adding the embellishments was a fun task. I still need to decide what type of pages will get bound inside, but at least the cover is now ready for use.
Waiting in that same corner was this little wooden tray. One of our Country Road Quilters members demonstrated how to make these with our favorite quilting fabrics lining the bottom on a recent Zoom meeting (take a look at the guild's beautiful opportunity quilt at the link above- we won't be having our planned quilt show this year so the quilt can be seen there). I can see I don't have such a steady hand while painting so this will need a little touch-up before getting its final coat of polyurethane finish. It's just right for trinkets or small sewing supplies.
And look who else was awaiting me in the corner! This fleece cutie just needed his features and some stuffing to take him over the finish line. He's ready to share his love with someone. And I think I'll be stuck in this corner for awhile because there are several more project to share with you once they are done.
Wednesday, August 5, 2020
Adventures in Mask Making ...
Friday, July 24, 2020
A Bad Hair Day?
Do you think this angel is having one? I believe lots of us are having bad hair days since this pandemic began! And an angel is welcome here, hair issues not withstood. She's a fun one that began as a little kit given to the Fiber Art Bee members by Celeste Beck of Goatfeathers Studio. Inside the kit we had a pattern and some metal tape for the wings. There was also a face, but I decided to paint one on muslin to use for this project. The angel has a fabric-paper dress and lots of embellishments, many of which came from our free table where we share leftover bits and pieces. She's about 10" tall, and watches over the proceedings in the sewing room.
I haven't been sewing quilts much of late because I've been doing a big clean out of the sewing room. Of course, as I clean, I also find projects set aside for "someday". Someday seems to have arrived, so I take a break from the cleaning and make a little something. This Ohio Star ornament is stitched with embroidery floss on gold perforated paper. There's enough perforated paper to make several more.
And for another break in the cleaning action, I've enrolled in two online classes taught by Joanne Sharpe- Art Sparks 1: Watercolor and Words, and Art Sparks 2: Color, Collage, and Concertina. I've never gotten on well with watercolors, though I keep on trying. But somehow, Joanne's style of loose painting combined with lettering is a process that works for me. These are a few of the "sparks" painted and collected to use in a small concertina book. It's great fun, and Joanne offers her classes for "a teeny, tiny price". You can follow this link to her site and see a couple of preview videos. I'll share the books when I'm further along in the class. And now for some more cleaning out. It's mind-boggling the things that accumulate over the years!
Thursday, July 9, 2020
A Bit of This and a Little of That...
Early in the pandemic, The TextileArtist.org offered a free six-week Community Stitch Challenge. Each week a well-known embroidery artist offered an instructional video and a creative challenge for participants. A dedicated Facebook group featured the work of students who responded to the challenges. I enrolled and learned a great deal. I've always liked embroidery, but this is a step beyond- very creative and inspiring. You can still follow along with those original six challenges which are on the website linked above. This wall hanging/art quilt is the result of artist Anne Kelly's video challenge in Week 6. Anne is a UK-based textile artist who likes to include repurposed textiles and folk art images in her pieces. My collage is designed on a background made from a vintage hanky and a lace tablecloth. It also has bits of lace and fancy trims along with beads and a braided yarn edging. It was great fun to work on, especially because it's a repository for so many little things that were part of my extensive stash of questionable textiles.
One thing that Anne likes to do is over-stitching on textile pieces. You can see in the close-up that I chose a decorative machine stitch in variegated thread and sewed parallel rows over all of the elements in the collage. I must say it took a little courage to do this because I liked the piece before the stitching was done. I was concerned how it might look over-stitched. The dense stitching does mute the colors a bit, but overall I really like the effect-soft and quilted.
You can see more of Anne's remarkable work on her website. She's had installations of her work in Canada, Australia, and the UK. I'll share some of the other projects and exercises in upcoming posts. I've been concentrating on smaller projects lately because I've finally begun a much-needed tidying up of the sewing room. It's taking quite awhile and I'm becoming reacquainted with lots of fun stuff!
Tuesday, June 16, 2020
At Home Still ...
Well, lockdown continues for the most part in our state. So a small house quilt seems apropos. And completing projects already underway is certainly one bonus of more time spent at home. I'd purchased the pattern for this quilt I'm titling "Hillside" from Eye Candy Quilts. The designers there call the pattern Fierce Ladies. It's a smaller version of their Painted Ladies quilt, inspired by the well-known area of San Francisco's Victorian homes. I had a collection of lovely batik fabric squares just waiting to become part of this village.
When our local quilt guild offered a class on piecing the Flying Geese units using a special ruler known as Wing Clipper by Deb Tucker, I signed up. My goal was not the class project, but to get this project underway. I completed the roof tops in class, and then the whole thing waited... and waited. But it inched along through the final step of free-motion machine quilting, and now it's done! I added embroidery around the doorways of some of the houses, and they may get further embellishment. But for now, it's done. The quilt is wallhanging size, so I think it will look cute displayed in our home. Guild meetings and activities have also been waiting... and waiting. But we are going to give online Zoom meetings a try. A new skill learned due to the pandemic, which remains a serious concern. Hoping you and yours are doing well. I'll keep on stitching along with a few other creative endeavors, and will keep you posted.
Thursday, May 28, 2020
All Dolled Up...
...And no place to go. Is that how you feel during this time of isolation? I always say that I'm not a doll maker. And yet, look what happened when I got confined to my sewing room for a long period of time! I saw a similar style doll in an issue of Sew Somerset, and decided to try my hand. So I got busy with decorator fabric samples, laces, beads, trims and some Ficklesticks for arms. She sure is...ummm... shall we say, unusual? I believe she is an antibody. I've seen the image of the virus so many times- all prickly and wicked looking. I'm thinking she can take it on! Now that I have a collection of various styles of dolls that I've made, I guess it's time to stop saying I'm not a doll maker. Quilts are happening, too. But they take a bit longer and I don't have any quite ready for prime time. Soon I hope.
Quick and easy doll projects also await. These two cute stitch-and-stuff dolls are ones I found on Spoonflower, a print-to-order fabric company. This girl is Allie.
And this is Scarlet. Spoonflower had a 50% off sale early in the pandemic, so I ordered both of these.
Another stitch-and-stuff panel I bought is The Quilt Police who reminds us to "measure twice, cut once". She has a few other quilting guidelines to make quilting fun. And she's ready to write a ticket if necessary.
Paging through another early issue of Sew Somerset, I found image transfer journals that looked interesting. She's underway, but still has more embroidery and beading to be done before becoming the journal cover. I like sitting in the evening working on hand sewing, so this little project has filled the bill. I may need to gather up all the dolls and display them together on a shelf unit. They'll likely fill it.
Sunday, May 10, 2020
A Little of This, A Bit of That...
During this stay-at-home time I've been able to complete or nearly complete three quilt projects, right down to the labels and sleeves. So that has been a good outcome. Even so, I don't feel as productive as usual. One antidote to that feeling is the pleasure I get from working on small handwork projects and learning as I go. This colorful cat patch is a fabric print to which I've added hand embroidery and some beads. It's worked on a piece of turmeric dyed cotton. The patch is going into a collection of little stitched bits I'm planning to use in an altered tote bag project. It made for good tv watching work, and I think it will be right at home in the tote.
In addition, a number of artists and stitchery groups have made some free instruction available online. One of them is Textile Artists Organization which sponsored a series of 7 textile artists, each with a video tutorial and a stitch challenge. Week 3 was artist Emily Tull who taught us to merge observational skills with embroidery. She showed how to look at our own eyes, and translate what we saw into an embroidery piece like the one above. I took a selfie, cropped the image down to just my eye, and then sketched some lines to follow in thread. What an interesting concept. A Facebook group allowed students to share their challenges and what inspiration is found there!
Free-motion stitching and some bright fabric scraps got turned into this fabric-paper piece done on scrapbooking paper. I'm not sure what this will be, but possibly a journal cover. Just a fun project to explore now that I have the time. So the stitching continues and so does keeping a low profile!
Monday, April 20, 2020
Bejeweled in Quilty Style...
I've had more luck at completing smaller projects in the sewing room during these days of Covid Confinement. Our Country Road Quilters' Guild will hold the biennial quilt show in early November of this year. One of the highlights of the show is The Shoppe, a boutique-style area featuring quilt related items members have made and donated. I committed to make one of my charm necklaces, and used this time to assemble it. It contains all sorts of sewing related charms and should be fun to wear for its new owner.
I got started by making the button charm that is the centerpiece of the necklace. I'd seen some interesting button necklaces on a quilting friend's social media and got the thought, "Oh, I must try one of those." It's stacked buttons joined with wire wrapping, and has a cute charm suspended from the bottom. You can see other charms here, including the tape measure, sewing bobbin, sewing machine, and puffed yoyo charms.
There is also a scissor ribbon charm, a beaded yoyo, and a wrapped wire bird's nest.
On the other side there is a heart button charm, a bottle cap charm, and one we call Toni's Tray. Guild member Toni made that one up. It's a jewelry tray piled high with tiny seed beads, and is surprisingly lightweight.
While I was at it, I came across a number of cross charms from necklaces worn over the years that had a broken chain or some other reason they could no longer be worn. But I saved the charms. There they were all sitting together as I pawed through the various findings in my collection, when it dawned on me to make an assemblage necklace using them all at once. I like the idea of assemblage jewelry, so I'm sure this will be my next rabbit trail to follow! There are a lot of pieces and parts in my supply boxes.