The shirt stripe box quilt made from my MIL's quilt is getting bigger every day, so I needed to clear my design wall to make room. An inner border, a pieced border and an outer border later, and this Spiral Log Cabin quilt was ready to come off the wall and into the "to be quilted" pile.
I LOVE IT! It is 51" square. Why did it take me so long to finish it, you ask? Ah, the usual lament of the scrap quilter - I ran out of my background fabric. I searched locally for more, but to no avail. But I found another fabric that was close enough for me. Can you tell that the background in the borders is different than the background in the blocks? Take a closer look...
But you know what? I don't care. I've said it before, but the first quilting book I read, and the one that has had the greatest impact on me, is Roberta Horton's Scrap Quilts: The Art of Making Do.
Do you have a book that has helped you to define your approach to quilting?
And back to the shirt stripe box quilt - it wasn't quite speaking to me until I turned the blocks on point. BINGO! This, I love!
As if that weren't enough sewing, I also sewed the binding onto the front of the last of the Hurricane Sandy Quilts that I have quilted. Now to just have some waiting time to sew down the back.
The other thing I did this weekend was set up a website for the Quilt Camp for kids that I'll be running this summer just before my shop opens its doors to the public. I put the link out on an announcement email at the University today and already got 4 emails from interested parties. After work today, I printed out my corresponding brochure with the little tear off slips at the bottom and posted them in 8 or 9 places around town. I am SO EXCITED about all this! Can you tell?
Quilting is becoming an increasingly important and integral part of my life. My creative outlet changes how I view the world around me, influences the activities I pursue with my family, and introduces me to new people whose life paths wouldn't ordinarily intersect mine. My life is much like my favorite types of quilts - scrappy and unconventional, full of interest and surprises, and with an underlying current of making do (and making something beautiful!) with what I have.
Showing posts with label Quilt Camp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quilt Camp. Show all posts
Monday, June 3, 2013
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