Where to start?
This morning, Judy took me on a virtual tour of some wonderful pictures of quilts during our weekly telephone conversation. Judy recently started a zipper quilt, and I had never heard of that term. She took me to a blog called the Rhubarb Patch at http://rhubarbpatch.blogspot.com/2005/07/zipper-quilt.html and to another site, owned by Aviva Hadas, at http://www.flickr.com/photos/65592515@N00/page3/ to show me what she was doing. Oh, how do these combinations happen? What a lovely journey we had at both sites, but it was the Aviva Hadas site that could captivate me for hours on end. How does someone produce such a huge body of work? Wonderful stuff.
Last Wednesday, because RV trouble prevented a planned camping trip, I went to the Martha Circle at church. This group, lead by Carol H, makes lap quilts for patients in the U.S. Military Hospital in Germany. Although much of the work on the quilts is done by individual members at their homes, the group gets together one Wednesday each month to tie the quilts and sew on labels. I've been a few times, and it is a very satisfactory way to spend a morning.
When I visited Donna and her family this past spring, I brought home a bunch of her fabric (along with her sewing machine), and there was some patriotic fabric there. I immediately eyeballed it for the Martha Circle quilts and laundered it; but it sat on my shelves until now. The quilt tops are simple - 9-inch squares sewn in a 4 x 5 configuration. Inspired by meeting with the women of Martha, I cut out and put together five tops using Donna's patriotic fabric and some pieces of my own. I was more inspired to do that than to work on the Fasset quilt I have in progress.
Here's the results:


The solid red 9-inch squares in the red quilts are from a poly fabric, and had I had some cotton in some color near this, I surely would have used it instead. I don't remember where the poly came from, but now it's gone and I will never need to try to figure out how to use it again!



Now, although I don't normally purchase patriotic prints, I will be on the lookout for them when I browse fabric stores. With the idea that I might find some patriotic scraps in the thrift stores (a great place to pick up odds and ends of fabrics once in a while), I took a little break yesterday and went to our local thrift stores. We have three pretty nice ones in one little shopping center, so it makes it easy to go from store to store looking for bargains. I ended up with a half a dozen pieces of fabric, ranging from 7" long to 2-1/2 yards, and several articles of clothing. I found some really cute cotton blouses that looked in good shape and a couple neat sweatshirts (a cranberry one for me and a green one, embroidered with Minnesota, for Lauren). How fun. We used to shop thrift stores when we RV'd a lot, and I enjoy taking a break once in a while and shopping our own locally.
Setting aside a project in favor of another is dangerous stuff. In the middle of working on the quilt tops for the Martha group, I also cut out four more carrying bags. I need one to put Amanda's afghan in, and I couldn't decide just which fabric to use. One thing leads to another, and I ended up choosing two pieces of my stash of heavy fabric and cutting the pieces for four bags out of them. I really like these bags for groceries, library books, projects - you name it. I don't know that one can have too many! Oh dear! Diversions!
Now that I've finished the tops for the Martha group, I'm thinking I'll get back to my Fasset quilt and then use the bags as an interlude somewhere in the middle of the next stages of that. I'm currently working on the half diamond pieces. I have each of them designed (the correct pieces chosen) and they're nice and neat in their little folders.

Lauren and I played with fabric for the border around each block last weekend. I've 99% decided to use a black border with a gold square in the the intersection of each border. Lauren's comment about the black, as he was evaluating his two top choices, was "I can see where some people will really like this ...," leaving the "and some people won't" as implied. But he's right. The patches are striking on black, but not everyone likes "striking."

I've left these two layouts on the end of the bed in our spare bedroom (the layer of patches on black over the layer of patches on gold) so we can think about them from time to time.

No comments:
Post a Comment