Saturday, December 28, 2024

Make Nine 2024 recap

Make Nine 2024 was a success! Here is a recap of my 6th year participating in this Challenge.

Make Nine 2024 recap.

In answer to my 2024 prompts, these projects were completed (from top left):

  • UFO: An improv quilt top from 18 - 19 years ago was finally quilted and bound. (finish #1)
  • Wild Card: the first of the Wild Card prompts was fulfilled with this quilt using Dashwood Studio’s Spellbound fabric collection. It was displayed at the booth at the H+H industry trade show this past May. (finish #4)
  • Mend/Upcycle: a new binding was given to this quilt I made in the 1990s. (finish #7)
  • Learn More in ’24: I learned how to make these triangle pouches this summer and made several of them for friends and associates. (finish #9)
  • On-line Challenge: I participated in the Winter of Care and Repair Challenge this year. Several mends, up-cycled or repurposed items, and using up yarn and fabric scraps. (finish #2)
  • Wild Card: the second Wild Card prompt was fulfilled with an improv quilt that was donated to the auction/fund-raiser for the John C. Campbell Folk School. Blocks were made by the students in my Intro to Improv Patchwork class. The top assembly, quilting and finishing was done by me. (finish #8)
  • Fun and Easy: Another yearly quilting project of mine is making kitty quilts. I make them throughout the year for friends with cats, neighbors with cats, for our own pack of kitties, and to support a local Cat Clinic and a local vet. A total of 10 kitty quilts were completed this year. (finish #5)

This is the completed worksheet for Make Nine 2024:

Make Nine 2024 worksheet.

I’m contemplating prompts for Make Nine 2025.




Wednesday, December 25, 2024

Happy Christmas and a mend-ful New Year

Out of the gate for a Winter of Care and Repair is this pillow that had literally busted at the seams. It’s been mended and in use again... in time for the holidays.

Mended tree pillow back in service.

This pillow is a long-time, scrappy favorite of mine. It was a project I made as a beginner quilter. The original fabrics for the sashing, border, and the pillow back were solids—and likely from a source that was used before I knew about, and understood the value of, “quilt shop quality” cottons. As you can see, the fabrics didn’t hold up as long as the rest of the pillow.

Unstitching and removing the patchwork from the pillow top.

Disassembly and the mending process

I decided to save just the center patchwork and put it into a new setting. It didn’t seem prudent to unpick the other seams and try to salvage the lesser-quality solid fabrics. (They will find their way into another scrappy project.) 

For the new borders, a cotton blender—a “holiday red” (merlot is the color name) from the Canvas collection [Northcott Fabrics]— was my choice for the replacement fabric. 

Unstitching the center patchwork from the old pillow.

After unpicking the patchwork from the borders, doing a little “quilty math” to fit the size of the pillow form correctly, the new strips were cut and sewn to the patchwork.

New borders added.

I sew rounded corners on pillows so they won’t be so pointy once the pillow form is inserted.

Sewing rounded corners.

A new pillow backing (I use the overlap style) was added using the same Canvas blender fabric. The old pillow form was inserted, and the tree pillow is like-new again.

Mended pillow.

The Winter of Care and Repair is off to a productive start. Happy patchwork for a happy Christmas!


Saturday, December 21, 2024

The winter solstice and a season of textile Care and Repair

Today is the shortest day of the year—the winter solstice. Tomorrow, there will be a wee bit more daylight… and a wee bit more the following day… until the spring equinox. The winter solstice also marks the beginning of Winter of Care and Repair.

Winter of Care and Repair Challenge for 2024 - 2025.

A Winter of Care and Repair pledge

My pledge for this year’s three-month Winter of Care and Repair Challenge is much like last year’s. The main focus is on textiles with the addition of household care.

  • textile mending and repairs
  • upcycling and repurposing
  • organizing my fabric stash
  • minimizing scraps
  • and this year, an effort to find time to tidy up my home office.

To start off the Care and Repair season, I’m donating four scrappy quilts to our local veterinarian and animal hospital.

Scrappy quilts for cats and dogs.

I use improv patchwork and fabric scraps to make these little quilts for the animals at the vet. The quilts are fun to make, stress-free, and go to both my Care and Repair pledge to repurpose and upcycle as well as providing care for the four-legged fuzzy ones.

Scrappy quilt backs.

Two of these quilts have flannel backings.

Free-motion quilting.

The quilts are free-motion quilted and the bindings are attached by machine with a narrow zigzag stitch.

Machine bindings using a narrow zigzag stitch.

The mending pile

I have begun gathering items in need of mending or repair. The Care and Repair Challenge is a perfect motivation to keep household items, clothes, and other textiles in good working order. 

 


Saturday, December 14, 2024

Make it Again… and again… and…

One of my Make Nine prompts is “Make it Again.” It’s a prompt for a project where I can use an existing pattern or a technique with which I’m familiar, to expedite “getting to the good part.” Here are another pair of Valencia one-seam pants and another long-sleeve (I’ve also made a few short sleeve versions) Bristol knit top.

The Bristol top and Valencia pants patterns from The Sewing Workshop.

Garment details

The knit is from Art Gallery Fabrics and the pant fabric is a woven from Diamond Textiles.

Another “Make it Again” outfit.

I always add pockets to my Valencia pants. Where else do you put your kleenex and your car keys?

Patch pockets added to my Valencia pants.

On the Bristol, I added top stitching by hand with a variegated 8 wt. perle cotton thread at the yoke. The sleeve cuffs are also a different knit print.

Hand stitching at the yoke. Contrasting fabric for the cuffs.

Two makes in two days. It’s “Make it Again” in all its glory. Can’t beat that efficiency!

“Make it Again” Bristol knit top and Valencia pants with pockets.



Sunday, December 8, 2024

Making Wreath Blocks with scraps and a specialty ruler

 My pile of make-do wreath blocks has grown!

Wreath blocks for scraps.

Using the Hatchet Block specialty ruler

The original “make do” blocks that inspired this project were made with scraps and strings, pieced on the diagonal of a square. 

I used a Creative Grids Hatchet Block specialty ruler to gauge the fabric length for the center section of each unit. Red fabric squares were cut in half diagonally for the corner triangles. The Hatchet Block ruler was designed to be used with 5” charm squares, but it can be used with scraps, too. Quiltmakers love tools that are multi-use and versatile as well as making the patchwork process efficient!

The Hatchet Block specialty ruler and a 6.5” square ruler were used to make units for the wreath blocks.

Four Hatchet units were needed to make each Wreath block. Trimming a few of the Hatchet units also added to my collection of HSTs (half-square triangles).

Scraps and trimmings contribute to half-square triangle [HST] units.

12-block layout

My individual Wreath blocks came to 9.5” square. They needed to be trimmed down to 9” to match the three “make do” blocks—the impetus of this project.

Squaring up Wreath blocks to 9” [unfinished size].

Twelve blocks make up the layout of this little quilt top. I opted to set the blocks solid (without a sashing). This allowed the diamond shapes—created by the intersection of four blocks coming together—become apparent. This echoes the diamond shapes in the center of each wreath block.

Wreath blocks on the design wall.

If you “spin the seams” at the block’s center (all in the same direction, mind you—either clockwise or counter-clockwise), the seam allowances will nest at the sides, making assembling easier and reducing bulk.

Spinning the seams reduces bulk and aids in nesting the seam allowances.

A simple red border finished the quilt top.

Finished quilt top. 31” x 39.5” 

Making these scrappy blocks were fun and stress-free. And I’m pleased that three orphaned “make do” blocks have found their home.


Sunday, December 1, 2024

Getting ready for “A Winter of Care and Repair”

A Winter of Care and Repair. I love this Challenge! I participated last year and it was very gratifying. The online Challenge is hosted by Jeanna @thepeoplesmending and takes place from the Winter Solstice (December 21, 2024) to the Spring Equinox (March 20, 2025).

Winter of Care and Repair 2024-2025

Make a plan, set some goals

During this season-long project, participants are encouraged to design their own parameters/plan/outcome/pledge that suits their lifestyle while focusing on mending, repairing, and caring for their belongings or themselves. I generally focus on textiles—mending, up-cycling, recycling, prolonging their life, and keeping them out of landfills. In general, being more sustainable by caring for existing items rather than buying new.

One of the mending projects slated for this year’s Winter of Care and Repair Challenge.

How the WOCAR Challenge began… and what’s new

Jeanna started the Winter of Care and Repair Challenge in 2020 during the Covid 19 lockdown as a way to provide some semblance of structure and control during an uncertain time. This year, she’s added another element to the concept. She says, “The winter of 2024/25 feels like the beginning another period of frightening uncertainty… with the future of human rights and environmental action looking bleak, I’m expanding the very lose parameters of WOCAR to include ‘something within the participants’ circle of control’ rather than just belongings.”

In the past, the Challenge focused on the care and repair of garments and belongings. This year, she’s including other aspects to her personal plan that are “in her circle of control.” 

Need ideas?

Visit @thepeoplesmending for ideas for creating a plan or your personal plan or pledge. In the past, some participants have designed their Challenge project to focus on things such as:

  • tending a garden and prepping the ground for the next season’s planting,
  • repurposing or repairing household items (rather than disposing of them),
  • de-cluttering a room/garage/house,
  • creating habits to improve personal health and well-being.
Whatever works for your schedule, lifestyle, and goals… A Winter of Care and Repair is the perfect opportunity in which to apply them!
 
I’ve notified members of my household to begin setting aside things for the mending basket.


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