Quilting and Stuff by Knitnoid

Author Archives: Pam

I made my first quilted item as a visual aid for a math project in 7th grade. Over the next 25 years quilting was hit or miss, but quilting took over all the other crafts I've done in 2003.

The Border Wars Are Over

OutOfTheBlue

The border wars are over and we have a winner — Out of the Blue. The quilt top is approximately 47″ x 61″.  All of the blocks came from my orphan block box — which incidentally I can now get closed  – although that’s probably due to neatly stacking rather than removing these blocks from the box.

Here’s a bit about the blocks.  The large black and bright 4-patches came from a swap I did when I first started quilting.  Only having 9 there really weren’t enough to do anything with, so into the box they went.

The hearts were supposed to be cornerstones on my Dancing Flowers wall  hanging, but I didn’t like the red with the flower blocks and I didn’t think they would go well in the Black and Bright swap quilt.

Speaking of the Black and Bright swap quilt, the turquoise, lime and black strip was made from leftover border and the pink and turquoise Flying Dutchman was a block I made for the swap which was returned to me when someone dropped out.

The two Dresden Plates are extras from my  Dresden Plate quilt Metamorphosis. I have no idea why I didn’t make the quilt one more column wider. I just needed another 3 blocks and two more are in the orphan box waiting to be turned and appliqued down.

That just leaves the small green 4-patches.  Most of them were given to me in a bag of “scraps” from T. In fact now that I think about it, some of them were from her Black and Bright swap block. Also in the scraps were some 2-patches which I sewed together.  But I came up short 1 4-patch — so I cut down one of the large green 4-patches to complete the row.  I ended up adding 3 4-patches to the orphan box as a result.

My husband came up with the name while we were brain storming names.  Out of the Blue was chosen for multiple reasons – The border was not one in the running earlier in the week, it came Out of the Blue. The border came Out of the Blue box of stash fabric. The entire quilt came Out of the Blue with no planning when I opened my orphan block box.

 

Border Wars

No I don’t mean KU vs MU – I never have gotten into that, but I know that for some it’s a big deal.  Borders as in what, if anything to do for my Orphan Block quilt.

This morning Becky suggested that I put the Flying Dutchman block between the two Dresden Plate blocks (something I had previously tried) and then take the extra 4-patch and split it into two 2-patches to fill in the large 4-patch rows.  That was enough to kick me in gear.  I actually cut down one of the large green 4-patches to fill in the small 4-patch row, which meant all my rows were 36″ wide, except for the turquoise, green and black row – and I took two pieces off of it and then it too was 36″ wide.

The quilt top now measures 36″ wide by 50″ long.  The length is probably OK, but it’s the width I’m having issues with.  I’m considering adding a border — but just to the sides.  Thus the border wars.

Do I skip all borders, go with just the print, or use a narrow spacer border before the print and if so, what color – yellow, blue, pink or green?

What Is On My Design Wall

There are bits and pieces of the orphan blocks up on the wall. I narrowed it down to just those blocks which had black in them. Went though several iterations even asking my husband to see if he could arrange the blocks.

orphansblackandbright

orphansrows

 

orphansTed

 

At one point I pulled fabric from my stash then asked if I could make new blocks for the Orphan Block Quilt.

orphans-fabrics

I got one answer “only from orphan fabric” and one answer “no”.

So I downloaded a few historical romances onto my Kindle and read. And assisted Syd with her quilt for her mom.

dw0729

 She’s picked a backing fabric from my stash. I think there’s enough, but I’ll have to use the John Flynn method to make the backing.

Be sure to hop over to Patchwork Times to see what others have on their design wall.

 

Stash Report

No fabric in and no fabric  out.

Fabric Added Since Last Report: 0 yards
Fabric Added to Date: 122.087 yards

Fabric Used Since Last Report:  0 yards
Fabric Used to Date: 61.374 yards

Net Used for the year -60.713 yards

Check out other’s stash reports over at Patchwork Times.

String Wall Hanging

stringcenter

 

I’ve finished the center of the String wall hanging from my Orphan Block Box. Now to decide if I want a border.  It currently measures 18 x 24.

One option is to simply quilt and bind it.

I’ve also considered a couple of border options.  The first one is a hot pink Colorworks inner border and then a black outer border.

stringcolorworks

But I almost think the pink is too dark or bright or something.

So, I’ve thought about using a black and white “plaid”.

stringpurse

I like this better, but I’m not certain.  I don’t have a whole lot of this fabric, so I’m not sure how wide I can make the border.

Anyone have any suggestions?  Whatever I do it will have to come from my stash.

 

 

What’s On My Design Wall

This past weekend I’ve spent playing in my Orphan Block Box – It has gone from this:

orphansbox

To this:

dw0722box

Sort of.

Up on my design wall I’ve put all of the black and bright blocks plus the bright blocks.

dw0722-wall

Clearly it needs some work.  I have no idea what I’m going to do with those border pieces…well an idea is forming in my head…. Some of the blocks are new – made with parts and pieces I found in the box. This is a work in progress. I don’t know if this will be a new quilt or a backing for something else.  It simply hasn’t told me yet.

But there are more pieces kicking around the sewing room. This is the easier bit of what needs to be trimmed & pinned together.

dw0722-cutting

Then there is this:

dw0722ironingboard

Strips sewn into strip sets for other quilts, a couple of Dresden plates waiting to be turned (no, I have no desire to finish them) and a few other bits and pieces sewn together.  Even so, everything shown so far could fit back into the box. It’s amazing how much more you can get stuff somewhere when it’s neat stacked.  There’s just one problem.

This pile:

dw0722stackofblocks

It’s the pile of blocks which came out of the box that are not on the wall. There are a few new blocks in the stack made from bits and pieces I found in the box. There is a good start of another top/backing in that stack. But I’ve gotten side-tracked.

dw0722gray

I found 52 3″ squares – 8 are already sewn together which I’ll take apart to fill in on the right.  I think I’m going to make this a little wall hanging — 15 x 20.  These are leftover pieces from a quilt I made one of my great-nieces.  I found 9 strips of string piecing from the same time frame — I’m not sure how many blocks that would get me — but I’d have to use a different background — I’ve long since used the rest of this and have no idea what it was.

So, my sewing room is still turned upside down, but I’ve had fun playing in my box to see what treasures I’ve found.

To see what other’s have been working on, check out the links over at Patchwork Times.

Stash Report

Saturday I spent the day playing in my Orphan Block box and nearly forgot that I finally had fabric to report as used since I finished Nifty Thrify – or at least completed the top.

So here are the numbers:

Fabric Added Since Last Report: 0 yards
Fabric Added to Date: 122.087 yards

Fabric Used Since Last Report:  6.729 yards
Fabric Used to Date: 61.374 yards

Net Used for the year -60.713 yards

See how others are doing with their stash over at Patchwork Times.

Play Time

truddicenterOK, I’m skipping ahead.  The center of the quilt is done, but now I  can’t remember what the borders are supposed to look like. So, I’m setting it aside for a bit play time in my Orphan Block Box.

As it turns out, the box contains blocks, pieces and parts.

Here are a some of the blocks I’ve tossed up on the wall.

orphansblocks

 

Then there are the parts and more blocks.

orphanspieces

 

Then there’s what is still left in the box. Strips sewn together to cut into HST with the Wondercut Ruler, more parts/pieces, tiny blocks for a quilt that seemed to be going no where fast, strips sewn together from mitered borders or ready to be cut into strips to form into other blocks.

orphansbox

There is no way I can get everything back into the box, since I still haven’t pulled everything OUT of the box – I’ve only stirred and fluffed.

I’m going to find a box I can temporarily toss stacks of pinned pieces into until I get to the bottom of this box. Once I see what I have I can decide on a theme of the quilt — Black and Bright?  Just Brights? Pink & Purple? Pastels?  I suspect there are at least 2 quilts in this box, perhaps more – especially with a bit of “coping” fabric thrown in from the stash.

 

 

 

Change of Plans

truddi

 

The plan was to work on the Orphan Blocks – but that will tie up the design wall until the top is complete.  So, I switched and pulled out T’s birthday quilt. It’s close to being a top, so it will finish up quickly.

As for the Orphan Blocks?  I cleared half the ironing board.

fridaynight

 

Yes, that overflowing box actually had the lid closed, but warped before I started stirring.

Nifty Thrifty Is A Top

niftythriftytop

 

I’m calling Nifty Thrifty a Top.  This is from Bonnie Hunter’s Scraps and Shirttails.  Everything in this top is from recycled shirts.  As a result, I’m not sure what I’m going to use for binding when I get that far – let alone what color.

Up next – to dig through that box of Orphan Blocks. I want to be able to easily close it by the end of the weekend, then I’ll work on T’s Birthday Quilt.