Quilting and Stuff by Knitnoid

Miss Florence Jane Has Arrived

Miss Florence Jane, named after my great-grandmother, was brought into my sewing room today.  The first two pictures are from a few years ago, sitting in my brother’s house.  It’s taken me nearly three years to make room for her in my sewing area.

singer5

singer1
Last night we took her out of the cabinet so we could easily transport the machine and cabinet in my truck.  Turns out with the back seat folded down we could leave the cabinet up right.

Once we got her into the house today the first thing I did was remove the motor.  The wiring is badly cracked and I’m looking forward to treadling on her.

treadle-motor

treadle-footpedal

I think that may have been the easy part.

Then I pulled out the manual – it’s from May 1916 – to figure out how to thread the machine.

treadle-book

It’s probably not the first thing I should have done, but I managed to pull the needle out and it ‘felt funny’, so I wanted to see how it was supposed to go into the machine.  Flat side of the needle to the right.  I don’t remember that from when I last sewed on this machine.  But then again it has been 32 years.

Anyway, before it goes back in the cabinet I need to clean it up a bit.

treadle-under

It’s a bit gunky underneath, and I’m sure she could use a bit of oil.

The cabinet top is rough – Potted Plant Disease.  The decals are all worn off.  But that’s because she was used!  No telling what was made on this machine when she was young, but in her later life my momma made clothes for her mother and our family each summer.  My guess is she was only used the 3 to 6 weeks we visited my grandmother each summer.

Mary — she’s wearing the spool doily you made me.

treadle-head

Now to order a belt, clean her up and get her back in the cabinet so I can sew on her.

What’s on My Design Wall

My main design wall is bare today.  I finished quilting Checkerboard Plaid Saturday (finished the quilt, binding and pillowcase before the book I was listening to) which is what I’m showing today.  I took a picture of it hanging, but the lighting was terrible and it was hanging funny.  But I have to say I’m impressed the with holding talents of my niece and her fiance.

EasterQuilt

Easterquiltzack

The quilt is Checkerboard Plaid from Evelyn Sloppy’s 40 Fabulous Quick-Cut Quilts.  Most, but not all of the plaids are from recycled shirts. There are a couple of homespuns in the mix because when I started the quilt I didn’t have the shirts that I have now. The off white is a muslin bought/given to my mom in about 1991/1992.

It is quilted simply 1/4″ on either side of each seam (click on the picture to see the quilting).

checkerboardquiltingdetail

It’s bound in a dark green “marble” type print I bought at Hancock fabrics around 2005.  The backing is a 60″ wide tiny windowpane.  I ended up with a whole bolt of if in 2008 for about $15.

In addition to the quilt I made a coordinating pillowcase.  The body is the backing, the wide portion of the cuff is the back of a shirt (there’s some of that fabric in the quilt as well) and the narrow band is Luninosity Prismaglass in Red.

Easterpillowcase

Quilt Statistics

  • Top Started 10/14/12
  • Top Completed 10/28/12
  • Quilting Started 3/25/13
  • Quilting Finished, Bound, Labeled and Washed 3/30/13
  • Measures 67″ x 81″
  • Warm and Natural Batting
  • Quilted on my DSM
  • Superior Omni Thread – Light Tan in top and bottom
  • 11 1/4 yards fabric for quilt and pillowcase

To see what others have on their design walls, hop over to Patchwork Times.

Stash Report

This week I’ve got both fabric in and fabric out — which actually made it into a quilt — not just passed to someone else!

The inbound fabric is pictured on the post from Friday.  The outbound fabric is the backing, binding, and pillowcase for Checkerboard Plaids, plus the floral blocks I made to complete the floral top.  I really need a better name for that quilt.

So, the numbers are as follows:

Fabric Added Since Last Report: 14.0 yards
Fabric Added to Date: 80.11 yards

Fabric Used Since Last Report: 6.363 yards
Fabric Used to Date: 23.141  yards

Net Used for the year -56.97 yards

Looks like I’m just short of being on track for using 100 yards of fabric this year.

To see how others are doing check out the links over at Patchwork Times.

To Border or Not?

floraltop

 

No, this is not the same picture as the last post.  In this post all the blocks are sewn together.  The top is currently 48″ x 60″. I guess really that is a good size for a throw and I don’t know if border wouldn’t just look like I was trying to make it bigger.

So, I may just call this a top.

Enough Blocks for a Quilt

floralwuilt

 

Sure enough it was quick enough to make 5 blocks.  I think this is the arrangement I’m going to use.  But first, it’s time to put the binding on Checkerboard Plaids.

Fabric “Scraps”

fabric

Last weekend my quilting buddies went to a quilt retreat.  I had to stay home and work.  🙁  But it wasn’t a total disappointment.  One of the quilt shops they stopped at had  “scrap bags”.  They bought several bags and then divided up the fabric, bringing me what is pictured above.  🙂

With the exception of one FQ in the bottom row, everything is full width, including one piece which is 120″ wide.  There are a couple of pieces which are 5 or 6 inches long, but most are in the 9 – 12 inch range.  One of the red pieces is a yard long and the bundle on the right consists of 3 pieces totaling 3 yards! And to think this is “scrap”!

The scraps above the full cuts range from strings, to 9″ squares.  The white fabric on the top left looks like it excess backing.

I can’t wait to start playing with this fabric.  But first, I’ve got a quilt to finish.  I’m 3/4 of the way through the quilting and with the help of my quilting buddies have picked a binding and a pillowcase cuff – all from my stash.

UFO Inspiration

LeeSquares

These floral blocks which I found yesterday (and added to my UFO count!) got me inspired to figure out how to get this into a quilt top.  I have a whole box of florals that I tend to ignore.  So, this evening I pulled floral prints,  pink and lavender tone on tones and some white on white fabric.

floral

With a few minutes (ok, perhaps an hour – had to pet the fabric) I now have 5 blocks kitted and ready to stitch.   Will this become a quilt top before April 15th?  Only time will tell.

Now back to my book on CD and quilting Checkerboard Plaids.  A few more 8 more passes then I’m half way done.

 

UFO Parade Preparations

Earlier this week Judy challenged her readers to a UFO Parade — Essentially, find all of your UFOs and make a list to show to the world (or at least the blog readers)  on April 15th.  I thought, smugly, that I knew how many UFOs I had and what state they were in.  I track them in a spreadsheet and I track them on my ‘Quilts In Progress‘ tab.

Last night I pulled down all of the project boxes from the top shelf.

projectboxes

Only one surprise in these boxes.

MomsJoAnnSampler

Mom’s JoAnn Sampler.  It’s not been started, so in my world that makes it a Kit and not a UFO.  I’ve struck it off my Quilts in Progress tab.

Then it was on to the bin of projects.

ufobin

This one held surprises.  Do you see the box in the box?  This box was given to me a by a friend.  I had briefly looked at the contents, but never really inventoried them.

Last night I did.

There were 4 projects in that box.

A top which just needs borders.

LeeBaskets

A set of log cabin blocks from a swap.

LeeLogCabin

A few purple blocks:

LeePurple

A bunch of floral blocks.

LeeSquares

My Quilts In Progress tab has been updated.   I wonder if I can strike something off the list before the 15th?

A Finish, So It’s My Turn

spongedonecrop

Here it is.  My young quilting friend’s Spongebob quilt for her little cousin.  I think the cousin is 2.  She was so excited when she saw Spongebob. At 43″ square, the quilt is almost twice as long as she is tall so she’ll have it for a while.

checkerboardquilting

During DWTS I sandwiched the Checkerboard Plaid quilt. I turned off Castle (which I enjoy) and put the quilt under the needle to get started.  I must be crazy. I’ve decided to stitch on either side of all the seams. That’s 10 seams a block and the quilt has 30 blocks — so that’s 50 lines vertically and 60 across the width.  When I took this picture had stitched  6 1/2 horizontal lines.

I wonder which will happen first — I finish the quilting or the new book I started listening to will finish.  I’m listening to A Proper Pursuit by Lynn Austin.  One CD = 16 horizontal lines of stitching, 1 + bobbins and cleaning the bobbin area out once.

The muslin and shirts are generating a lot of fuzz. (I’m using Superior’s Omni Thread in Light Tan on the top and in the bobbin – Warm and Natural batting).

What’s On My Design Wall

dw0325-syd

dw0325-al

dw0325-pam

There is nothing on the wall this morning.  This past week my young quilting friend spent most of her spring break with us and she finally got her quilt top finished and quilted.  It’s still in the binding stage – I ended up working for 2 hours late last night instead of getting the binding finished.

The middle picture is what my sister is working on.  This is her first traditional quilt and half of the blocks.  She spent a couple of hours over here Saturday cutting orange rectangles for the rest of the quilt.

Finally something I did (and I think the only thing I did all week).  I made the backing and cut the batting for Checkerboard Plaid.

Hop over to Patchwork Times to see other design walls.