Thursday, July 28, 2022

Peri-Pinkle Nine Patch Quilt

The month of July started the Country Threads 2022/23 Dirty Dozen UFO Challenge and I was busy. New to the challenge is besides a number being pulled for a UFO project, a color will also be pulled (a list of colors and the corresponding number was posted in June) and you have the option of working on a new or old project. This gives the participants a choice of working on a UFO or a new project which I thought was a great idea since there were several months that I wondered if I wanted to continue participating since I was getting tired of finishing UFOs. I also added another twist to this challenge by gathering five projects for each month corresponding to the Color which were a flimsie waiting to be quilted, a UFO project (in a block stage or less), a designer whose fabrics I’ve have in my stash and always wanted to make something with it, a fabric bundle waiting for a project and a scrap project. I have a choice each month of deciding which one of these projects I want to work on and given myself the allowance that new projects can be a flimsy finish. Number 10 and the color Pink was pulled for July and I chose to finally finish my Peri-Pinkle Nine Patch which was a flimsie I finished in 2000 or twenty-two years ago.

One of the reasons why I wanted to finally finish this quilt is because of the other name I gave it; the Granddaughter Quilt #2. The Granddaughter Quilt #1 is also on this year’s challenge list. I was working at the Quilt Shop when I purchased the fabrics for this quilt; it was during this time when other fabric companies were coming out with their own reproduction fabrics which before only Marcus Bros, Julie Rothermel was designing. The fabrics used in the Peri-Pinkle Nine Patch Quilt were from Moda (Sharon Newman), In the Beginning (Sharon Yenter) and Chanteclaire (Darlene Zimmerman). When I made this flimsie, my two sons were still in high school and middle school and thought that someday this quilt would be for a future granddaughter. Now this future granddaughter, the darling granddaughter is now five and may be ready for a big girl quilt or several big girl quilts so I thought this would be a great finish to start the Challenge. You would think this would be my oldest quilt finish but it’s not if the Granddaughter Quilt #1 is finished.

I would like to say that the machine quilting was a breeze but it wasn’t. My plan to do simple in the ditch quilting combined with diagonal crosshatching on the nine patch did not go well with the Ditch Quilt Foot which I used before. I should have realized after the first line of quilting that something was wrong but I ignored it. Two thoughts came to mind after I quilted it the first time, you’re never too old to make stupid quilting mistakes and if the first line of machine quilting isn’t right, stop and get the seam ripper out. You can see on the top pic how badly puckered the machine quilting was and my thought was maybe this is what it would have looked like if I had machine quilted it twenty-two years ago and maybe it wouldn’t be too noticeable if I photographed it at a certain angle. But I decided I needed to rip out all of the quilting which took two days. It should be no surprise that I binge watched crime and murder mysteries. The second time I machine quilted this quilt I used my walking foot, the ditch quilt foot has been placed in the time out corner on my sewing table. You can see how much better the machine quilting  looks on the bottom pic. When I showed my Hubby these photos, he commented that if I left the quilt alone the first time,  I could have called it the Puckered Pink Quilt.
I did hand sew the binding down which I would have done twenty-two years ago because doing it by machine was almost unheard of back then. You can see the backing is the pink Chanteclaire ticking stripe which I almost wasn’t going to use because back then I thought I might need it for another project but now I’m pretty sure there won’t be and it was just perfect for the backing. I normally am a cheapskate when it comes to backing fabric; I use sale fabric which sometimes is not part of the fabric line or used in the flimsie. BTW, the Peri-Pinkle Nine Patch Quilt measures 60”x80” which was a pretty big quilt for me back then.
And here’s a photo of the darling Granddaughter with her Peri-Pinkle Nine Patch Quilt wearing her matching pink shoes. If you’re wondering how I came up with the name, it’s a combination of the periwinkle blue and pink fabrics used in this quilt.
The Peri-Pinkle Nine Patch Quilt was a finally finish before mid July so I thought I would have time to work on other projects I had designated for the month. I spent the last week in June organizing my projects, a total of 60 projects and making a photo collage of the five projects for each month. I have to mention that I love each one of the projects chosen and that there were lots more which could have been included. The left top photo is the flimsie, the bottom left is the UFO, the top right is the designer bundle, the center right is the fabric bundle and the bottom right is the scrap project which I have to mention since Pink was the color of the month, my scraps are Tula Pink. There are some months I tweaked some of the designations and changed one of the fabric colors from stripe to neutral or free for all. We’re only traveling to the GP House every other weekend now which gives me a nice block of time to do some serious quilting and that I did.
Four Flimsies in four days-leave it to me to turn a Challenge to a Choice and then to a Am I Crazy Challenge by working on the other four projects which I don’t expect I will do each month. It helps that these patterns were fast and easy. And you know what’s even crazier….
I finished another flimsie, instead of quilting one of the other four flimsies, which was a DrEAMi but right now looks more like a Squirrel Scream. This flimsie did not sew fast as the others and glad it’s a finish. I’m hoping once the blue binding is on, I will like it better. I’ll post more about these flimsies once they are finally finished. I’m thinking some of these flimsies finished during this year’s challenge are perpetual and are going to appear on next year’s challenge list. I do like the idea of having less fabrics sitting idly in my stash.
Even though the month of July isn’t over for another three days, I’m tired. We’re leaving for the GP House this weekend and I don’t think I’ll bring any sewing but who knows what I’ll come up with after I clean my table. There are some interesting scraps laying around…..

Linking up with: My Quilt Infatuation/NTT

Thursday, July 7, 2022

A Happy Stripes Quilt

When I first saw Emily Dennis’ Happy Stripes  pattern, I knew I had to purchase it because it was a great stash buster pattern for 2.5” strips. If you seen my other quilts, you know that I love this combination. The fabric in my Happy Stripes quilt might look familiar since I just finished in April my Carrie Bloomston Unruly Patchwork Throw.
A little bit of happenstance with the making of the Happy Stripes quilt which made me wonder if I really have a Fairy Quilt Godmother in my studio. After I ordered the pattern and I was thinking of using my Carrie Bloomston stash since it was fresh on my mind after making the patchwork throw. I really do love my stash which includes several of her fabric lines which work so well together. I just so happened to see a purple tote bag sitting on the bottom of my project cart and decided to look to see what was inside. It contained approximately 150 2.5” strips cut from my Carrie Bloomston stash maybe last year and had forgotten about it. I just needed to die-cut 25 more strips and HSTs from the Newsprint fabric and I was ready to make this quilt.
Over 60 different prints were used. After grouping the strips in sets of four, there were sixteen different combinations,  After sewing the strip sets which made four rail blocks, the connecting corners were sewn on different sides of the rail blocks so it would look like there were more combinations.
The Flimsy was finished by the end of May and I had to wait until after my busy June was over before I could finally machine quilt the Happy Stripes quilt.
No surprise with the machine quilting with my go-to combination of straight and wavy lines with CT Essential Thread in #20858 Stone. The binding was a Stoffabric gray/black dot print with gold metallic and not from the Carrie Bloomston stash since there wasn’t enough yardage of a solid print which would work and  I thought a scrappy binding would look too busy. Lucky me for just purchasing a yard of this print when I was in Colorado last month.
The Master Quilt Holder had a little trouble holding up this 64”x88” quilt to show some of the backing which is the Pueblo Stripe print from the Carrie Bloomston stash. I purchased beaucoup yardage of this several years ago from Bernie Kringle’s Needle and Foot Shop and I knew one day I would make a quilt to finally  use it.
Here’s another photo of the Happy Stripes quilt. A sad note about the finishing of it; after spending Saturday and Sunday with friends with holiday get togethers,  my plan was to spend the Fourth of July machine quilting. Instead, I spent the morning and early afternoon glued to the television because of the awful shooting at a parade which happened in a town just 27 miles away. This is a beautiful town I am familiar with, visited and even dreamed of living there. I finally made it to my studio late afternoon and quilted with a heavy heart once again. It is days like these which I find comfort in quilting and it’s happening much too often.

Linking up with: My Quilt Infatuation/NTT