Showing posts with label Happy Trail Rail Quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Happy Trail Rail Quilt. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Have Scraps, Will Travel

While I am traveling on a road trip to Yellowstone National Park with my hubby and son, I have once again set up the Backseat Sewing Studio which really is a nice way to travel.  I decided my Create On the Go project for this trip will be sewing fabric scrap pieces onto scrap batting cut to 5" or 6" squares which is a great way to use up both of these never-ending stashes. I plan on using these squares for either mug rugs or pincushions.  I thought I would share a scrappy story and the blocks made along the road.
I guess my Hubby does not read my blog because he would know that a Ninja with a rotary cutter, I am not.  As we started on our travels to Yellowstone, I was in the backseat behind my hubby while my son occupied the front seat next to him.  After a couple of hours into the road trip,  I started working on my hand-piecing project.  I brought my brayer/roller so I can press the seams as I sewed along which made a squeaking sound. I could somewhat hear a conversation between the two guys; hubby asking my son a question, he responding: "What's that?" and then talking about a pizza cutter and then my son slowly turning around to look at what I was doing and then telling my hubby "No".  Hubby thought I was using a rotary cutter while he was driving.  I am pretty careful when it comes to using my rotary cutter--two feet on the floor, eyes focused, mindful of where the rotary cutter is going and something I would only do in the comfort of my studio/home and not in a moving vehicle.  I will admit though, I did entertain a thought of bringing my Sizzix Fabi Die-cutter to cut a gazillion 1" HST while in the backseat but I didn't want to make a mess in my backseat studio. 


I sewed these scrappy blocks on the way to Yellowstone  The one in the top photo I'm thinking would make a nice mug trough and the ones in the middle will be for pincushions or mug rugs. (BTW, the block on the very bottom was a test block made before we left and it was trimmed.)  The bottom ones are my favorite so far and I love the improvisational look. I'm sewing the scraps the Crazy Mom's Scrap Vortex method and involves finding and sewing scraps which are the same size or shape. It's really a nice, relaxing project for the road, albeit the squeaky brayer. I'll trim these squares once I'm home where the rotary cutter will be waiting for me.

I brought my Happy Trail Rails Quilt, which was finished last week,  along on our road trip (you can read about it here).  Diann of Little Penguin Quilts suggested I take some photos of the quilt in Yellowstone.  I am not too adventurous and still camera shy when it comes to photographing my quilts outside my house but I think these two photos turned out quite nice.

These photos are better....I'm just having a little fun here--no animals nor  I were harmed; the photos are courtesy of picMonkey photo editing and my quilt being photographed at the right position.  How do you like my watermark on these photos?  Just like not using a rotary cutter in the car, I would never think of using wildlife for a photo prop for one of my quilts; it's not right nor allowed plus I can't run fast anymore.  It sure was funny when hubby asked me how I did I that; I think for one brief second he thought maybe the quilt was actually on these beautiful creatures.

Well, it should be no surprise that I already purchased 7.5 yards of fabric before we arrived at Yellowstone.  I like to visit Wal-Mart whenever we're on vacation to see if I can score any deals in their fabric department and I did find some backing and some basics.  I'll tally my new total for my Minus One Hundred Yard Challenge on my next post since there may be a chance I may actually visit a quilt shop on the return trip home.  Maybe I should add a rule that fabric purchased while on vacation does not count, especially if money was saved.  At Yellowstone, we finally purchased our National Park Lifetime Senior Passes for $10 each, just two days before the rate was going up to $80 each, so that's a $140 saving which does buy a lot of fabric.

Linking up with:

KokaQuilts: Sew Stitch Snap Share
My Quilt Infatuation: Needle and Thread Thursday
Crazy Mom Quilts: Finish It Up Friday
Confessions of a Fabric Addict:  Can I Get A Whoop Whoop?
Busy Hands Quilts:  Finish Or Not Friday
Quilting Is More Fun Than Housework: Oh Scrap