Monday, June 29, 2015

frogging... rip it, rip it *grumble*

Again... the directions are for a full size quilt and WE ARE MAKING A TWIN... <<banging head>>
I should have measured the total length of the tube *before* I assembled it, to make sure it won't be longer than the width of *our* quilt.
I re-measured and shortened the strip set, and reattached the end block to the shortened strip set. Not a big deal in the long run, but annoying when you think you have it all figured out and *surprise* you don't. LOL
This is a clue that I need sleep...

The Tube, a la bargello quilt assembly

The Tube, a la bargello quilt assembly - assemble, press, then (cut) discover you should have measured before assembling...

I heart chain piecing


To chain piece is to sew sets (usually of 2*) of fabric together one set after another, without cutting the thread in between sets.
Chain piecing is a fast way to sew a bunch of pieces of fabric together quickly, especially if you're sewing hundred(s) of little squares or triangles together (BTDT).
Chain piecing is great because it wastes less thread, and keeps the needle from unthreading if the take-up lever isn't all the way up when you last stopped sewing.
It is super-annoying and a massive time waster to have to stop to rethread your needle and/or fish the bobbin thread out of the bobbin case. It's the same as using a starter scrap to keep your thread ends from getting sucked away, only you're not using a starter scrap. It's the same, but different! LOL
*I know of one exception: you sew 3 pieces together at once for Kaye Wood's Attic Windows pattern

design decision... cutting strip sets (fuzzy math)

We have to cut the strips (in half) to size before we sew the end blocks on. (See previous post re: too confusing to describe what I discovered I had to change)
Read the directions three times, measure twice, cut once.
In related news, I have a headache. LOL

more squaring strip set ends

I already trimmed the starry blue/white strip sets, and here I've trimmed the blue/water strip sets.

I lost my helper. *sniff*

come baaaaack....
we were making so much progress...
*sniff*

more trimming selvage/ends

I trimmed the other end as well. This led to a design decision that would be ridiculously confusing and pointless to describe, LOL... remember, what matters most is that you're happy in the end!

preparing strip ends for end blocks

I like to check the waste to make sure I got all of the selvage off, instead of disturbing each of the layers to check, since they are stacked and ready for the other ends to be trimmed already.

pressing strip sets






And yes, I pressed them closed and then open...

cutting 4.5 x10 inch blocks for ends of strips

Of course, it turns out that it would have been fine just to have cut solid 4.5" strips and then chain-piece the strip ends to the solid 4.5" strips, since I'll probably have to square everything up later on anyway...

design decision: 2" (middle) strips


We are assembling 2 strip sets into one long strip and then into a tube, and then cutting the tubes so that when laid out the design is staggered (per the original pattern).
The plain blue strip sets have a strip of "water" going down the middle. We cut them perpendicular in direction compared to how all the other strips are cut, so it will look like water and not an EKG after assembly.
So the water strips are longer than all the other strips, which were cut from selvage to selvage (the factory-cut ends). Although this results in more waste after trimming, it will be worth it to have the effect we want.

No Food While Sewing!!

Unless it's Chocolate Emporium. What can I say, I can be bribed...

(THANKS, DINA!!)

chain piecing - two sewing machines going at once - fast!



The machine on the left is a 1957 Singer 1200 in an artisan/dressmaker's table with electric treadle.
It's the same machine as a 201-2 (great-grandma's machine, on the right) except for the knee-operated presser foot lever. 
It's big help in making quick work of sewing pieces together, one after another. (Also called chain piecing. Wheeeeeeeeee)

always press seams to the dark side (bwahaha)


We'll be doing a LOT of pressing with this project. We want our sewing to be as accurate as possible, and pressing seams open right after sewing really helps with accuracy.

Some people even press the seam before opening it up. They press the seam closed and then press it open. I will admit to having done it. I am still not sure it helps, but it definitely feeds my inner OCD monster. Nom nom. LOL

I use a dry iron. No steam holes means even pressing. No need to drag the iron around to make sure to press where the steam holes missed.
My favorite iron of all time is the Continental Dry Iron. I've had 2. Both had screws or something loose that rattled around on the inside, but as long as they worked, I didn't care.

So that was the problem: after being dropped five too many times, my last one finally quit.

My current iron is lighter (a minus), Black and Decker, and I don't love it, although it has survived one catastrophic fall so far. While on, face down on the year-old hardwood floor, of course. Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooo


assembling the strip sets, adapting a pattern to a different size


We eventually decided on 7 strip sets total. This changed a couple times...

Be open to changing any aspect of your project at any step. Cut yourself slack if suddenly you realize that what you'd declared non-negotiable in color scheme, layout, or whatever is just not working. You want to love your project when it's done. :)

We're adapting a full-size quilt pattern to make a twin quilt.  How do we cut our fabric to get the right dimensions for *our* quilt? Which of the directions for the full-size quilt do we follow and which do we change? 
That requires... I'm sorry to say... math. *weeping*

If you are a visual person, I strongly suggest sketches and notes for each step. Labels, lists, whatever you have to do to keep things straight.

We chose a different color scheme than the pattern calls for (and changed it again, ack), and a different (but much easier, yay!) construction of the middle, narrower strips in each strip set.
So... we worked backwards.

What's the finished size of *our* quilt?
Are we following the pattern directions for strip dimensions and just shortening the finished strip sets? (yes)
We decided to make our quilt half as wide as the pattern.
The directions are Right There, and I stared at them for a very, very, long time. LOL

cutting: 2-inch strips for center of strip sets

These will be the center of the assembled strip sets, that the poly pellets will go in after being sewn to the quilt backing.

cutting: eight 4.5" strips of each color.

Lining up the layers exactly, and then cutting 4.5" strips from the (trimmed) edge, makes for less work cutting overall. If cutting through two layers, you only have to cut 4 strips instead of 8.

Pillowcase! Autism Awareness! :)

Fabulous :)

my daughter sewing on her great-great-grandma Ellen's sewing machine

That's my great-grandma's 1935 Singer 201-2 in a #48 cabinet. The cabinet used to be an UGLY green. I refinished it and love how it came out so much that occasionally I pet it. (pet pet)

first, a pillowcase

the puzzle piece theme represents the cause of Autism Awareness

Wednesday, June 24, 2015

ironing...

endless ironing...

preparing the fabric: washing, ironing, cutting strips

I had H. wash the fabric with the detergent that she uses. Then my daughter RM and I ironed the fabric and cut into strips. 

Read the directions three times, measure twice, cut once...


Here I trimmed what will become the backing piece, that we will sew our assembled strips sets to. Those strips we will pour the poly pellets into, one strip at a time going across.



design decisions

What color(s), which pattern to use? S.'s mom H. and I went to Joann for ideas, and here's what we came up with...



The pattern my friend H. chose is Back to Blue from Fons & Porter's Easy Quilts, Summer 2015. The instructions are for a full size quilt, and we're making a twin quilt, so we have to play with the fabric yardage a bit.

The inspiration for the construction of this quilt is taken directly from The Weighted Blanket: An Easy Quilting Project by Rob Appell of Man Sewing.  Rob's a man who sews! Cool, eh?

Other quilters I take inspiration from are Kaye Wood of the PBS series Kaye Wood's Quilting Friends (click to go to my favorite video of hers!), and Jenny Doan of the Missouri Star Quilt Company.