Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogs. Show all posts

Saturday, May 25, 2024

Scrappy Saturday

Pink scrap blocks
I finished my log cabin blocks and my heart/alternate blocks in pink for the month. I have some other projects I am working on so am probably done with pink scraps for the month. Will see what color June brings.

Treadlestiches
posted about a disappearing 9-patch recently. I had seen quilts with this block but never understood how it came out of a 9-patch. Now I get it! Seems like a great scrap-buster block. Sane, Crazy, Crumby Quilting also had a some good scrap-busters a while back: checkerboards in RSC colors with a constant background (green in her case) and Cheerio blocks which are adorable. I am really enjoying doing the RSC so am trying to keep track of blocks I might want to make from scraps going forward. 


 I am linking up with Scrappy Saturday at So Scrappy and Oh Scrap! 

Sunday, March 31, 2019

OMG March Finish

9 stacks of 8 blocks = 72
I completed my #onemonthlygoal for  March 2019 which was to complete, with sashing, 72 scrappy purple blocks for another wheelchair lap quilt.  This project was inspired by the Bread Crumbs Quilt at TheQuiltPolice.  It may turn out to be that quilt, or it may end up a bit different. Will have to see how I feel about it when I lay it out. Linking up with  Oh Scrap! this week as well as the One Monthly Goal project at Elm Street Quilts.

Saturday, March 23, 2019

Book Report: Mr. X Stitch Guide to Cross Stitch

The Mr. X Stitch Guide to Cross StitchThe Mr. X Stitch Guide to Cross Stitch
by Jamie Chalmers
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I have been cross-stitching sporadically most of my life, so most of this book was review for me. It provides very good basic instructions with clear illustrations and some modern looking projects. The detailed analysis of how a pineapple project changes depending on size, count, and number of colors (adjusted with design software like PCStitch) was extremely illuminating and clarified the implications of these choices in a pattern. My main quibble is that he describes a "laying tool" in the gadgets section (which I have never come across before), but never explains how you use it to do what he describes. If you have never cross-stitched this book would be a good place to start. His website is www.mrxstitch.com
I first heard about this book on Following the Thread.

Monday, November 16, 2015

Do You Know About Quilter Blogs.com?

If you want to see what thousands of quilt blogs have to say today (or any other day) check out Quilter Blogs. It has a feed of posts from all the quilt blogs it follows so you can drop by and see what is being posted currently. There is also a list by name so you can find a specific quilt blog (like Urban Quilter which was added recently). It is a great way to find new blogs to follow and to be inspired by all the great quilting going on in the blogosphere. 


Thursday, May 29, 2014

Blogging Advice

Molli Sparkles posted an excellent set of instructions for improving your blog. If I do all the stuff she recommends (including #13) I will have an awesome blog. Her post was part of the Plum and June New Blogger Blog Hop which promises to include lots of good stuff about being a better blogger over the next couple months. 
In the interest of cross referencing (It's the librarian in me and I can't help it) there are also a lot of good blogging resources from the book-blog world at Bloggiesta.
There may be renovations ahead here at Urban Quilter.

Monday, May 5, 2014

Triangle Quilt Along: The Extravaganza

The Sassy Quilter has posted a triangle extravaganza with all the beautiful quilts that everyone completed for the Triangle Quilt Along. It is very cool how there are so many different looks based on the colors, the fabric consistency (love the ones with lots of black triangles mixed in!), and the edge finishes. I would definitely consider making a 60-degree-triangle quilt again.

Monday, March 24, 2014

Vote in the Pantone Quilt Challenge

Play-Crafts and On The Windy Side hosted the 2014 Radiant Orchid Pantone Quilt Challenge and you can now visit the linky party to see the quilts and vote for your favorites. Personally I voted for the ones in each category that I thought were the most fabulously purple, but other theories could apply. Voting will be open until Thursday (March 27th) at 11pm PST.
I love radiant orchid! I didn't participate in this challenge, mostly because I only learned about it a couple weeks ago and the quilts needed to be started in 2014 to qualify so the purple syncopated ribbons and the purple/cream quilt I just put into the AQG show are both too old. 

Friday, March 21, 2014

Triangle Quilt Along - Fabric

Fabrics for the Sassy Quilter Triangle Quilt Along
The Sassy Quilter is hosting a Triangle Quilt Along. I've never made a triangle quilt and I had enough fabric in my stash to make the quilt so I have signed up and this will be my April Activity. Technically it starts today (March 21) but it goes through April so I think it works.

There are 2 new skills involved for me here: sewing triangles (shouldn't be a problem, but I haven't done it before) and using Flickr (seems like a steeper learning curve.) I have a flickr account and have set up a link on the sidebar to my (soon-to-have-pics-in-it) photostream.

My husband loves green and when he saw an all green quilt at a show a few years ago he suggested I should make an all green quilt, so that is the plan for this project. Note that this does not mean the quilt is for him.

Saturday, March 1, 2014

My 30/30 Goal

Sarah at Berry Barn Designs is tackling her 2014 goal to "sew more for me" by carving out 30 minutes for 30 days. I decided that since March is my birthday month I would join her and as a gift to myself make time to sew every day for me. In February I participated in the DAGM20 challenge at Quilting Hottie Haven which focuses on finishing UFOs. I enjoyed that and got some stuff cleared out that had been hanging around too long. I love that the focus of the 30/30 Sewing Challenge is "me" time!
The first step in the challenge is to choose a goal for your 30/30. Mine is to spend 30 minutes each day working on a sewing/quilting project that appeals to me that day. I have some ongoing quilt projects that I might work on, a couple of spring skirt patterns I want to make, and I might start working on a new quilt design. 
There will be check-in posts each Saturday with linkups at Berry Barn Designs between now and Monday, March 31st  so you can see what all the other participants are doing in their 30/30 time.

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Blogger's Quilt Festival

Amy's Creative Side is hosting a Blogger's Quilt Festival which begins this week. There are lots of great quilts already "on display" and I hope to get a post written on one of my quilts to enter before Halloween. I learned about it from Eva Paige Quilt Designs.
Speaking of which, I just finished the middle section of the purple twin size quilt I am making from EPQD's "Syncopated Ribbons" pattern. It went together really easily (the rotating cutting mat I borrowed from one of my bee ladies helped a lot).

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Failure and The Dog Bed Bag

Scoutie Girl posted today about failure. If you try something new or different sometimes it doesn't work. I think her decision to take it as a learning experience and figure out how it helps the next time is the right one. Learning to cope with failure (or setbacks, or disasters, or unintended features, or whatever you call things that don't go as envisioned) is one of the most important lessons in life. When I was learning to walk (40+ years ago) my Dad would sing me the Jerome Kerns song Pick Yourself Up. The same song came up throughout my life as I ran into new and different challenges that required the same approach -- "pick yourself up, dust yourself off, and start all over again."  I think it helps to view any one failure, big or small, as part of a cycle of learning and improvement.


The series at A Happy Stitch called Fail Friday was linked in the comments on the Scoutie Girl post and is a great set of posts about things that didn't go as planned and what can be learned from them. The post from This is Marzipan talks about "the bin" which reminded me of one of my favorite ways to deal with sewing failures -- the dog bed bag. There are a couple of women in my Quilt Guild who make beds for shelter dogs and collect fabric scraps to stuff them with. I used to feel guilty about throwing away little bits of (expensive!) fabric and saved it all because I might use it someday. I also felt compelled to take apart quilt blocks that didn't come out right so the pieces wouldn't go to waste. No more -- they go into the dog bed bag. This is a tote bag that hangs on the side of my cutting table and collects cutting scraps and mistakes. Every time I fill the bag it gets emptied into a grocery store bag and taken to someone who makes it into something useful. If I don't make any mistakes the bag won't fill up and where will those doggies sleep? I think it is a good solution all around.

Tuesday, November 6, 2012