Community Quilt 75

22 04 2013

There are some Community Quilt tops I get that I just love. And some I like a lot. Some others — not so much… This was one that I actually disliked (with no offence to the person who put the top together). I didn’t like the colours, I didn’t like the prints (Holly Hobby [!] and cow udders combined with tropical leaves and pastel flowers, anyone?), and I didn’t like the fabrics (cheap poplin, some linen, some curtain fabric, as well as some older cottons with no redeeming features at all). And it was wonky.

To beat the wonkiness into submission and to not overpower the quilt with any more ‘busyness’, I just decided to do a reasonably close meandering stipple in a variegated thread in mauve, olive, and khaki that sort of matched some of the colours. Unfortunately, the thread was a 12 wt thread that I hadn’t used before, so it had a few breakages along the way and caused me a bit of grief.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Wonderfil Fruitti (12 wt; Egyptian cotton; colour # FT 14)
  • Bobbin: Bobbinfil (white)

 





My first doctor

21 04 2013

The things you find on the internet…

This article (http://www.harveyoralhistory.com/site/history.php?ID=64) is about the doctor who delivered me and my sister and the hospital he delivered us in. I was a feet-first breech, which was a pretty dangerous thing for a small country practice doctor to deal with at the time, and went blue within hours — his matron was passing the nursery (mothers were separated from their babies then) and saw me and resuscitated me, otherwise I wouldn’t be here today.

I even remember him making up pills etc. and putting them in little round cardboard pill boxes!

He was our family doctor until I was 13 and we moved to another town.





Community Quilt 74

16 04 2013

Another quilt using yellow thread! I’m on a roll…

This one was a cute bee and honey quilt. Not only were there bees on the front, there were bees all over the back too. But how to quilt it?

I could have gone for stylised bees or flowers, but having never done bees before, I thought that would be a bit much. Flowers? Meh. And then I saw the little hives. They gave me inspiration for doing my geometric, ‘flat end’ version of the ‘open headband‘ motif. I was pleased with how it turned out.

Again, this was an all-over, edge-to-edge design that puts me into that ‘zen zone’ 😉

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Back:

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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Glide ‘Mango’ (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour #80116)
  • Bobbin: Bobbinfil (white)

 





Community Quilt 73

16 04 2013

This quilt had little tiny leaf motif fabrics, and a small floral print in the border, along with the tiny aqua squares. I decided to use my ‘open headband‘ variation of adding a petal-like sweep to one of the ‘headbands’, emulating the petals of the flowers in the border.

Again, this was an all-over, edge-to-edge quilting design.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Glide ‘Mango’ (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour #80116)
  • Bobbin: Bobbinfil (white)

 





Community Quilt 72

16 04 2013

Ooo! A dramatic yellow, black and white quilt top! How to quilt it??? There were some floral and leaf fabrics in there, as well as geometrics. I immediately dismissed the idea of a floral or curly leaf motif and went for geometrics. Should I just do straight line ruler work a la modern quilts, or something else?

I still wanted to do something similar to quilting on modern quilts but not plain lines, so I opted for a straight line stipple that crossed to form rectangles and ‘sort of’ squares. No rulers or markings — I just eyeballed it and went for it, starting in the centre and working my way out.

This is one of those all-over, edge-to-edge, single line quilting motifs that I love doing (I get into a zen zone), and I thought it worked well on this quilt.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Isacord 40 wt trilobal polyester (I don’t have the empty thread spool, so can’t give the colour, but it was sort of a mango yellow)
  • Bobbin: Bobbinfil (white)

 





Score!

16 04 2013

I had to have my car serviced last Friday. I’d requested a loan car as I needed to go shopping in town and here’s what I got for the day — a brand new (only a few thousand km on the odometer) Mercedes A-Class in bright flaming red!

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Cool car! Loved the reversing camera, the simplicity of the gear changes, and the simplicity of the parking brake mechanism. After having used them for a few hours, you wonder why no-one has simplified these things before!

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Another big score of the day was these threads. I went into Spotlight to get something (I can’t even remember what, now), and spotted a bin of ’embroidery’ threads going out for $3 each. Normally I wouldn’t even look at the threads Spotlight has on sale as they are usually cheapies, not name-brand good threads that I use. But this time the bin was full of all Wonderfil threads! I bought every Mirage (30 wt), Inivisifil (100 wt), Silco, and Fruiti (Egyptian cotton) thread in the bin. I left the Razzle and 12 wt threads as I do very little bobbin work. Each spool of thread was $7 or more retail, reduced to $3. Total number of thread spools purchased: 55. At $3 a spool, that haul cost me $165. Had I bought them all at full price, they would have cost $385. And yes, they all fitted on my spool holder and in one of my spool trays.

The final score of the day actually occurred the afternoon before. The last block of land we owned in Bridgetown Gardens was finally settled (after the contracts were signed in mid-January and after settlement was meant to occur in mid-March). I immediately paid down some debt, and left enough for any capital gains tax we may incur, and left a tad over for play money 😉





Community Quilt 71

7 04 2013

This was a BIG quilt. I didn’t realise how big until I started quilting it. Instead of doing an all-over design, it decided to feature feathers in the light blocks, leaves and curls in the green areas, more feathers in the light border, and curls in the other border. As a result, this quilt took well over 6 hours to quilt. Had I stuck with an all-over design, it might have taken less than half the time. But I was happy I spent the extra time on it, as I think the quilting complements the quilt well.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Back:

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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Glide ‘Sea Foam’ (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour #97494)
  • Bobbin: Bobbinfil (white)

 





Community Quilt 70

7 04 2013

This one was very similar to Community Quilt #68, so I quilted it in the same way, using an all-over flame design in a bright orange for the main top, and just emphasising the large white dot paths in the border in black.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Glide ‘Neon Orange’ (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour #90811), and a plain black rayon from Robison-Anton
  • Bobbin: Gutermann Skala U121 240 (black)

 

 





Community Quilt 69

7 04 2013

What a cheery quilt this was! Bright colours, complemented by the white. I suspect a young girl/teenager will love it. In keeping with the bright cheerful colours, I quilted it with an all-over design variation on ‘open headbands‘, in a bright fluoro orange thread.

(Click on a photo to view it larger)

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Threads used:

  • Top: Fil-Tec Glide ‘Neon Orange’ (40 wt, trilobal polyester, colour #90811)
  • Bobbin: Bobbinfil (white)

 





Picture postcard perfect

2 04 2013

On Easter Sunday I drove down to Yallingup to spend a few hours with friends who have a holiday house down there. This was the view from their verandah. A perfect day, with enough wave action for the surfers. The place was PACKED.

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My friends have two gorgeous parrots, but they are cheeky little buggers! They happily climb all over you, and, if you let them, they’ll kiss you and ‘clean’ your teeth…. and they’ll take anything shiny out of your ears too — like a diamond earring stud!!! Yes, the cheeky green one removed my earring and I didn’t feel a thing. Fortunately, my friends’ daughter was being vigilant and saw it happen so got it back from the bird… After she’d taken the photo! I’d like to have seen the look on the face of an insurance agent had I had to claim for a lost earring! Later, he tried to grab my necklace too. Thieving critter 😉

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Caught red-handed stealing my earring!