Busy Developing New Projects

Test and practice piece using all wool machine applique and embellishment

Hi gentle readers! As the title says, I have been very busy lately developing new projects that I hope you all will fully enjoy when I publish them here and in my YouTube channel.

For the first of these projects…exploring painting on quilted fabric…I will include any additional information that accompanies my video(s) that you might want here on my blog.  So the the entire exploration information and demonstrating videos that result in a handful of painted quiltlets will be free to you.  I am really having fun doing all the prep work for the videos and practicing the techniques and am nearly ready to start “filming” the videos.

For years I have been exploring how various types of fabric paints, artist crayons. and pencils, work with different types of fibers and weaves that are already quilted.  Or rather, I already know more or less how this works so I will be show the matching of the types of paints, crayons, and pencils with the different fabrics to get the best results.  I believe that by doing this, you will be able to take what I share and use it to get the looks you want on your own projects, or at least to explore your own ideas with some success. I am hopeful to get these published in April and May. 

In the process of working out the sampler quiltlets I came up with an idea I want to make for a cuddle lap quilt that I may or may not put into a video if I make it.  I haven’t decided if I can fit it into my work plan or not, but if I do make it, at the very least I will share it here on my blog. It involves in-the-hoop quilting designs coupled with free motion quilting and possibly quilt-as-I-go construction, but I haven’t fully decided on all of that yet.  It’s just an idea at this point.  I will be able to use some of my pretty threads for this project.

Anyway, in addition to working on the painting project hours daily for some time now I have been trying to design some new wool applique by machine projects to present on my channel for fall and winter. One will be quick and less complex and presented sometime soon, and others will be presented across the rest of the year.  But  I am also working to come up with a really good design with dimensional texture that uses the wonderful characteristics of wool for a small very artistic wall hanging. It will be what I think of as 2 1/2 D rather than 3D.  LOL

3D stump work dragonfly I made in the hoop has wire hidden in the stitching on the wings. This was so much fun to make, I want to do more in-the-hoop stumpwork.  Would you like a video on how I do this?

I am thinking, after much consideration, that the background fabric for this textural wall hanging will be on cotton, and the appliques will be wool.  I also am considering adding some couching of  wool yarns and maybe even some wool roving that I would needle punch with the needle punch attachment on my little baby machine, my Bernina 350, which I usually use for piecing and travel, but it also has several attachments I like to use on that machine because it has a 5.5 width maximum stitch that allows some interesting results.  I might also add stump work object that I make in-the-hoop from lighter fabrics.  Anyway, I’m working on a complete design that I am very hopeful will be really beautiful and interesting to watch me make on my YouTube channel.  It would be so delightful if some of you decide to make one yourself because it is so interesting and the result will be lovely.

If I get the design right, it will involve the use of three of my machines…my B350, my Bernina 880+. and my Bernina Q20 sitdown longarm, but will be doable on a single domestic machine and a hand needle punch tool if that is all one has or wants to use.  For this project, I will be developing a downloadable pattern that I will sell in my website store. This pattern would include svg files for cutting out the appliques using a digital cutter and line drawings for use with scissors.  Anyway, it’s rumbling around in my head and I am working on various designs to come up with the best one.  It should be fun.  I have long known that it takes me longer to design a project and develop the pattern than to make it.  So this project will take some time, consist of multiple videos, and hopefully will be published over the summer.  It would make a wonderful present for someone, even if it is for your own sewing space.

Sew you may want to know where the third and last video of my two birds project is. My video director and editor has had some minor delays in getting it done as work and life got in the way.  We are hopeful that it will be out sometime in the first week of April. There is a downloadable pattern for this project available for only $5 on my website shop, but as of this writing I have only sold one copy, even though I have almost 400 views of the first two videos.  Since it would be very difficult to make this project without the pattern, I guess my hope that some of my viewers would try to make it themselves has not yet happened.  I am still hopeful that some quilters will decide to do the project and share their results with me so I can show you all.  Maybe they want to see the finish before they decide.  Or maybe people are not aware that it is almost a complete book on how to do this kind of project that they may find informative and interesting even if they don’t make it. It is accompanied by svg files for cutting the appliques.  You don’t have to have a digital cutter though, because it also has the line drawings to cutout the appliques with scissors.  Here are the links to video one and video two.

Sew happy everyone!  Have fun in your studio.

 

 

 

 

 

 

75!!! and still sewing!

I hand stitched this little crewel scene using wool threads years ago. It has a special meaning for me because I stitched it during my frequent visits with my mother in the months just before her death in 1998. My youngest son took it and had it framed in a museum quality acid free framing to protect it.

I am a very blessed woman.  On Thursday, the 3rd of March, 2022, I will be 75 years old, three quarters of a century!

Come fly with me

And yet I still happily enjoy my sons, daughter in law, and grandson who live close by.  Joyfully, I still have a clear mind with only an occasional “senior moment” and gratefully I have a fairly functioning body, though I often feel a little creaky as one might who is 75, find it a little challenging to manage the stairs in my townhome, and I can’t work quite as fast or nearly as long as I used to, but nevertheless I still mostly manage.

I have a wonderful, though somewhat crowded, studio with four machines that are so enjoyable to use with each its own function to play with and a good sound stash of fabrics and threads.  My family outfitted my studio with equipment of all kinds to help me make the videos I want to share with you all.

Sony ZV-1:  One of my two primary cameras that I use in filming my videos.  I love this little camera.

 

So bless the Lord, oh my soul!  Thanks to Him and thanks to my family and friends who have surrounded me with love and support to help me through this phase in my life.

I had hoped that my videos coupled with the accompanying patterns that can be purchased for such a small amount from my website would provide some profit to support my fabric art work, but alas, this has not happened so far.  Yet I will keep on in spite of that at least for a while because over my 70 years of sewing (yes!!!) I have learned so much that I want to share.  It seems remarkable that at my age I have garnered a clear understanding of some of the more technical aspects of using my advanced machines and the software that helps me on a daily basis.  I guess it comes from practice and a certain fascination as to what can be done with these wonderful tools. The first lesson I clearly remember from when I was around 5 is how important it is to keep one’s tools, especially the machines, clean and oiled properly.  She also taught me to get the best tools I could afford and learn them well.  Then she taught me how to sew.  We spent many great enjoyable hours together making our clothes and household items.  When my children were on the way, we made their entire wardrobes, receiving blankets, and crib items.

This sewing machine is like the one I remember Mom having when I started to sew.

I learned to quilt starting in 2003 when I moved close to my oldest son and his wife after my dearest love Marvin passed.  Beth (DIL) said she thought I would enjoy quilting, which she had herself found fun.  So I took up the challenge and never looked back.  I must admit though, that I went in a somewhat different direction that she may have expected, since I fell in love with pictorial art quilting.

Canterbury Silk. I consider this as kind of my “flagship” quilt for my current fabric art work.  It won three nice fat ribbons, one even at AQS Paducah! It hangs in my living room above my comfy chair most of the time.

I may have just a few more days, months, or years to live. Only God knows the answer to that, but I kind of expect that I have a lot of years left before me (many in my family ancestry have lived to their late 90s and early 100s).  I plan on keeping on with my sewing, quilting, writing, and videoing until I simply cannot do it any longer.

I have had, so far, an interesting life full of love, laughter, world travel, and even adventure.  Now I am content to stay home and play in my studio for the most part. Sew I am sending out love and thanks to all my readers and viewers, family, and friends.  May God bless you all.

Sew happy everyone!  Have fun in your studio!