Ooops and Double Ooops
Not quite sure how it happened, but Mr Postman brought me TWO packs of fabrics I seem to have ordered
However, I still don't have enough - no, don't laugh, I seriously don't have enough - I started to make this Somerset Star as a sample for a class I'm teaching on Friday,
And I'm one red triangle short!!!
Can anyone think of a good reason why one should be a different colour to the rest, or do I have to use it as a this-is-what-can-happen-if-you-don't-prepare-properly example?
However, I still don't have enough - no, don't laugh, I seriously don't have enough - I started to make this Somerset Star as a sample for a class I'm teaching on Friday,
And I'm one red triangle short!!!
Can anyone think of a good reason why one should be a different colour to the rest, or do I have to use it as a this-is-what-can-happen-if-you-don't-prepare-properly example?
Somerset Star
Last Friday I taught a class how to do a Somerset Star at the request of one of the Chertsey Museum ladies: all very well but I had to find out how to make it! I Googled it, and a few 'recipes' came up, but they seems to all use different methods, so I took the simplest bits from each one, and thought I'd share it with you here.
It seems to be called Somerset Block, and Folder Star, but as fan of alliteration, I have gone for Somerset Star!
I'm pleased to report it's not as hard as it looks:
I started with background fabric about 10x10 (or cushion size plus a few emergency inches) pressed in half in all 4 directions making an 8 line star in the centre (like making a fortune teller thingy at primary school, or I think Americans call it a coutie catcher)
I then carefully cut four 5x5 squares, and pressed them first in half, then into triangles by folding the fold into the middle (did you ever make a hat or a boat from a sheet of newspaper?).
I arranged these in the middle using the horizontal and vertical folds (+) in the background fabric to help align them, and I stitched them down along the outer edge.
Then I cut eight squares in a new fabric, again 5x5 inches, again the folding and pressing. Next I carefully measured 1/2 inch from the centre, and place 4 triangles on the + lines, and the other 4 using the diagonal (x) lines, and stitched down near to the raw edge.
Round 3 was the same as round 2, but using a different fabric (either in a third fabric, or back to number 1) but now placed 1 inch from the centre (keep using the fold lines in the background to keep straight)
Round 4: same again
For the 5th round, some internet examples arrange 16 folded triangles - the normal 8 and then the others in between them - try placing them and see if you like them.
Now you have pretty much finished this bit. If you want to make a cushion cover, use the stitch and flip method to cover the seams and bulk out to the size you need. If you want to make a pot mat, add a layer of wadding, and a layer of insulbrite (?), then backing fabric, and bind.
I haven't included stitching down the points. I really like the 'monsters mouth' effect of leaving them free, but don't think it would go well in the washing machine, so the recommended method is to stitch each point down at each stage. Just telling you!
Confession: The two blue Stars aren't even mine - two students did these - good eh? and they had enough squares cut to complete each round. LOL
It seems to be called Somerset Block, and Folder Star, but as fan of alliteration, I have gone for Somerset Star!
I'm pleased to report it's not as hard as it looks:
I started with background fabric about 10x10 (or cushion size plus a few emergency inches) pressed in half in all 4 directions making an 8 line star in the centre (like making a fortune teller thingy at primary school, or I think Americans call it a coutie catcher)
I then carefully cut four 5x5 squares, and pressed them first in half, then into triangles by folding the fold into the middle (did you ever make a hat or a boat from a sheet of newspaper?).
I arranged these in the middle using the horizontal and vertical folds (+) in the background fabric to help align them, and I stitched them down along the outer edge.
Then I cut eight squares in a new fabric, again 5x5 inches, again the folding and pressing. Next I carefully measured 1/2 inch from the centre, and place 4 triangles on the + lines, and the other 4 using the diagonal (x) lines, and stitched down near to the raw edge.
Round 3 was the same as round 2, but using a different fabric (either in a third fabric, or back to number 1) but now placed 1 inch from the centre (keep using the fold lines in the background to keep straight)
Round 4: same again
For the 5th round, some internet examples arrange 16 folded triangles - the normal 8 and then the others in between them - try placing them and see if you like them.
Now you have pretty much finished this bit. If you want to make a cushion cover, use the stitch and flip method to cover the seams and bulk out to the size you need. If you want to make a pot mat, add a layer of wadding, and a layer of insulbrite (?), then backing fabric, and bind.
I haven't included stitching down the points. I really like the 'monsters mouth' effect of leaving them free, but don't think it would go well in the washing machine, so the recommended method is to stitch each point down at each stage. Just telling you!
Confession: The two blue Stars aren't even mine - two students did these - good eh? and they had enough squares cut to complete each round. LOL
Friends and Fabric
Jackie, my quilting twin, came over from Ireland for a 48 hour flying visit at the weekend. I put her to work at the village fair on Saturday (we were an ace Gazebo erecting team, although not such a hot chasing-a-flying-gazebo-across-the-cricket-green team!) and then went on a fabric shop trawl on Sunday.
I was obviously traumatised by not having enough red to finish my Somerset Star, and then I was lead astray by Jackie (it's all her fault) and the circumstances weren't helped by us finding ourselves at Creative Quilting in Hampton Court
So I, um, cough, sheepish look, bought even more fabric!!!!!!
However - it is kind of justified as I have just had another request for an I Spy quilt, and these are all I Spy fabrics
This evening I have been working on the sashing for the Windsor A to Z project: Designing the text on the computer, and then stitching in onto the sashing fabric . . .
And more . . .
Who can guess what I need to be doing tomorrow night!
I was obviously traumatised by not having enough red to finish my Somerset Star, and then I was lead astray by Jackie (it's all her fault) and the circumstances weren't helped by us finding ourselves at Creative Quilting in Hampton Court
So I, um, cough, sheepish look, bought even more fabric!!!!!!
However - it is kind of justified as I have just had another request for an I Spy quilt, and these are all I Spy fabrics
This evening I have been working on the sashing for the Windsor A to Z project: Designing the text on the computer, and then stitching in onto the sashing fabric . . .
And more . . .
Who can guess what I need to be doing tomorrow night!
Fete, Flannels, and Fancy That!
We had our school fete yesterday, and I pinned all the finished-so-far A to Z blocks on a big notice board, and they looked FAB! But you'll have to take my word for it as I forgot to take a photo :-(
I can show you a mosaic but even that's not complete as A, R and W all arrived at school yesterday, but you can see it's getting there (shame mosaic maker cuts off part of the image, they are all complete, honest!)
I took my Baby Brother embroidery machine along, and mum and I sat in the sometime sunshine, me embroidering names on flannels and her tying off the loose ends on the Ladders Quilt that . . . wait for it . . . someone bought! Fancy That!
(Thanks mum, terrific job done there!)
After a few hours of occasional threats, it did actually start to rain, so mum and I packed the embroidery machine away with a few unfinished orders, so I thought I'd show them here. And for all who are (quite justly) concerned about my ability to put the right name on the right item, I *think* I have then right this time!
I just need to trim the jump stitches, and then these flannels can go into school tomorrow
Do look at all the lovely coloured flannels mum and I got
Rainbow heaven :-)
I can show you a mosaic but even that's not complete as A, R and W all arrived at school yesterday, but you can see it's getting there (shame mosaic maker cuts off part of the image, they are all complete, honest!)
I took my Baby Brother embroidery machine along, and mum and I sat in the sometime sunshine, me embroidering names on flannels and her tying off the loose ends on the Ladders Quilt that . . . wait for it . . . someone bought! Fancy That!
(Thanks mum, terrific job done there!)
After a few hours of occasional threats, it did actually start to rain, so mum and I packed the embroidery machine away with a few unfinished orders, so I thought I'd show them here. And for all who are (quite justly) concerned about my ability to put the right name on the right item, I *think* I have then right this time!
I just need to trim the jump stitches, and then these flannels can go into school tomorrow
Do look at all the lovely coloured flannels mum and I got
Rainbow heaven :-)
A to Z Update
As mentioned earlier today . . . I didn't get a picture, but the lovely Claire who has been helping every step of the way DID get a photo :-)
Doesn't it look fab! I cant believe how different each block is
Doesn't it look fab! I cant believe how different each block is
Slugs and Snails, or Sugar and Spice
Sometime in the next month or so, I am going to be a great auntie for the second time, and we are very lucky in that we can claim a relationship with the new baby through both parents: Daddy is husband's nephew, and Mummy is (was) our Au Pair in the mid 1990s, and has always felt like at least a niece to us.
We THINK we know what they are having, but if they know they are not telling, so this weekend I've started to prepare two I-Spy quilts just in case. I usually have a mix of boyish and girly fabrics in an I-Spy quilt, but having just bought a *cough* few picture fabrics recently I had enough choice to make a very boyish one and a very girly one.
So far they are only strip pieced, I will use my very lazy QAYG method to attach them to a fleece blanket soon, then I only need to bind them
I know which one I am going to finish first!
We THINK we know what they are having, but if they know they are not telling, so this weekend I've started to prepare two I-Spy quilts just in case. I usually have a mix of boyish and girly fabrics in an I-Spy quilt, but having just bought a *cough* few picture fabrics recently I had enough choice to make a very boyish one and a very girly one.
Sugar and Spice and All Things Nice
That's what Little Girls are made of
Slugs and Snails and Puppy Dogs' Tails
That's what Little Boys are made of
So far they are only strip pieced, I will use my very lazy QAYG method to attach them to a fleece blanket soon, then I only need to bind them
I know which one I am going to finish first!
Norwegian Knowledge (and a quilt question)
An ongoing project that saw light this week is currently known as Norwegian Red. The main fabric is red, and it did come from Norway, and the quilt top may become a birthday present for a cousin I will see in Norway this summer, but its name is also a pun - the traditional red paint used for a vast number of homes in Norway is called "English Red"!
These two cottages are owned by family members: the top one is on the West coast, and it was my grandmother's when I was a child, now my cousin's, and the bottom photo is of the boat house at mum's cousin's cottage just off Oslo - this was taken by a cousin at 11:45pm on Mid Summer's Night
Anyway, enough of the lesson, back to 'Norwegian Red'. This has been stitched into strips, but now I'm not sure where to go next. I originally planned to arrange the blocks so they were staggered slightly both vertically and horizontally (pic one) but then I quite like the brick effect in pic two (or are the vertical 'morter' sections going to be too fat?)
Any thoughts much appreciated
These two cottages are owned by family members: the top one is on the West coast, and it was my grandmother's when I was a child, now my cousin's, and the bottom photo is of the boat house at mum's cousin's cottage just off Oslo - this was taken by a cousin at 11:45pm on Mid Summer's Night
Anyway, enough of the lesson, back to 'Norwegian Red'. This has been stitched into strips, but now I'm not sure where to go next. I originally planned to arrange the blocks so they were staggered slightly both vertically and horizontally (pic one) but then I quite like the brick effect in pic two (or are the vertical 'morter' sections going to be too fat?)
Any thoughts much appreciated
Negligence
I have been very negligent, and I will try and remedy lots of overdue thanks in this post!
The lovely Jackie made me the most useful pressie when she came over a few weeks ago, and I haven't properly thanked her for it - as you can see it is already in good use:
It holds pins and needles, my glasses (sigh) and I've attached the scissors that Jackie previously gave me to it too - now there are no threads on the arms of the chair - yippee!
She also brought Lisa a lovely crochet hook case as a thank you for the loan of the bed
but given that Lisa wasn't home anyway, and I had to clear the room (admittedly of my stuff) to even *find* the bed, I think I deserve it more - luckily for Lisa I cant crochet, so it's no good to me!!!!
I also need to thank Teje in advance - I commented on a post on her blog . . . well actually I commented on a guest post, posted by her handsome Alsatian, Nero. Nero was very kindly offering one of Teje's lovely 2-in-1 makeup bags to celebrate summer (they live in sunny Crete, not cloudy England). Nero very kindly picked my name from the basket (well he ate the others and didn't eat mine, that's as good as being picked isn't it?),
I also, in the last few months have been awarded this award from Annabelle Serendipity who says "Benta at SLIK stitches really does do some amazing stuff and I like to see her photos and hear about her exploits - but - get that kitchen sorted Benta!"
(and I was really chuffed to be awarded it in the same keystroke as Hadley at Flying Blind!!!)
and I have been awarded this award by Rebecca who said "Benta at Slik Stitches is absolutely lovely! I've followed this blog for ages now and she creates some absolutely beautiful quilts among other things!", and also by Amo who said "Always making things and does so much in her community to encourage stitching."
I have to tell you 5 things that you may not know about me:
Hum,
- I love instant coffee, but not real coffee,
- I was so bad at sewing at school I had to take Home Economics (yes Annabelle, cooking!) for my practical subject
- For all the sewing and other crafting I have tried over the years, my two very best creations are my daughters
- Next spring I'll have been married 25 years (!)
- My favourite colour is yellow, but I don't have any yellow clothes
So THANK YOU to all of you, and I am so sorry it has taken me so long!
Super Squishy
I just came in from the garden to find a squishy envelope hanging through the letter box . . .
and this was inside
Which opens up to show this
Lucky lucky me
Thank you Teje and Nero :-) I love it. It is *even* better in real life than in the photos!!!!
(Is blogger spell check working for anyone else?)
and this was inside
which opened up to be this
Which opens up to show this
Lucky lucky me
Thank you Teje and Nero :-) I love it. It is *even* better in real life than in the photos!!!!
(Is blogger spell check working for anyone else?)