Wednesday, July 31, 2013

2013 July (second half)

 


Baby Bobbins

I had some machine embroidery to do for a customer, in gold thread.  Metallic thread often shreds or breaks so i needed to watch it, but I didn't want to sit doing *nothing*!

I'd popped into "the Works" after school today, I love the possibility of cheap books or crafts and I picked up a few packets of these 

I've got a crafty friend coming here at the weekend and I wanted to make something for her, so I set about decorating these 

And then a few more

And then the rest 

(They may look normal size, but the grid under them in the early photos is a 1" grid)

And I got the embroidery finished too




Tangled Threads

In the last post I used some embroidery threads.  They all come in similar packaging, but I can't help feeling there is a design fault!

When you buy them, they look lovely

They get a bit tangled as you carefully take off the first metre or so 

They then, while you aren't looking,  transform themselves into a birds nest

My second purchase from the Works was a pack of these

And last night I spent a few hours watching TV and transforming my birds nests into these 

While I was wrapping the thread around the dolly peg I pulled quite tight.  This pulled the 'legs' together so the end of the thread could wedge in the end of the peg 
(-:


A Bit of Bondage

I managed to find a bit of time to sit at the sewing machine, I had to: I'm teaching binding at Chertsey museum on Friday and need to have something to show them!!!!!


So the first two huge hexi quilts now have binding stitched on to the front, so the ladies can see how that is done, and I can then demonstrate hand stitching to the back 




Friday Flowers

The ladies at Chertsey Museum made fabric flowers on Friday


A lovely afternoon :-)




A Monday with May

I know lots of you went to the  Retreat in London this last weekend - well I didn't, but I got to hear all about it first hand.

I knew that May from Confessions of a Fabraholic was coming from Germany for the retreat, and I invited her to stay the following night with me before she flew back home.  As well as following May's blog, I know her through the Star Of Africa Bee that she has arranged (see the blocks I received here), and the texty charm swap that she also arranged where I got this lovely bundle.



Our weekends are normally quit and peaceful, but somehow this one became ridiculous - poor May! As she arrived the family were here on mass: both daughters, two boyfriends,husband and family friends were all just finishing a race at a kart track. 


Then there were 9 of us for supper for Sunday evening, and Monday morning I had to get up early for work abandoning poor May!

We managed to get a few fabriccy hours together on Monday afternoon.  May brought me these super yummy Oakshott fabrics, which I am drooling over as I type this

and also these fabrics that she considered fluglies, but I'm very happy to have in my stash, and some yummies from Liberty

One of the classes she attended was curved EPP - she showed me the pieces 

and her sample piece

I think that idea will make a great class at Chertsey Museum

By mid afternoon I had to take May off to start her journey home: Our nearest tube station is Heathrow, so we drove to an airport so she could get the tube, to get a bus to get to another airport to get the plane!!!!

We did manage to get an innocent bystander to take this phone 

It was great to meet you May, see you soon



Bye Bye Boss

For the last two years I have worked for the best boss I've *ever* had, and I'm gutted that he's leaving the school.

We've done a collection from all the staff and got him some lovely pressies, but I wanted to get him something from ME

Mum suggested this quilt.  I made it a whole ago and it's been stored at hers, but given that his favourite colour is purple, I think it's very appropriate, 

Good idea mum, lets hope he likes it



Travelling Thursday

So school finished yesterday, and my boss seemed very pleased with his quilt, (and I was very spoilt by the lovely families at school) and today I'm off to Ireland to have 4 days at a sewing retreat (aka Jackie's house)

First I made a couple of bags just because I *had* to sew something this week


Then I tidied Lisa's room so she can come home, trouble is there is only one place to move the stuff

Anyway, I'll deal with that little problem when I get back.  Hope you have a lovely weekend, I reckon I will!


Feel Good Feltiing

Jackie and I had a great day trip to see Carmen who reaches felting.  We layered and soaked and rolled and bashed
 
And then did more of each and ended up with a pot and a bag each

And also ended up with lovely soft hands!  That's from the soap and the lanolin (?) in the wool.

When we came back to Jackie's we make scissor keepers

(I need to get a photos of Jackie's too) and worked on our EPP hexies:

Jackie's

And mine

And may have chatted a bit too!



Hurling for Foreigners

I have today been introduced to the game of Hurling, let me tell you about it.  


Take a pitch, I'm guessing about twice the size of a football pitch, add rugby goals and football goals too.   Throw on loads of players,  give each one a stick that looks like a golf club that was run over by a steam roller.

Tell the players that they can move the ball on the ground like hockey, they can smash it to the other end of the pitch like tennis, they can pick it up and run with it or they can (I think) Velcro it to their stick and run with it (think egg and spoon race). While reminiscing about childhood sports days,  tell them they are allowed to squabble like children, and that wrestling is also allowed. 

Yes, I think that covers it, thank you Paul for the introductory lesson.  (Any errors may reflect more on my inability to grasp *any* sports than on Paul's ability to teach!)

I'm off back to the sewing room to do done quilting designs on this 


Sunday Sewing

So much fun sewing with someone else!

This is Jackie's sewing room . . .


where yesterday we marked the quilting pattern for the Rainbow quilt, 

Pieced together some of the text charms 

to make a lamp shade

And cut, stitched, and bordered this lovely tumblers quilt, 

and even pieced its backing, and cut and joined pieces for a scrappy binding!

as well as planning future projects and future visits

Thank you again Jackie for a fab "retreat"  long weekend, see you in 9 sleeps in Birmingham!!!!!!!



Tidy Up Tuesday

So I left Jackie yesterday, and came home to a house that needed just a little bit of tidying up so that has been much of my Tuesday: Jackie however has managed to decipher the quilting markings I made on the Rainbow HST quilt borders, and has it all quilted, doesn't it look great


I did buy Jackie a thank-you-for-having-me pressie, but then got scared that it would get confiscated as a sharp, so she'll have to wait until Festival of Quilts so she can put it in hold luggage.  I bought one for me too, and as she's seen the pic of hers I can now show you mine - a tulip rotary cutter, isn't she pretty!

Partly to hang it up, and partly in case there is another one at a class, I put a red ribbon on the end.

It cuts beautifully, like a hot knife through butter. 

My thought process . . . .
  • I probably don't replace my blades often enough. . .
  • I wonder when I last DID change a blade . . .
  • It would really help to know when the blade was last changed . . .
  • I should record that info somewhere . . .

Have you made a connection yet?  It took a a while for me to think of it, but I finally had the brainwave, and I've written the date of the new blade on the ribbon

The rotary cutters were last week's impulse buy, I actually went to the shop to get some binding fabric (I was going to be within 10 minutes of it anyway, and would have half an hour to kill)

So I took a bag of quilt tops . . .

This one had already been backed and quilted and now has pretty purple stars for binding

These are still flimsies but as it's school hols I should have the time to assemble, quilt and bind, so the flowery hexies have pink binding, and the tumblers have grey (both spraytime)

These hexies have muted yellow binding all cut and waiting

and these two string flimsies have a bright yellow and a blue/black binding

How organised am I?

Monday, July 15, 2013

2013 July (first half)

 






Gold stuff Gone

Sorry, that alliteration was a bit strained.  The local fabric shop has my number and gives it out if their customers ask " do you know anyone who . . . "

A lady called a few weeks ago, could I make a replacement cloth for her  bedside table?  I imagined 12/18 inches square, not much work, so agreed.  She turned up with a circular tablecloth, 2m / 6 ft across. And 4m gold fabric. And 6.5m gold bias binding.

 I was not happy!  

Anyway over the last two weeks I have joined the fabric, cut the circle, machine stitched gold binding and then hand stitched the back of the binding, all 6.28m of it


It's horrible . . . But it's now finished and collected, and I have a pocket of cash, so (excuse the pun) this cloud had a *gold* lining!


Woodwork Wednesday

Not me woodworking, don't worry, my new friend Darren is a woodworker: he has done calico bags to put customer's purchases in, but wanted his logo added to the bags.

Cost wise it wasn't viable to post the bags to and then me to oust them back, so I made the logo as a badge (splash patch we used to call them when I was s kid) and posted them to him.


They should arrive with him on Wednesday, so Katy and Hadley, no sarky comments about my desperate need for alliteration resulting in me ignoring that today is Tuesday!

Go and have a look at Darren's stuff - it's awesome!!!!!!

Here are some pics I pinched from his fabebook page, I dont think he'll mind!


Huge Hexies

A few months ago one of my students at Chertsey Museum brought in a 3m (3 yard ) flimsey that a friends mother had made from big paper pieced hexies.

What could she do with it?  Nobody wanted it as it was, it was too big, and a real miss-mash of fabrics: cotton, corduroy, lining material, even crimplene!

Finally after a few months thinking she decided we could chop it into 6 children sized flimsies and make charity quilts .

So last night I quilted the first one, just free range lines in each direction resulting in a star burst roughly in the centre of each


then I washed it just to be sure the top wouldn't fall apart, And it came out fine!

I've got three more to go, two of the students took one each too


Too Busy to Blog

With end of term madness, extra teaching classes, visitors this last week and the warmest weather I can remember in years I've hardly managed to get any sewing done, so I thought I'd show you what the students did on Friday:

The embroiderers are now up to 40 of the 50 leaves

And the children who had got bored with embroidery did some weaving instead



Wonderful Wood

Look what I got!  After making these patches for Darren

He messaged me to say he had put some stuff in the post for me, and tonight when I got home from work it was waiting for me

A fab chopping board, a gorgeous seamless sweet serving dish, and the most awesome gnarled and knobbly serving tool, which he appropriately sells under the "witches kitchen" label.

Darren, thank you soooooo much, I love everything!


Saturday Sewing

Still not getting any sewing done myself, so I'm sharing a bit more from one of my classes:

On Saturday morning I taught one of two Saturday morning Fun With Fabric classes at my school: two new families came and attached a number of squares towards a quilt for the local neonatal unit.


The youngest children were a bit young to sew, so they did some sticking instead


Hole lot of Hexies

Not really much sewing, but at least I've got to the end of unsewing the yellow hexi top and am happy with the new layout.

It currently looks like this

There is a great big hole waiting for a whole lot of yellow hexies!!!!!


Therapy Thursday

Despite working a full day, and then working at the school production, and despite the sewing room looking as if an explosion had occurred recently, I HAD to do some sewing.

I dont know if I mentioned that the June meeting of the Richmond & Kew quilters was a Charity Quilt night.  At variuos desks around the room people were contributing to making charity quilts.  I know some Dear Jane blocks were being made, and I'me sure others were too, but I was chanied to my sewing machine for the whole evening and didn't see anything else.

I had teams cutting & counting out 42 x 2.5inch strips which I then joined into one (very) long strip, with others snipping off the triangles, and pressing the seams.

We made one top during the evening,

and I brought home one pack of strips, 

and one very long strip, so as a bit of therapy I have started joining the long strip.  Not very exciting but it's now 4 times as wide as it was, and 1/4 the length, and I have done *some* sewing


How's your Owl?

At Oakfield yesterday we gave ourselves a break from embroidering words onto leaves, and switched to owls instead.

The plan is to have one owl for each head teacher in the 50 years of the school.  I sketched them a simple owl and showed them how to break it down into body and wings, and gave them ideas for eyes, beaks and legs

Didn't they do well!













Sewing Saturday

Yesterday I spent the morning at school at the last Fun With Fabric class of the school year.  More squares got added to more strips

The family then went to my S-I -L's for a lovely afternoon of food, drink, fun and chat.

My M-I-L tried to take a nice photo of the girls . . . 
She didn't quite get the hang of the phone camera!!!!

Next attempts were better . . . 

(The champagne in the top pic is to celebrate this letter)

And then I bullied the girls and their boys into posing for a photo 

What a lovely group ;-)

2024 November

I'm working on a great project with Chertsey Museum: they have been collecting memories of Chertsey Hospital, including inviting people ...