The summer here has been seemingly hotter than usual, or I think I am seriously missing the aircon from my old sewing room! We haven't had much cooling wind, and that also means that there has been less rain in the northern part of the country. But that hasn't stopped me sewing as much as possible.
This is the sum total of reels of thread used up in 2024. They weren't all full to start the year and have now been put in the recycling bin. Already have one emptied for 2025.
I've been trying to move various projects along, and have started a few new ones. Two mystery quilts started earlier this month are in progress and these are some of the fabrics for the first one, Good Hope Quilters' Guild's named The Cape Winelands. A bunch of deep bright blues have since been added.
Pink is the
Rainbow Scrap Challenge for January. (Click on the link to go see what others have been doing with their scraps.) The very few pink scraps generated since the last pink month were quickly stitched up into various sized slabs (no pictures). Over time I've been making notes for ideas to use these slabs of made-fabric. I wanted to balance the weight of the pieced fabric with other smaller scraps of fabric as a whole quilt with made-fabric is quite heavy. I was pleased with this first block (12-inch finished):
So stitched some more, and will continue making just six per month in 2025 in RSC colours.
A couple of needle-turned pieces, the one with yellow stars is the centre from a pattern our Guild was selling to raise funds and is based on a quilt in our Cultural History Museum. You may find it here: Glenday Quilt. The other is from my monthly quilt group in which we were asked to fold paper and make cuts like making paper snowflakes, and then use that as a template on a similarly folded piece of fabric. I just had to stitch it up to see how it would look!
I occasionally go the Cape Embroiderers Guild and members were asked to embroider anything in the supplied evenweave fabric square (some had outlined squares and some had circles). I am not that keen a hand-stiticher, and so it sat for about 5 months taunting me to stitch, and this is the eventual result which turned out ok. The squares will all be stitched together for the CEG's 40th birthday this year.
Steady progress on Bonnie Hunter's year-end Mystery, The Old Town. Thankfully I didn't sew the sashing pieces together as I have decided to change the layout and create little stars at the intersections! In order, one block pressed, the rest to press, playing with sashing, and playing with layouts. I think I will make two quilt tops, 3 x 4 blocks each.
Have just realised I haven't taken a photo of my completed 365 quilt top. So happy with this milestone reached. Next time!
Hi Karen! I LOVE the colors of your Old Town mystery. This is Kathy from Kathy's Quilting Blog. I got the nice edges of my circles from playing with my new set of Applipops. I bought them used because I thought they were a little pricy. I really enjoy making circles now--they are even becoming addicting. Now I'm keeping an eye out for more quilts that need circles. I am glad I bought the double set. It really speeds up the process.
ReplyDeleteThank you Kathy!
ReplyDeleteYou have such alot to show for your stitching time, well done!
ReplyDeleteLots of pretty pink blocks! Love the colors for 'Old Town', it's a beauty.
ReplyDelete