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A Covered Button Press

November 21, 2021 7 Comments

I recently visited my friend Cathy. I hadn’t been to her beautiful lake home before and I enjoyed the view, as well as all of her lovely quilts, and the wonderful furniture made by her very talented husband Tom.

In the dining room she had a small table with an odd tool attached to it. I stared for a few minutes and finally had to ask “what is it?”

Do you know?

It’s a covered button maker. It’s actually called a Hand Press, and you can purchase one online for anywhere from $60 – $200. I’m so glad Cathy showed me how it works and then loaned it to me to play with (thanks Laura for helping me carry it to the car 😊).

I’ve made covered buttons before, but the tools involved were this kit from Dritz and a hammer!

Cathy pulled out the box with the blanks for all the different sized buttons, and the press dies

And made a button before our eyes:

button back “inside” up in bottom die
bottom die placed in press
top die
fabric placed in top die
button top placed into fabric, “inside” of button up
top die in place
a little bit of muscle

And voila… a covered button!

I’ve made quite a few covered buttons when garment sewing. This is one of my favorite vests. The buttons are only for decoration, but it was fun to stitch the design from the vest onto the fabric before making them.

I’m looking forward to doing a bit of playing with the press on my current challenge quilt. Thanks Cathy!!!

Have you ever made covered buttons? Do you have a story you’d like to share… with pictures?

Vintage Travel Posters

November 7, 2021 8 Comments

The “Big Challenge” for the ThreadBenders this year had a very interesting theme and color palette. Here are the rules:

The quilt must be made in the style of the travel posters from the WPA of the 30’s and 40’s. The place is up to you- it could be someplace you’ve visited, or your backyard or wherever, but in the style of the posters. The idea is not to recreate the existing posters, but turn a place of your choice into a quilt “poster” in this style.

You may only use 6 colors, which means only 6 fabrics.  In addition you may use black and white (gray is considered a color).  If you look at the old posters for inspiration, you will see they only use approx. 6 colors.  Colors must be “tones”, like the colors used in the old posters – no brights. 

The location title must be included on the quilt, either straight across the top or bottom.  You can choose any font, but the title must be at least 80% of the width of the quilt.

The resulting poster quilts were spectacular (if I do say so myself 😃) and they have been posted to our site. I think you’ll find the variety fascinating. To see them all click here!

Typically with these challenges I take the opportunity to share my quilt’s story in a blog post – so here it is!

My mom’s family had a cottage on Pewaukee Lake, and both of my parents loved the water. My grandfather sold that cottage many years ago, so in my early teens my parents decided to purchase a speed boat. They wanted Kurt and me to love life on the water too. We all enjoyed the boating and skiing, but my parents disliked all that goes with towing a boat around on the weekends. Within a few years they decided the boat needed a home and it was time to buy a cottage of their own. They found a small cottage on a lovely lot on Lake Sinissippi (which has grown over the years).

It was less than an hours drive from Milwaukee and we spent most of our weekends there.

After over 50 years of fun on the lake I decided I needed to commemorate this important part of our lives in a travel poster quilt. Here’s the photo I took of the shoreline specifically for this project:

I chose to leave off the pontoon boat, and add a great blue heron to the quilt (in a spot I’d seen one recently, but didn’t take a photo). Once I raw-edged repliquéd the quilt top It occurred to me that this scene could be from just about any lake in Wisconsin (or many other states for that matter). What makes this shoreline special to me is the memories of all the wonderful times we’ve had there with family and friends. So I began going through photos from the past 50 years. I chose my favorites, copied them by photographing them with my phone, and placed them in Photoshop™ in an arrangement that would fit a yard of fabric:

I uploaded this entire image to spoonflower.com, and for $18 I had the perfect backing for my poster quilt. Amazing!

I finished the quilt in time for Mom and Dad’s July birthdays (Mom turned 87 and Dad 90 – and they gave me permission to share that 😊). We had a huge family gathering at ~ you guessed it ~ the cottage, and we gifted the quilt to them from all of us!

Everyone wanted to find themselves in the photos on the back, especially the kids!

The adults got in on the fun too!

Now the problem is ~ how to hang it??? At this point it’s hanging in their living room “right side out”, but I’m pretty sure it will be flipped to the album side pretty soon.

I hope you will visit the ThreadBenders site and see all of the wonderful posters!

Quilting With My Friend Lori

October 31, 2021 3 Comments

As I was looking at the Autumn quilt I have hanging in our living room (click here to learn more about this quilt),

I was reminded of the fun of having it hang in Paducah. Then I got an email from my friend Lori with a link to her current online tutorial, and many memories came flooding back.

I met Lori years ago when I spoke to her quilt guild, but we really got to know each other the year we both had an Oak Leaf and Reel quilt accepted into the New Quilts From an Old Favorite contest at the National Quilt Museum in Paducah. Lori is third from the right:

And here’s her fun quilt:

She is a talented quilter, teacher, author and dear sister in Christ – with a great website: Quilting With Lori. Like me, she’s a teacher at heart and loves to share tips, techniques and step-by-step tutorials.

While watching a recent video of hers on how to “web” a quilt, I thought “what a great technique to share!” But I knew I couldn’t have done the instructions any better, so I thought it would be a great idea to link to the tutorial on her site ~ click here .

Many of you may already use this great technique. I’ve found it saves me some ripping as it keeps everything in the proper order and I’ve not only used it for blocks, but for entire quilts. However I never thought to call it “webbing a quilt”. How very clever!

Lori has books, patterns and templates available for sale, and I think you will be amazed at how much she shares for free. Her site is a wealth of information for quilters. She also speaks and teaches for guilds, virtually and live. Click here to reach her homepage. I know you’ll enjoy getting to know Lori 😊!

A Page 38 Challenge

October 24, 2021 3 Comments

Our most recent challenge in my Fiberistas group had a unique twist. Each member grabbed an old magazine from Barb’s overflowing pile. We then turned to page 38 (that number was chosen at random), and we challenged each other to make a quilt inspired by some aspect of our page. Here’s mine:

I wasn’t excited about the block on my page, but I found the circle inside the star intriguing. We picked our pages back in December of 2019, and ideas began to rattle around in my brain. Then I went to Japan! For my newer blog readers, you can read all my posts about that wonderful quilting adventure by typing Japan into the search box on my blog’s homepage 😁.

Way back in April of 2020, with my trip to Japan fresh in my head and loads of time to quilt “at home”, I decided it was time to make a memory quilt of the trip, and started by piecing a background to display some of the pieces I made in the classes with our Japanese teachers. (Click here to read about the inspiration for this “background”).

You may have noticed I included my hand-stitched sashiko sampler in the piecing above. My next “what if” idea was to make the class samples into circles and “bounce” them over the surface of the quilt. These bird and flower samples are from the Yuzen painting class:

I loved the shibori dyeing class – and the color too!

I also included some other pieces I purchased on the trip, but I didn’t have enough circles to make a really interesting design. Then an idea struck – those circles on page 38! I only had a copy of that 1 page, and there were no “how-to” instructions, so how would I create those pieced circles??? As most of you know I’m always looking for an easy way to accomplish a task. After a bit of pondering I realized those circles could be cut from pinwheel blocks. After making pinwheels in different sizes from some of the Asian fabrics Evelyn gave me (thanks Evelyn!), I marked the circles, cut them out and added them to the collection.

It took awhile to find the right layout. I find it helpful when I’m doing this type of designing to take photos with my phone and then swipe between the options until I decide on the one that tickles my fancy. Here are three of the options I came up with:

And here’s the one I finally decided on:

I think it’s pretty, and such fun to snuggle under. I love being covered with all those wonderful memories!

All of the challenge quilts were fascinating and we finally have them posted to our Fiberistas site. To see all of the magazine pages and the quilts that resulted please click here! You’ll notice that most of us used only a small aspect of some portion of our page to inspire our quilts. I think that was part of the fun. Enjoy!

.

Easiest No-end Binding ~ Refresher

October 17, 2021 7 Comments

A few years ago I discovered a technique that I think is the easiest way ever for joining the beginning and ending tails on a binding. You don’t need a special ruler, an iron, or math. It’s done with a 2″ piece of Dritz Wash Away Wonder Tape™ (which I now keep next to my machine at all times 😊).

As I was using this technique to bind Josiah’s quilt, the teacher in me knew I had to share it once again; for newer viewers and as a reminder to the rest of you 😃. It’s the only one I’ve used for the past 3 years and I highly recommend it. It’s really this easy:

Leave an opening between your beginning and ending tails about 10″ long:

Fold one tail back to create a 45 degree angle. No math is required because you can check it by putting a square ruler in the inside corner that’s created:

Place a 2″ piece of tape along the fold and rub with your fingernail to be sure it sticks:

Remove the paper from the tape, leaving the glue strip along the crease:

Lay the other tail in place along the edge of the quilt, and over the tape on the crease:

and finger press to secure tape to this second strip:

Lift the strips to reveal the inside of the crease:

Gently pick the entire piece up and stitch in the crease:

Lay the binding back on the quilt to make sure it fits:

Once you’re sure, trim off the tails:

Lay back in place and sew this last portion of the binding to the quilt:

Voila. I just leave the tape in place since it will wash away. Turn the binding to the back of the quilt and finish as usual. I hope you’ll give it a try!

***********************

Correction!

In spite of the fact I like math ~ it was brought to my attention that I have oft repeated a counting error. Doris sent me an email after watching my Quilt as You Go lecture at the Great Wisconsin Quilt show saying that she could only come up with 6 layers when sewing the front and back sashing on, not 7. She’s exactly right and I apologize for any confusion this may have caused. Fortunately the technique remains the same 😊. Thanks Doris, for letting us know!

Shot Cotton and the Magnifier App for Photos

October 10, 2021 5 Comments

Back when we used to be able to wander through quilt shows, I found myself drawn to a special type of quilting fabric – it’s called Shot Cotton, and it’s the “green” fabric I used in my nephew Josiah’s quilt.

Most of the cotton fabrics quilters use begin as a white fabric that is dyed or printed to make all the beautiful bolts we are so infatuated with. However, Shot cotton is special because the warp and weft yarns are 2 different colors woven together to create a special depth, a “shot” of color. When the edge of this fabric ravels, you can see a bright contrast to the body of the fabric.”

These fabrics are woven using cotton thread which is dyed in small batches. Variations in color and small imperfections in the weaving are a natural part of the process. Here’s an even closer view:

The really exciting part for me in learning more about shot cottons, was learning how to get a really close up “shot” with my iphone. After a bit of searching the internet I discovered that my phone has a magnifier app.

and I can take photographs in that app. This is a close up of my necklace as seen in the magnifier app:

By sliding the yellow dot I’m able to achieve a very good magnification and… by touching the “X” I can take a photo of the image and save it to Photos. We’re always learning 😊!

Back to the shot cottons. They actually do have a bit of a sheen and the colors are beautiful. Have you worked with them? Do you have any in your stash? Perhaps you don’t even realize it.

We tend to buy the fabrics that tickle our fancy and often we don’t even know about these interesting details. I hope you found it as interesting as I did.

Josiah’s Quilt

October 3, 2021 15 Comments

My brother and sister-in-law’s kids have been very busy giving them grandchildren lately 😊. You may remember that I made my nephew Kevin’s daughter, Roan Mary, a “spider” quilt a few months ago (click here for that post). Well, Kevin’s sister Brianne just had baby #3. Josiah Thomas was born in August and joined his sisters Tessa and Gabby.

While on my last quilt retreat I started a quilt, with him in mind, and got the top done.

I found out his room has a woodland creature theme, so I wanted to add some friends into the quilting. I searched the internet for copyright free woodland critters, enlarged them, and printed them out so I could trace them onto Glad Press n Seal™. Then I was able to stick them in place on the quilt sandwich (moving the pins to the top so they wouldn’t be in the way):

I stitched through the traced patterns,

Removed the plastic with a tweezers,

and was pleased with the results:

I also did some free-motion straight line quilting through the colorful squares using rulerwork:

His initials and some fun woodland foliage were then added. I labeled the quilt at the bottom in quilted words: “Jesus love you – and we do too, Uncle Mike and Aunt Chris”.

Josiah’s quilt is now finished and ready to wrap him in. Can’t wait to meet him!

*************************

And one more thing! I’d like to caption this addition “it’s never too late to finish something beautiful”!

This past week I received an email message from Kate:

“Hi Chris,
Many years ago I took your class on how to draft a Mariners Compass.
It was with the Scrappers Quilt Guild in Williams Bay, WI
I finally finished it.
I enjoy your blogs, thank you for sharing.
“

Great job Kate! You’re very welcome.

I hope Kate’s an inspiration to many of you. Remember, those UFOs in the closet are not “unfinished objects” but “ultimately fabulous opportunities”!

Landscapes in Wool

September 26, 2021 5 Comments

A few weeks after the Top Stitch competition my friend Kathy and I decided to meet up at the Wisconsin Wool and Sheep Festival in Jefferson, WI. Kathy lives in Illinois, so we look for opportunities to get together and enjoy our passion for fiber.

Even though this show is only 15 miles from my home, I’d only been there once before because it’s always held the same weekend as the Great Wisconsin Quilt Show and I was always teaching there. Since the quilt show was virtual this year we realized we could see the show and take a class too! We decided on a 3 hour workshop by Anna Repke, entitled “Mini Wool Felted Landscapes”. Here she is with a few of her class samples.

The feature image at the top of this blog post was taken of Anna’s booth in the show. To visit her website click here.

Her work is incredible! Anna is a great teacher, a sister in Christ, and her workshop was one of the best I’ve taken in a long time (even though wool isn’t always my first choice of fiber). Here are a few more class samples. I think you can see why we were excited to get started.

She brought all the supplies, including an amazing selection of dyed wool roving.

In her initial demonstration we learned how to lay out the design,

Layer it all, get it wet and begin “massaging” it,

Roll the piece up to continue the felting process (and roll, and roll, and roll some more),

and once the background piece was wet felted, we learned how to needle felt details on top of it.

I found her instructions for adding trees particularly interesting.

Then it was time to jump in. I actually enjoyed the felting process: playing with fibers, hot water and soap; and discovering how the wool behaves and shrinks. Here’s my background pre and post wet felting:

Now it was time to needle felt some details onto my background. Years ago my friend Linda did a play day with a number of friends in which we tried needle felting. To see the project I made that day click here!

Having that little bit of experience was helpful, especially since needle felting is a pretty easy process. You simply lay fibers from wool roving in place and “punch” them into the background with a barbed needle (or a felting machine if you’re lucky enough to have a friend who owns one 😊). I added some more “hills and valleys”, but I couldn’t wait to finish it off with “That Tree” I posted about last week (I warned you this was coming)! The windblown tree series now contains one made in wool. I’m thinking this is very early Spring, and I’m pleased with the results for my first try at it.

All of the student quilts were successful ~ and quite interesting!

Kathy and I truly enjoyed it – thanks Anna!

The rest of the show was fantastic and I have to admit I did buy more wool to add to the stash. Can’t wait to jump in and explore wool felting again.

*********************

Fabric Opportunity For Those in Southeastern Wisconsin!

Patty recently sent me this email:

“I have some fabric that I’m trying to find a good home for. Maybe you know someone who would be interested.
Vintage Lace – A box of lace from my mom’s basement. Mostly lace tablecloths and curtains. I don’t think any are handmade. You can tell they were used since some have stains or holes. Great for some kind of project though.
Bag of zippers – Also from my mom’s basement. She never threw anything away. These were salvaged from clothes before the clothes were put to another use.
Wool scraps – A bag of washable wool leftovers from projects. Nothing very large. These were originally from wool clothing. They’ve all been washed and dried and didn’t felt.

Cotton quilting fabric scraps – Little leftover pieces. I’d heard you could fill pillowcases with them and donate them to animal shelters but I couldn’t find any in the area that would take them. Have a couple of bags.
I live in Germantown and drive to the Madison area a couple of times a month to babysit for my granddaughters. I’d be happy to drop them off anywhere along my route.
Thanks, Patty”

If you’re interested please contact Patty directly at:

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