Friday, December 19, 2008
Monday, November 10, 2008
Bow tie blocks explained...

But in order to spice my latest quilt up a bit, I used a bow tie block (OK, so they call it the Double Necktie Block). In order to make this 9 block into a "bowtie block", you just add small triangles to the corners of adjacent blocks, as shown in this picture. It is really a simple procedure, but it is a time consuming extra step. But worth it, I think, for something a bit different. 

It makes the resulting block look like two bow ties stacked on top of each other. I got this block from my favorite site for finding quilt patterns, the Quilter's Cache. Every time you load a page on that site it plays a new song, so just to warn you to turn down your volume if you are checking this out at work!! :)
OK, well, hope that you are fully inspired to try this block for yourself. And have fun experimenting!!
Labels:
Bow tie,
Double Neck Tie block,
Irish Chain,
quilt,
Rag quilt
Saturday, November 8, 2008
Sewing for the holidays...
It is that time of year again, and you craft-ies know what I mean. The holidays. Compound the normal holiday season with 5 November birthdays and you have a real gift giving problem! And every year I get inspired to give at least one or two folks a quilt of some kind for thier gift. So this year I have a few coming down the pike, so I have not been able to post much, since that would ruin the surprise (Also, the election and my guest posting on http://www.letters-and-surveys.blogspot.com/ has taken up all my blogging time!! Thank goodness that is over!)
Somehow the lines and blocks really seemed nice put together this way. And the bowtie block added a level of detail that I really liked.
So, one of my gifts this year was for my sister's birthday, and since that is over, and the gift has been given, I can now safely post.
This one was so fun. I started out by getting the fleece backing. It is super soft and cozy. I waited and waited for my Jo-Ann's coupon to arrive so I could get 50% off the cut. Once I had the back I was puzzled as to what to do next. 
I searched around for a cool pattern, and at the same time kept my eyes out for fabric that would match. I wanted to keep it monochromatic, since when my sister and I went to a quilt show she seemed to really like the monochromatic quilts.
So I got on ebay and searched for navy blue fabric...and what to my wondering eyes did appear, but someone who had perhaps made their own monochromatic navy blue and white quilt and was trying to sell the leftover remnants. So i bought about 6 different fabrics that all matched perfectly right from the comfort of my couch. I love technology!
Then I wanted to find a different type of pattern. So I decided to try the bowtie. You can see it here in my first attempt at laying out the quilt top.
My first pattern attempt was not exactly right, though, since I did not have enough of the blue fabrics to make it big enough, so I went ahead and changed it around. 
By changeing the pattern around a bit and alternating the blocks with white strips and blocks it made for an interesting top and allowed me to have enough fabric to finish! Always important. :)
I did not quilt this one to finish. I used embroidery thread to connect the backing to the top. I have never tried quilting a quilt with a fleece back in the traditional sense. I just use the knots to tie the two parts together.
So happy birthday sis! Hope you like it.
So now on to Christmas and my next round of projects. This is a fun time of the year!!!
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Shop Hop
So my quilt is set to be quilted. But I could not show it in this post, so I am showing pictures of my garden. I built a new flower bed and planted some mums. They are huge. And looking very pretty.
So that is what is up in the Sapphire quilt world. More to come as always!
Monday, September 22, 2008
What we can learn from my Grandma and the women of Gee's Bend
Have you ever saved an empty bread bag for later use? Have you ever felt guilt when throwing away an aluminum disposable pie plate or a plastic milk jug? Have you ever eaten questionable food as opposed to simply throwing it away? If you answered yes to any of these questions, you were either raised during the depression or you are part of the new "Greenwave" that is crossing our country these days. But there is more than just the environment at stake for all of us, and the new "greenies" may not fully appreciate that fact, while my Grandmother could really care less about global warming as she tucks her breadbags away. She was reducing, reusing, and recycling before the three R's were cool. (Actually, in her day the three R's were Reading wRiting and 'Rithmatic, but that never made much sense...)

You see, the depression taught my grandparents and the people of that generation something. I realized today that people younger than me (close to 30) are not being exposed to the Depression style way of life. That is, my parents were raised by Depression era parents. I was impacted by Depression era grandparents. But my kids (if I ever have any) will not know their great-grandparents enough to understand this mindset of scrimping and saving.
My Grandparents learned as young children and teenagers that debt was a dangerous thing. If you didn't have a nest egg, in cash, you were at risk. They saved extra money, made their clothes last, walked to the theatre, and saved such things as bread bags for a second or third use.
But I was raised in the 80's, not the 20's and 30's. In the eighties, everything was about bigger and better. If you don't like what you've got, throw it away and get a new one. Oh, and don't bother fixing things. In fact, these days you can't get things fixed. You have no choice but tossing them. So we have been trained to borrow and spend and borrow some more and don't worry you will earn more later to pay the creditors back. Want a car, get one! Want a house, get one! Too small, get a bigger one! And so it goes, and so we are where we are economically today.
I heard an NPR story on the way in to work today about an economic bubble that burst in Japan that taught them the same lessons Americans learned in the Great Depression. I found it so profound as the man in the story talked about how everyone was in the "buy buy buy" mode...but it took 20 years for him to pay off that debt after the crash. And I thought to myself, how long will it take me to pay off my debt? My education, my home...I don't think 20 years will cover it! So what if we have a crash? It is enough to make me want to start stashing bread bags in a drawer.
So this brings me to the quilters of Gee's Bend. A couple of weekends ago, my mom and I went to see an exhibit of these quilts at the Knoxville Muse
um of Art. It was great.
These are some cards I bought there which had the prints of some of the quilts on them. You see, the ladies of Gee's Bend would take what ever fabric they could get...old jeans and courderoy pants with the knees worn and that could not longer be used, or old shirts, sheets, anything that could be found. It would be patched together, mostly in a "log cabin" or "housetop" pattern. But the word "pattern" is used loosely, as you can see. Squares and strips is how they come out. All colors, with variations in the fabric from where knees had bent, pockets had been removed, creases had been made.
Batting was cotton lint that was leftover from processing of cotton in the cotton gin. The lint would be stretched and spread over the quilt back and then the top was added.
Then let the quilting begin. Women gathered around the quilting frame and stitched while they sang, told stories, and talked about all the things women talk about. Then, after a bit of finishing, the quilt was complete and ready for use. You see, this project was not a gift or a hobby, but it was the way that a woman would keep her husband or children warm on a winter night.
But the quilters of Gee's Bend knew about not wasting, not borrowing, but usually having just enough, or a little less than enough. Mostly about being happy. The video at the museum showed one of the matriarchs talking about this...she said that no matter how little they had they were happy, but that nowadays, no one seems happy.
And I guess we're not. Who can be happy when the world can crumble so easily. When retirement and investments can be lost, debt will take 20 years to pay, and cars run out of gas. But when you have nothing and no where to go, what is there to worry about? You can just sit with your family, stitching and singing and letting the world worry about itself.
So we have a lot to do. We need to be green to save the planet, we need to save money and get out of debt. But mostly, we need to love each other and worry more about the next stitch than the next dollar.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
New Gadget
It looks like a pizza cutter. It cuts so easily through the fabric to make the peices that you put together later. Isn't that cool? No more measuring with a peice of cardboard, marking it with a pen and cutting crooked lines with a scissors. I can get my least favorite part of quilting over with much faster with this new method. Thanks mom for the birthday present! :)
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