views from this weekend

this weekend davis and I went hunting. he built a new stand in the cutover (pines planted for paper/pulp purposes) and i hunted there....i love hunting in there. the deer feel safe and it's so quite.

i saw five different deer, but only got pictures of two.
this is a little doe. she was a riot to watch. she caught a scent of something she didn't like and was throwing a fit....

(valerie- this is what they look like :) )








and this little guy, i think he is her brother. they were too comfortable being close to each other to not be related. he just stood there watching his sister throw her fit...

they are what we call 'last year's deer' (one and 1/2 year old) . they are too little to shoot.  if you look between his ears you can see his 'antlers' (click on the picture, then click the back button to come back here)...he's called a spike because they are pretty straight and, well, look like spikes. when referring to the antlers of a whitetail buck , you count the points...a trophy is judged by three things: the number of points, the mass of the antler (how thick they are), and the spread (width)...

lotsa quilts

i returned lots of quilts to their piecers this weekend....sit, back, and relax. here we go: (remember you can click on the photo for a larger picture, then click the 'back' button on your browser to come back here)
first carolyn's emerald quilt. made from tons of sq-n-sq units and batiks. it was a big one, 104" square













i E2Eed it with my swirly design
















then Pam's two. this one is called Teacher's Pet












i just did my 'thang' on it...this was a fun one to quilt














Pam's other one, Fickle Pickle....i just LOVED this one!













i had fun with it too!














detail of the back














pat's under water panel quilt with cute pieced turtles













i did a watery-swirly-E2E















joyce's chritmas sampler. it's a wall hanging














it had lots of space for creative quilting!














back detail




last but not least, jean anne's pinapple quilt. this will appear soon in a magazine! 

i have been a busy bee- now back to work!

have a happy thanksgiving! i'll see you later next week!


hey- all those pictures and blogger didn't hiccup once! yay

breathe deep




i love the smell of
batiks in the morning!




churn dash

this is kathy's blue and white churn dash....kathy is new to quilting, and she is picking it up pretty fast!










i quilted my swirly design on it..she brought another for her daughter that is black and white. that one is getting the royal feather treatment....stay tuned!

the other white meat!

tonight for dinner- BLTs....

everything is better with bacon...

the most imporant thing about BLTs? keeping the bacon flat. notice how flat that bacon is? i'm gonna share my top secret technique (and you thought all i could do was quilt...)

first, use low sodium thick cut bacon and cook it in the microwave between layers of paper towels. i cook a whole package at a time...i put three slices per layer with two paper towels inbetween...use good quality paper towels. cheap ones will fall apart from the grease.  so i cook the whole layered mess in the microwave on high for four minutes, then flip the whole sandwich over, then four more minutes, etc. check the bacon in the middle for done-ness. if you don't flip the whole thing, the bacon on top will burn and the bottom layers will never get crispy..don't let the bacon cool in the paper towels...you have to peel it off while it's still hot or it'll stick and be ruined.

an added benefit to this- the bacon isn't greasy (the paper towels will be) so it doesn't make the bread soggy...

hey- BLTs are an art....it took years to prefect the method 8>)...don't get me started on the mayo....

DONE!!

thanks to all the comments on which layout you guys liked. it was a high comment post....but the incomplete circles was not my favorite. i liked the randomness of the traditional X layout. i felt that the circles were too familiar and literal. i wanted a more scrappy feel for the quilt.

so here's a picture of the completed flimsy! the picture doesn't do it justice, plus it's so big (84 x 105) that i can't get a good full picture of it....

moving on to the next one.....

playing with UFOs

LAing isn't holding my attention today, so i decided to do some piecing...i grabbed a bag outta the UFO pile that has these drunkard's path blocks in it. i have the majority pieced, so i'm playing with a layout.

help me decide. i kindda know which one i'm leaning towards...
first this one...it has incomplete circles intertwined

and this one which is the 'traditional' X layout of Solomon's puzzle...

i plan on quilting it with an free hand E2E spikey swirl thing i do...the border fabric was in the bag too...

which do you like? why?

how much do i buy?

i am asked by new piecers, "How much fabric do i need to buy for a stash?" after they realize my answer "As much as you can afford" is a joke i explain how i approach fabric purchases. there is nothing worse than starting a quilt and as you shop from your stash, you keep coming up short on your yardage.

i tend to make large quilts (large queen size to king size) so when i buy for my stash this is how i go about it and it works or me. i don't make quilts from one collection exclusively (unless it takes my breath away) and i've stopped buying pre-cuts.

background- when i purchase fabrics that i think i'd use in the future as a background (solids and nice subtle creams) i buy anywhere from 3 to 4 yards. this is plenty fabric to amply use as the same background through a whole quilt. i have a color card of all Kona Cotton colors and buy as i need it. i tend to pick my background after i pick my prints that i want to use it help carry my 'theme' i am aiming for...i like to use solids for backgrounds as it gives me a place to showcase some quilting...the only exception to this that i can think of is pure white- i'd buy a bolt of it....

borders- i'm not a fan of piecing my borders and cut my borders along the length of the fabric. my king size quilt is usually around 100"+ in either direction, so i buy 3 to 3.125 yards. some piecers are not comfortable having that 3 yard by 13"+ inch piece- i use that to make the backing wider or stick it back into my stash as there is usually enough left to use it for another quilt's inner border.

binding- i usually buy 1 to 1.5 yards for binding. i cut mine on the bias, so this is usually stripes...

stash- i use to buy fat quarters then i realized that it wasn't enough fabric for my purposes. i know that there are uber books that are full of quilt patterns using fat quarters- i'm not including those in this....also- check the price of a fat quarter in your LQS...let's do the math, if a fat quarter is, say, $2.75 and the fabric per yard is $8.75/yard it is more economical to buy a half yard at $4.40 (two fat quarters would be $5.50). i buy half yards of fabric i like. i tend to use more tone-on-tone fabrics for my piecing (they are more versatile), so i will buy a yard if i find one i like. i've been piecing for a while now, and i know that some colors (salmon, acid lime green, good oranges and periwinkle) are hard to find...if i find one i like i will buy 2 yards. i love LARGE scale prints, so i tend to buy 2 to 3 yards of any i like...

backings- i have a 'rule': i do not buy backings at full retail price. i acquire my backings from the sale rooms of my LQSes...when i go to a new quilt shop, the first area i visit is the sale bin/room then i hit the batiks :) i try to aim for 6.5 yard pieces. if i need a larger backing (say for a king that requires 9 yards) i just grab a three yard border piece from my stash. another thing to keep in mind is the 'print' of the fabric. i like my quilting to show on the back of my quilts, so i tend to buy fabrics that read as a solid and in a completely different color than the thread color i intend to use. if you do not want (or care) if the quilting shows, buy a busy muli-colored print. those 40% off coupons from the chain stores help with my backing yardage acquirement's too. yes i buy from Joann's and Hancock's. i feel the fabric- if it feels 'right' then i deem it fit for the stash. i don't buy fabric i can read a newspaper through from across the room. at my joann's i've started to see a better quality fabric on the shelves, not to mention that they do have the closeouts from some well known fabric producers...i found a fat quarter pack of Heather Ross prints...trust me, i spend more at my LQS a month than at the local chain stores.

when buying fabric, you need to know what 'holes' you have in your current stash. i haven't met a green i didn't like and my green drawer shows it. my hole in my stash is my yellows, oranges, and purple. in batiks it is pinks. when i fork over my money for fabric i want it to have a home in the stash. i also know (and am comfortable with) my style of quilting. i know when i see a fabric what i would use it for...so i buy accordingly.

another thing i keep well stocked in is Magic Sizing. i average a can per quilt. i'm not a starch fan, and i have silverfish...every time i go to walmart i buy about 4 cans....it's only a buck per can...and yes, i've been to wally world at 2am cause i've run out...i'm not a pre-washer either, so i keep Shout Color Catchers on the washer... oh, and i use alot of freezer paper...oh, and i keep a bolt of Pellon fusible stabilizer for all the totes i make...anywhoo....

i would like to add one more soapbox-y thing- support your local LQS...i would miss Tiny Stitches, Little Quilts, and Intown Quilters if they closed. it is my treatment for a bad day (if chocolate doesn't work) petting fabric always makes everything better. a LQS is the best resource a quilter can have in their back pocket. i understand that not all have a disposable income, but something is better than nothing. Besides the local guild, they are great for classes...

now, having said all that- i am embracing the improvisational fun that comes from making from stash. let's say i have a turquoise that i love for binding...i need a yard, but i only have 3/4yd...i'm more inclined to pull another fabric that is in the quilt (usually an orange or lime green or both) and piece it into the binding to make up that 1/4yd...so i have become more open to possibilities in my piecing that adds 'playfullness' to my quilts (thank you to my wonderful friend Jess for teaching me that)

hopefully this will help shed some light on buying fabric to stash. Davis always says that a man is only as good as his tools. let's twist it to fit this situation: a quilter is only as good as his/her stash...i can justify anything when it comes to fabric :)

it's what's for dinner

extra moist fudge cake with dark chocolate mousse icing *yummy!*

my first attempt at a layered cake...it was a box cake, but we all have to start somewhere...


the mousse was my absolute favorite!

sharing...

in the spirit of encouragement- i wanted to share Libby's view on 'perseverance'.  i feel that all creative people should read her posting no matter what medium you express yourself with...she shares her observations about the too predominate 'role' of fear in a creative process and it's use in our vocabulary.

i would have to agree with her...so, today, i am throwing FEAR out of my creative process... it really doesn't belong there anyway...
ask yourself:

WHAT WOULD YOU DO IF YOU WEREN'T AFRAID?

doesn't that realization create so many fun possibilities?! did you just feel all that weight magically disappear from your shoulders?


tomorrow my voice will be heard!

i am an American citizen and i vote!
i am a woman and i vote!
i believe in God and one nation under God and i vote!
i own a gun and i vote!
i am out raged and i vote!

my vote counts because i vote!