7/13/26

Quilting Row by Row

Good morning, my friends. I'm writing extra fast this morning because I have an early appointment with a new dermatologist. My dermatologist of some 35 years retired a couple of years ago. I've been seeing another doctor, but I haven't really felt comfortable with her. Now I'm switching. It's hard getting in with a specialist as a new patient, but I managed to score a July appointment, when his new patient appointments were booking out until December. I hope I like him. It's just a routine skin check...nothing to worry about. Hopefully, I'll come home with all my skin intact.

So, let's just get right to it, shall we? Yesterday morning I stitched most of the bottom of the Love Sampler.


Now, I’ve moved my hoop up to encompass the last of it. I won’t finish it this morning, but tomorrow isn’t out of the question.


After that, there was a garden to hoe and flower pots to water. After lunch, I was able to get back to my quilting. Smitty was there to make sure I didn’t move the quilt too quickly. He wants to see nice, even stitches.


One block was stitched the day before, but I was able to finish up the rest of the row yesterday.


Here’s a peek at the back. 


This quilt has five rows. With one row done, I’ll have four days to quilt the remaining rows. Then, I’ll spend a day on the horizontal sashings and another day on the vertical sashings. That means I could have it to binding stage in about a week. For now, I left it needle-down in the next row down from the one I’ve already quilted. There should be some time to work on it today.


From there, I finished the third block for Where the Cows Come Home. When I left off the day before, I’d created the barn on a pressing sheet. Yesterday, I fused it to the background and added in the details.


The tree had some scraggly branches extending from the applique trunk. I made a copy of the placement diagram, and then traced the branches onto the fabric, as I do for embroidery.


Then I used my machine’s triple stitch and also the regular straight stitch to machine stitch the branches on the tree. After that, just the top-stitching was left, and the block was finished.


These are the three blocks I have for this quilt so far.


Smitty helped me tidy up at the end of the day. He’s a stickler for organization and cleanliness.


If there’s time for sewing today, I’ll get to work on the next block for Across the Wide Missouri. These are the two blocks I have for this quilt so far.


Recall that these blocks honor women who traveled across the prairie with westward expansion of the United States. The next block will honor Kate Carmack. I haven’t read much about her yet, so I’ll say more as I get to work making the block.

All right. I have a doctor’s appointment this morning, and then we’ll meet up with Erik and Mae for an early dinner tonight. With the change in our phone service, we have new phones to hand off to them. (We have a family plan.) It’ll be good to see them. We’re seeing them again on Thursday when we’ll all get together for dinner. Matthew will be with us for that too. We haven’t all been together since April, and so it’ll be nice to see everyone.

Okay, my friends. With that, I must be on my way. Busy morning ahead. Have a good day, Everyone!

7/12/26

Lots of Sewing

Good morning, my friends. It ended up being kind of a slow day here. The weather never really cleared up, and so I was deterred from going for a walk. Instead, I decided to stay at home and work with the macro function of my new camera. First, I picked the day's blueberry harvest, and then I just walked around taking close-up shots of things. I have a lot of pictures to show you today.

So...remember all the flowers on the Stargazer lily? Here's a photo I took last week.


Despite all my protective fencing, the deer still managed to eat every single flower. Oh well. At least we got to enjoy it for a little while. I made it to easy for them to get their muzzles into the fencing. Next time, I’ll make it taller.


Walking on, I noticed another flower forming on the echinacea. This is the one known as Cheyenne Spirit.


Growing in among the foliage on the echinacea, I noticed a tall weed. It had this cute little flower. Nevertheless, it was a weed, and I pulled it up and tossed it aside. Usually, when I pull a weed as I walk by, I leave it visible so all the the other weeds can see it. It’s a form of warning off, like a head on a pike.


The Dr. Seussian thing below is the spent blossom of the Edda clematis.


Ooooh…now this has me checking every day. Maybe today I’ll find it open. This is the first flower on the Bumble Rumble dahlia. It’s my favorite of the dahlias.


The Fuzzy Wuzzy dahlia is blooming its guts out.


Lookie here! This is a surprise. It’s the purple poppy I mentioned a few days ago. I was surprised to notice it growing in among the red poppies that are making a comeback this year. And, honestly, I shouldn’t have been surprised because the seeds came from Mae’s garden, and she often gets purple poppies.


What surprised me about it is that the poppies are biannuals. I wouldn’t expect a flower from it this year, but that sure looks like a bud to me. I pressed lightly on it to see if it might be a bundle of leaves. Pretty sure it’s a bud. That will give me something else in the garden to obsess over.

Out in the vegetable garden, I noticed the zinnias are budding out. I grew zinnias in the vegetable garden some years back. They were so pretty, but I didn’t ever plant them again. No reason. This year, I planted fewer vegetables and more flowers. Zinnias made the cut.


The smallest of the zucchini plants has a flower on it. That means all three zucchini plants are producing. Whoa, Nellie. The “Z” wars will be starting up soon.


The green beans are putting out runners. I’m going to have to watch these closely because I want them to climb the poles, and not get all entangled in the protective fencing. Mike wondered if we should remove the fencing. If I can train them, then it makes sense to leave it. And, honestly, maybe it doesn’t even matter if they entangle themselves in the fencing. The green beans are getting a lot of experimentation this year after the disastrous garden of 2023 when the critters bit every single vine off at ground level. It both broke and hardened my heart.


Having checked all the vegetables, I gazed out across the bee garden in search of some new color. I spied a few of these Checker Mallow.


This is a new one…I believe it’s known as a corn poppy.


This next stem hanging its head looks like it could be a poppy too. I had a hard time getting the bud in focus even after taking about half a dozen shots of it. I think the background is simply too busy, and that’s a common problem with macro photography. The camera can’t tell what to focus on. My new camera has the ability to manually focus, although I haven’t tried it yet. I’m usually relying on auto focus.


Okay and the hydrangeas are still showing off.




So that was the extent of my outside time. Back inside, it was time to get started quilting the Shop Hop 3.0 quilt. 


Choosing threads was pretty easy. I wanted something neutral both top and bottom. In the bobbin, I’ll use this OMNI tan. It’s a 40 weight thread.


It’s a close match to the backing fabric.


I had a nearly-empty bobbin already wound. I used most of that checking the tension, and then rewound the bobbin. It’s good to start with a full bobbin

On top, I’ll use this So Fine thread. 


.It’s a 50 weight thread and a good match to the background fabric on top. I believe the 40-50 weight combination was what I was using when I finished off Ruth’s Legacy. My tension was already good.


So, I’ve struggled deciding how to quilt this. I’m stuck on what to do with the front and back covers of the books. I’ve been perusing Pinterest for several days, looking at motifs that could be fillers. I kept stopping at this one:


My sections aren’t square. They are more like diamonds, but I still had ideas about how I could make it work. I spent a while trying to mark the section, but it was hard to see anything I used to mark it. Finally, I marked it with a blue chalk, and then started stitching. And this just didn’t work at all. I didn’t stitch very far, and I took it all out. Back to the drawing board.


Checking my book shelf, I was pretty sure I had the book below…and yes, I did. 


So I looked at her section on diamond shapes. And mine isn’t exactly a diamond either, but I still thought I could make the motif below work.


Mine blossoms out from the bottom of book spine in both directions. (I hope that makes sense.) Also, the “petals” overlap more than in her design. No matter. I like how this looks.


I’s always planned to do a little swirl where the pages of the book are.


It’s a little easier to see what I’ve done from the back. It kind of makes me think of a waterlily. Or maybe a winged insect with his antennae at the wrong end of his body. Or maybe he flies in reverse. Could happen.


Looking at the image above, I’m realizing I could make the petals face the other direction, starting at the top of the spine and going in the opposite direction. Then, it really would look like a winged insect. Nah.

Okay, and I’d only done one block, but I’d run out of patience for this project, and so I called it quits. I left it needle down at the second block, and I’ll make more progress today.


In the downstairs sewing room, I found Sadie ready to get to work.


My first task was to trace the last twelve of the Tiny Treasures. When these are finished, I’ll be ready to sew all 72 into a quilt.


And it’s almost impossible to see anything in that image above, so here’s the page from the book, showing what I’ll be stitching. My goal is always to do one per day.


With that finished, I was ready to get to work on the third block for Where the Cows Come Home. This block is called “Home for the Holidays.”


Sadie helped me choose my fabrics, although she’s pretty possessive about that one she’s holding.


She let me have enough of it to make the block background.


It was the change of shift, and so Smitty helped me with the applique. I think he just woke up.


The applique for these is best done on a pressing sheet. By day’s end, I’d created the structure of the barn. And that took of the rest of the time I had for sewing. I still need to add a door and windows and some other details and then I’ll fuse it all to the background. It should be ready for top-stitching today.


For dinner I tried this recipe for Miso Corn Dumpling Stir-Fry. It was pretty good! I used veggie potstickers (dumplings) because that was all that was available. I substituted broccoli for the zucchini in the original recipe, and I added a one-pound bag of medium shrimp for some protein. It was a stir-fry dish, and so it meant standing at the stove for a while, but it wasn’t hard to make. I’d do it again.


The garden needs hoeing today and I should probably water the flower pots. When those things are done, I can get back to my sewing. I’d say I’m going to take that walk today, but I know hoeing will be enough physical activity for one day. It’s important to pace oneself. A good rule of thumb is to keep a 1:10 ratio of physical activity to laziness. That’s how cats do it, and cats know everything.