The coming several days will be taken up with slow-stitching. I'm very close to finishing off the Heartland Barns piece. This morning, I finished up the section I was working on.
And now I've hooped the last of it. There are 19 leaves to stitch, and then just a little more of the barn and the road. When that is finished, I'll have a finished set of quilt blocks to be sewn into a quilt top.
Yesterday, I finished off the quilting for Paintbox Pizzazz. I was still trying to decide how to quilt the two paint box borders when I left off on yesterday's blog. I ended up doing a little swoopy half-circle thing. When I'm doing a motif like this where there are a lot of changes of direction, I find it helpful to develop a little chant for myself that I can say out loud as I go. It keeps me heading in the right direction. The one for this motif was "Up-Over-Down-Back, Up-Over-Down-Back." There were three rows to complete the quilting, and so I might switch around the Up's and Down's depending on which direction I was headed. When it was finished, it looked like this.
Here's how it looks from the back.
When both borders were complete, I laid it out on the floor for a look. It's a big quilt at 71 x 71 inches, and so it's hard to get a good picture without a quilt holder-upper on hand. You can see there at the bottom left corner where I flipped up the back over the batting to use as a spot to check tension.
Here's how it looks from the back. I'm pretty happy with this. Sometimes the quilting goes off without a hitch. The Superior Fantastico and Bottomline threads performed splendidly.
Toward the end, I had a couple of top thread breakages. The last two quilts have taught me that when I'm quilting over a seam where many blocks come together (read that: a thick seam), the needle tends to dull over time. I switched out the needle when I started getting thread breakage, and that took care of it.
While I was hard at work quilting, the kitties were enjoying catio life. Sadie likes the catwalk that extends from the ladder to Smitty's corner office shelf.
Of course Smitty favors the corner office shelf. Something had his attention. There be squirrels here, and sometimes deer.
Okay, so I had some things to do around the house, but I had plenty of time left in the day to finish off the binding. The strips were already cut. In keeping with the "paint box" theme, I chose this one with paint spatters on it.
I always add an extra 20 inches of length to any binding I make to ensure I have enough to finish the whole distance. This one scared me a little. When I reached the point where I was ready to join the two ends, I had only this much left:
When the binding was finished, this was all that was cut off.
Have you ever worked with a quilt that resisted being finished? This was one of those. When it couldn't defeat me by having a too-short binding, it took a different tack. When I had just this much left to stitch:
I ran out of bobbin thread. Of course I did.
These were minor inconveniences...first word problems, you might say...and in the end, I prevailed. That binding is sewn on and ready for hand-stitching. Ta-Da!
So I don't know how much time I'll have for sewing today, if any. I'm heading down to Salem (about an hour south) to have lunch with my friend Lenelda and her mom. After that, we'll pay a visit to a quilt shop. On the way home, I'll need to make a stop at the grocery store to pick up some last minute items for the trip the guys are taking down to Monterey. And after all that, I expect to be exhausted. We'll see.
9 comments:
Great is the art of beginning, but greater is the art of ending. ~ Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Oh yes - I've had several quilts that have resisted being finished. I have a baby quilt right now in that category. In this case it is due to the small pieces and the colors - I keep getting bored alternated with frustrated. It might become a table runner instead. LOL
Bobbins ALWAYS seem to run out at critical points, don't they:)))
I like your quilting pattern on this one--really pretty...
That ban embroidery is really turning out beautifully!
I want to get back to finishing up some of my UFO's--maybe soon..a bit at a time...hugs, Julierose
I have a quilt top in that not wanting to be finished category. I have the final border to sew on and somewhere in my measuring and cutting I cut the borders to short. Now I have to go back and add a bit to the borders….grr. I am totally not sure how that happened. I measured and remeasured and then still cut short. So much for one length of fabric. I was so close to having it finished on Saturday and had to walk away in disgust with myself.
I love your Heartland Barns piece. It has been so fun to watch you stitch it out. Inspirational. Sounds like you have a fun day planned. Enjoy.
Stitching all many, many those Autumn leaves may have been tedious, but they add the most delightful pop of colour to this design. It's coming along beautifully.
Phew, you snuck through that binding just by a hair, but you did it. I recently stitched an entire row of block together with no bobbin thread. Didn't even notice until I picked up the row, which fell apart. Geez. Some days are like that. Glad you persevered and finished well!
Since both Erick and Mae love to cook I'm surprised they aren't preparing food stuffs for the trip. .. or are they?
Bobbins have an infuriating habit of running out mere inches before the end. Same thing with hand stitching - it will insist on running short just as you get to the final two or three cross stitches.
Your paintbox quilt has turned out wonderfully!
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