10/29/25

Ready for Binding

Good morning, my friends. I'm writing fast again this morning. Poor Smitty has to go to the vet. It's his annual check-up, and he's due for some vaccines. We'll load him up in a little while. He won't be a happy camper. I've also noticed he's kind of lethargic on a day when he has his vaccines. Poor guy. Except for being alive, he did nothing to deserve such harsh treatment.

Before heading out to the grocery store yesterday, I took the first stitches on July's block for A Year in the Garden. My fellow shoppers fare better when I do a little slow-stitching first.


It was a good day of sewing yesterday. It was after lunch time when I was able to make my way to the quilting machine, and so I didn't get as much done as I'd hoped. Still, I have one quilt ready for hand-stitching the binding, and that's probably how I'll spend a good part of my afternoon.

There were the two outer borders to quilt. I spent some time perusing Pinterest, but ended up using my usual go-to motif. This is a motif Lori Kennedy calls "Paperclip." Sometimes I'll leave a narrow border unquilted. When it's wider than one inch, as this one is, I feel as if it needs something there. The paperclip motif is an easy one for me to do, and it works well in a narrow border like this one. 


I had an idea how I wanted to do the outer border. I had in mind to make little houses. When I tried drawing them out myself, they ended up looking like upward-pointing arrows. So, I referred to this book, also by Lori Kennedy.


Within its pages, I found exactly what I was looking for. I like her way of showing each step of quilting a motif. It's good for people like me who can't draw worth beans. This is one of the images from her book.


I didn't end up going over hill and dale like it shows above. Mine were quilted straight across, although I did make my houses different sizes. Also, I added in a tree here and there. Here's how that looks.


As usual, it's easier to see it from the back.


In a little over an hour, it was finished.


Then, I took it downstairs and squared it up for binding.


Around a half-hour later, it was ready for hand-stitching.


So, I didn't make any more progress on Autumn's Harvest Pumpkin, but I'm fairly certain I'll have time for that today.


Okay, so my work is cut out for me. I'll have a lot of hand-sewing on today's agenda, and I'm hoping to get the pumpkin to binding stage before the day is over. Just now, I'm going to go round up the cat for his torture treatment. Hopefully, this can happen with no bloodshed. Wish us luck.

6 comments:

dgs said...

I'm enjoying my 2nd cup of coffee and delighted I come across your current post. Usually, I'm reading a prior post with my coffee. Maybe now, I'll officially be back on track. I hope all goes well for Smitty (and for you) with the Vet appointment today. Maybe Smitty can have a good cuddle on one of your beautiful quilts when he returns. I will also send positive thoughts that he gets some sunshine coming thru a window. Poor guy. But always good for all of us to stay current with our checkups.

Cathy said...

Oh, I have that book of Lori’s and had forgotten about it! Your motif is a cute version of hers, which I like too. A friend and I are getting ready to host a house-themed QAL along with the RSC for next year, so that motif will almost certainly come in handy! Looking forward to seeing your Sashiko reveal too!

Tracy said...

I started following your blog when you started making the Tiny Houses quilt. I had planned on making it too. I still have all the patterns saved and in a "someday" folder. For now I will have to settle for admiring yours, you've done a wonderful job.

piecefulwendy said...

Hope it all went well with Smitty. Fun to see that quilt ready for binding!

karen said...

Atten fellow shoppers.....
Do your fellow shoppers shop there like they do here :
Place cart directly in middle of isle (so you cannot pass by either side), then spend 12 minutes gazing at some unattainable object(totally ignoring the rest of the world), then look at you with dagger eyes and act like you should feel guilty about shopping in THEIR store.
At no time do they excuse or say sorry.
Grrrrr!

Kate said...

For some reason it took me forever to realize that center motif in your A Year in the Garden block was a bird. I was thinking it looked like a weird tulip! The quilting turned out nicely, those houses look great. I'd never guess you can't draw because your quilting always looks so good.