I’m pretty disappointed that not one person played along with my last post. Doesn’t anyone like to play “Wheel of Fortune?” Well anyway, here is the completed quilt. I think this saying is one of the funniest and most factual sayings I’ve come across. So that probably says a lot about me, and it’s actually true. I hate housework and when you do things you don’t like you look ugly. Plus, I tend to do housework in the mornings before I have taken a shower, and I’m usually still in my sweats. My hair is not combed and I, of course, have no makeup on. So there you have it.
Monthly Archives: March 2012
Mystery Wall Hanging
I decided that since I finished one project I should start a new one. I attend a quilting class on Friday mornings and our project a couple of months ago was to make a word quilt. But I couldn’t decide on what I wanted my word quilt to say until today. So here it is in it’s beginning stages. I have five letters done and in the postion where they will be. If you like Wheel of Fortune this is your opportunity to play along with me. I’ll be Vanna and you give me the next letter. I’ll tell you if you’re right or wrong. The winner will get a word postcard mailed from me to you.
Unfinished Projects
All quilters, at least 99.99% that I have met so far, have this burning desire to start a new project before she, or he, completes the current one. Sometimes we just get bored. Some of us are ADHD and jump from one project to another, sometimes working on three or four all in the same day. Sounds crazy eh? Yeah, I think we are. So I started this Log Cabin block about three years ago. I wanted to do a black, white, and red quilt and I wanted to do this pattern. So I started it, made six blocks and then I went on to another project. I have no idea what it was. These blocks were buried somewhere in my studio, only to be unearthed several times. Each time I saw them I wanted to finish the project, but (sigh) it didn’t happen. So here comes 2012, and I tell myself to finish some projects already.
Ok, so I find the log cabin blocks and decide I didn’t really want to make any more blocks, but I would like to make a wall quilt, or a table topper to sell at the upcoming craft fair. So the first block shown here is the actual block called log cabin. The traditional Log Cabin block consists of a center square surrounded by light and dark strips. To enhance the theory of the block representing a log cabin, quilters were told that the center square – usually constructed with a red fabric – represented the warmth of the hearth. The strips surrounding the fire are the logs of a log cabin house; light logs represent the light coming through the window and the dark logs, the dark recesses of the room.
This is my arrangement with three borders to finish off. Now I have to decide how to quilt it. Any suggestions out there?
More Postcards
So I thought I’d share some more postcards with you today.
The first two are leaves, which I suppose you knew. I sent them to some wonderful ladies in my PostmardArt group to represent the letter “L”. Cute huh? The third one is my interpretation of the Flower Fields in Carlsbad with the rows and rows of ranancoulas flowers. It is a sight to behold.
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Ponies for Angie
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Last month I took a really fun class with Terry Waldron http://www.terrywaldron.com. I am a member of Canyon Quilt Quild and we have these great classes six times a year, always someone different and always a different technique. Well, Terry taught us to do a landscape wall quilt and I had a blast. If you saw my blog yesterday about the landscape fabric postcards then you now know where I got my inspiration.
So this quilt started with the blue skies, of course. That’s like one of the most important elements of a landscape. But not always I guess. Anyways, I added the mountain ranges and at first I had this narly old tree in the foreground. I love old trees and really liked this one, but I wanted horses running in the background and couldn’t make it work with both. So, against my will I chopped down the tree, put in a fence and added two ponies running around behind the fence.
Since Angie, my daughter-in-law, was turning 30 tomorrow, and she loves horses, and works with them and has been riding and training horses for more than half her life, I decided to give it her for her birthday. I think she likes it.
Teaching Fabric Postcard Class
I taught seven incredible ladies last Saturday how to make a mailable fabric postcard. I kept it simple this time by showing them how to make a landscape. We started with a beautiful blue sky, followed by rugged mountain ranges. A couple of ladies took it further by adding waterfalls cascading off one of the mountain ranges, and others added flowers in the foreground. We had a really great day of laughter and learning.








