Wednesday, January 29, 2020

More stash usage: another mug rug pair

Hello, everyone.

As it says in the title, this is another mug rug pair, and it used up some more of the pink stash. (Plus greens.)


As y'all can see, this is another rendition of the same pattern as the last pair. It happened that the blocks on the pieced wall worked out to be a pink and green checkerboard.

I'm not entirely sure I like how the quilting stitches came out. Possibly another shade of purple on the heart edges and a repeat of the light green in the quilted vines?


Monday, January 20, 2020

Stash usage

Hello, everyone.

Our local sewing club meets almost every month (even in summer!) and we usually work on a little project that familiarizes us with a new product--new to me anyway!--or technique.

This month, our project is mug rugs. These cute little gizmos have been around for a while and people are always trying out new ideas for this format. (It uses up stash, after all.) This month the ones we're working on are from Ms. Jacqueline Steves's blog a few years back. The project includes both piecing and applique for the top, plus quilting the little rectangle to keep it steady while in use and laundering.

I pulled a bunch of pinks, auditioned them, and settled on an assortment.
This is the audition of the background fabric. I liked the contrast of the hot pink better than a white or off-white.

The heart shape was cut from the wonky pieced bit after the final color selections were made. A bit of interfacing/stabilizer was put in back of the piecing.


There was going to be quilting on the background fabric, so I tried out some of the more decorative stitches that came with my old Kenmore. Making a little sampler on similar fabric is always useful! Some of the cute decorative stitches just looked to hard to maneuver around the shape of the heart. The meandering bird-track at the left seemed like it was the thing for this project--at least for the quilting at the end. I went with the tried-and-true star pattern for the applique stitches.

By this time, even though it was still some weeks before our meeting, I was all pumped up and ready to go. I thought I'd try it out without the help of my sewing sisters, just to see how it went.


The heart was sewn down with a basting stitch on the background, then lavender fancy stitches were added to the edge to really secure it. The pieced rectangle on the left was sewn as a block of strips, then cut into 1.5-inch slices and the middle slice was flipped. (It probably wasn't what Ms. Steves did, but it seemed like a lot less trouble than sewing tons of 1.5-inch squares together in pairs, then joining pairs over and over. That many seams can get a little "off" on the squareness and result in a wonky block. There is enough wonky in the heart.) After the two parts of the top were joined, and of course pressed, the quilt sandwich was constructed. I quilted inside the heart in-the-ditch for stability. Then I switched to the green thread And did lines in the block "wall" and shorter lines around the heart, simulated vines on the pink.

It was fun. There is already another pair started and that one I'll wait to finish at our meeting. It's entirely possible there are tricks that my sisters know and I don't yet!




Saturday, January 18, 2020

Christmas season was busy, so...

Hello, everyone.

As the title says, Christmas season was busy. It's still busy, so crafty things were photographed then and are being posted now.

These were an idea from Pinterest.


I made a triangle template from an old file folder.

The stripey fabric was pieced from stash on hand, various greens and Christmas-y bits, some not rectangular, various widths for interest. Used spray glue to adhere the thin batting to the backing piece, then to adhere the pieced top to the batting. I think I quilted in the ditch at this point. Traced the template and sewed the outlines. Then cut apart. (Used the wavy blade on my rotary cutter.) Added ribbon loop at top, in white, and ribbon loop at bottom for trunk, in brown. Or black.

They're a good size for package tie-ons, or favors.

I kind of think if you could solve the cutting into an inside corner problem you could make really cute hearts on the same principle.

Maybe one could do it in reds and make diamond shape or lozenge shaped ornaments, too.



Monday, January 13, 2020

Walking training has begun

Hello, everyone.

As the headline says, we're now training for our next Camino walk. We've gone to Bentsen-RGV State Park twice now, and the Hike and Bike, and to Estero Llano Grande in Weslaco as well.

We saw some interesting birds at Estero this time. (One of them was completely uncooperative about posing for pictures. He was small, blue-gray, and very active. One of the other visitors guessed he might be a Blue Gnat-catcher. He was certainly eating bugs too small for us to see!)


This ibis was hunting. He wasn't having much luck, as the wind was coming up in advance of a cool front coming through.


The kite was surveying the world, and incidentally keeping most of the smaller birds in cover.


Great Blue Heron? He was hanging out with some more white ibises, and some other swimming birds, and what looked like a juvenile ibis.

Estero really has a lot of waterfowl to look at. Even when the alligators aren't holding court, there is a lot to see.


Saturday, January 4, 2020

Beading bits n bobs

Hello, everyone.

There was a lot going on in December. Who has time to shop?

A gift for a young lady, made of beads:


The bracelet is child-sized. The necklace is about 16" long. I think the colors will work for: Christmas season, Valentines season, Fourth of July season...and also if the child lives in a school district where the local school colors are some form of red and white. Also with that length she can wear the necklace for a while.

The beads are red glass rounds, white perle rounds, and crackle glass clear rounds. All from, stash on hand!



Friday, January 3, 2020

Walking at Bentsen in November

Hello, everyone.

As you all realize, life went on while the series on Israel was being posted. I propose to pick up some of those bits in the next several posts.

We went walking in Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park after we returned. It was a glorious day for wildlife viewing!


One of the flock of turkeys that were attending the bird feeder next to the road through the park. This is the first time we had ever seen turkeys there. The flock must have been around 8 in number.


And at the blind there were a mother and a baby and two adult male javelina. (One may have been the father. He ran the other one off with much loud clacking of teeth.) They socialized, drank water from the pond, and generally hung around for a while.