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Friday, August 31, 2018

My whimsy heart.


I know I just updated a couple days ago, but I'm excited to be stitching again!
I love my tiny stitches 😊.
I left my needle in to help show the size of the stitches.
A perfect 1/4" seam allowance isn't necessary because the stitching line is marked exactly where the stitches go.

Although, after marking my lines, I do usually trim a 1/4" allowance with a rotary cutter and ruler.  Having a consistent seam allowance helps to line up the pieces.
All that said, I gotta tell you a memory:
 I used to go to a hand piecing group many years ago.  There were 4 or 5 of us regularly there.  We all marked the seam allowance like I did in the pictures above, except one lady.  I don't remember her name, I wish I could.  
She never marked her fabric at all!  She cut the pieces accurately with the 1/4" seam allowance and then proceeded straight to stitching.  I asked how she was sure she was stitching on the 1/4".
She shrugged and handed me the piece she had just finished stitching together and confidently said, "measure it."
😄 I really did have my doubts. So I grabbed my ruler and measured her work... and a few more pieces she had already put together....
All were perfect 1/4" seams!! ...without the time to mark them!

I was super impressed.
I wanted to be a stitcher like that! 
I do want to say, even though I don't remember her name, I can still see her face, and she has a special stitcher's place in my heart!

That was over twenty years ago!
I never managed to develop that skill. ...as you see I'm still marking my pieces...  
 At the time, I was still struggling to keep the front and back seam lines matched up. I often had to reload stitches onto the needle because the bottom fabric would migrate.  It was very frustrating.
Continuing with the marking method is probably due to the certainty of exact seams... (K, that really translates to ~ my personal sense of stitching perfection... I'm "ok" with that!) 

... I am proud of my stitching.  Heres the top side.  😊.   I think the stitches are nearly invisible.  I know this piecing is going to hold up over time.  Add quilting and good maintenance care, this quilt has great potential to be around for a long, long time!

(And happily, I can report that at least I don't have migrating fabric issues anymore 🤗.)

I use the same needles for piecing that I use for quilting.  Some might feel they're a little too short.  But for me it works. I can load about 1.5 inches of fabric before drawing the thread through.  Because all my needles are the same, I don't have to go searching through my box for the right size.
And look at those "y" seams 🤗.

Ahh yes, this is just what my whimsy piecing heart needed.

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Small progress is still progress.

I think this is going to be just a short blog update.
I'm not sure how much to share.  I'm a bit at odds with myself, a bit discontented, a bit lackadaisical.  The time spent in my sewing room hasn't produced the usual joy in a while.
But sitting in the evenings with idle hands isn't an option for me. I took a corner in the living room and set up shop. 
It became a perfect opportunity to work on the piles of scraps that are beginning to over take my sewing room. I blogged about how I organize scraps a while ago,  "scrap system or brink of insanity", so I won't go into great detail here.

It's slow work. I concentrated on marking pieces for my elongated hexagon quilt I started in March while at the Mountain Quiltfest in Pigeon Forge.  The scraps have to be at least 3.5" wide and 5.5" long.  Most of my scraps are smaller but this cutting session produced 30 elongated hexagons.  I was pleased.

Next sizes were 2.5" squares. 
And I've added sizes 2.5" x 1.5" and 1.5"x 2" rectangles... I'm not sure why except that I couldn't bear throwing that precious half inch of fabric away.  (*Sigh* this may be a sickness, but I don't think it's hurting anyone. 😋)
Of course, if 1.5" squares could be squeezed out, those were trimmed as well.
And smallest pieces are the 1" squares that are intended for the tiny star points I also mentioned in my scrap system.

After a couple days of cutting and trimming I had several piles that made me feel some accomplishment:
 30 elongated hexagons
 100+  2.5" squares
100+  1.5" squares
1.5"x2.5"
1.5"x2"
And 1" squares
Small progress is still progress!

That was a couple weeks ago. I still haven't felt very compelled to sit at the sewing machine too long.  And since I have new elongated hexagons ready, I've started adding them to my piece...
And THIS is what I love most.
Sweet and simple. 
Needle and thread.
Piece by piece.
One tiny stitch at a time,
 I am sewing my contentment back together.
Small progress is still progress.