Hello! Even though our area has opened for business, we are sticking close to home and being safe. We've eaten out only twice - and that's okay because it's cheaper and healthier. I hope you are staying safe, too!
On the quilting front, I started a new project with the intent of making a wheelchair quilt for my mother. The resulting flimsy is a bit too wide for that, so that means I will have to make another new quilt, doesn't it? This new one uses the Basket of Chips pattern from Quilters Cache and is made from fabric in my stash. No new fabric was purchased for this quilt! I still have to make the half-square triangle border, requiring 88 scrappy triangles. I had cut so many for the blocks that I already had 80 triangles left over. Now I just need to cut some neutral fabric and sew the pieces together.
My daughter thinks the basket blocks look like bowls of ice cream with rainbow sprinkles. So the quilt name has become Ice Cream Parfait.
As for all those Works-In-Progress waiting for attention, none have reached the finish line yet. But they are closer!
1. New fabric has arrived for a new inner border and wider outer border for my first quilt which has languished for twenty years as a flimsy due to its currently pitiful borders. I was never inspired to quilt it. Now there is hope it will eventually be finished!
2. The center of Double Delight is done and waiting for me to decide on the border. I'm considering a pieced border to highlight the piecing. After all, I spent a lot of time piecing the blocks. A plain border would be faster, but just doesn't make the quilt shine.
3. Lady of the Lake has more blocks added to the pile. I'm sewing these as leader-enders. Sixty-two more blocks to go.
4. The little Greek Cross blocks are continuing to pile up. Eventually they will become a flimsy called Bricolage. That word means construction or creation from a diverse range of available things. It's a great name for a scrappy quilt!
5. Border fabric has been ordered for Awesome Land. Yes, I know it's supposed to be a scrappy quilt, but I just didn't have enough of the right fabrics stashed.
6. New fabric is ready for cutting zig-zag setting triangles for finishing another old WIP started in 2013. This one has had several names - Mother Goose, 1860's Revival, Double Cross. Today I am figuring out how to more effectively cut up the 3-1/2 yards of the dusty blue print for the setting.
Tonight is my weekly "bee" with quilting friends. I will be cutting those triangles for #1 and possibly the fabric for #6. Or maybe I will pick through my pink scraps (PINK is the RSC color for June) and cut standard sized strips for future projects.
What is your biggest stumbling block when working on a quilt? For me, it is the quilting plan. I have a quilt that is half quilted but gathering dust. I didn't have a solid plan, just winged it in the first few blocks. It's not working and I can't bring myself to just power through and finish. It's blocking me from quilting several other flimsys awaiting their turn on the mid-arm. Maybe I should bring it to the bee and pick out the stitches. Lesson learned. Sketch out a plan and, if it is complex, test it out before starting on the quilt. I'm not a professional quilter, so a simple design is better for my skill level.
On the flying front, last weekend my husband and I washed the airplane. I always forget how much surface area there is, especially the underside which usually has smeared oil (my airplane is an antique, so it spits a bit of oil). She is shiny now - or at least WAS a week ago. That Saharan dust storm may have covered her again with dust. Next time we will drape her with old bed sheets - or go flying more often!