Sunday, August 23, 2020

Visit my neighborhood

Welcome to my neighborhood! In 2016 Moda published a free pattern "Be My Neighbor". It's a fun and easy collection of 16 big blocks. It was so much fun to make! Now the quilting part begins. The windows will get drapes or blinds or a couple doors. The rooftops will be striped tin, scalloped tile, or shingles. The cream background will have gentle wavy breezes and clouds.

Making this quilt was a stress reliever over the past couple weeks. We closed on our new property a few days ago and are in the process of moving. I haven't even touched my sewing room yet. I shudder to think about packing those overflowing scrap bins.

Want to see a glimpse of the new place?  I'm so in love!



Linking up to #MCMQuilts (Main Crush Monday), #SlowSundayStitching, #MondayMaking and #TogetherWeQuilt (Connecting Threads hashtag), #ModaBeMyNeighbor.

Friday, August 14, 2020

Book Review and House Progress

Jocelyn at Happy Cottage Quilter inspired me to join NetGalley as a reader.

This past week I read The Dyodyne Experiment by James Doulgeris and V. Michael Santoro. It's a free read for Kindle Unlimited users on Amazon HERE.

I truly enjoyed this book! This action-packed story with a technological edge was similar to a Clive Cussler, Michael Crichton (Congo) or Steve Alton (The Meg) novel. The scientific breakthroughs involved in the storyline were believable with just enough detail to make you think, hmmm, that's alarming, brilliant, and amazing, then a few complications were dangled which kept the story moving.  Wow, what if the DaNA technology became reality in a few years?  I enjoyed the interplay between Sarah and Tim plus the secondary characters. Uncle Billy seemed a bit too much of a superman to be true, but that doesn't detract from the fun.  The book ends with an imperfect happy-ever-after (some characters have to die, after all) and a glimpse into a topic for the next book. If you like to read about chillingly potential technology and fast-paced action with some love interest (but nothing explicit), then grab this book! I look forward to reading more by authors Doulgeris and Santoro.

I received a complimentary ebook copy from the publisher, through NetGalley. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own.

On the quilting front, I finished blocks 9 through 12 this week on the Moda "Be My Neighbor" quilt (no new pic yet). The last four blocks should be finished up this weekend.  This has been such a fun quilt to make!
What are you working on this week?

Monday, August 10, 2020

New House

At the end of this week we are scheduled to close on our new house - a log cabin. Is that a quilting-themed house or what? Our realtor pulled off a last-minute sweetheart deal to make this sale happen. And she is a sweetheart, too.  So.....I am making her a house-themed quilt.  After searching the web for ideas, I settled on the Moda "Be My Neighbor" pattern.  The price is right, too (FREE ---here).  

The blocks in this pattern are huge (15.5 to 18.5 inches) and not too 'fiddly' but not too simple, either.  There are sixteen blocks in this top, some with applique and all begging for scrappy, colorful fabrics. In one week I had eight blocks done, except for stitching down the ironed-on applique, and last night I finished 1.5 more blocks (just need to cut and stitch the tree fabric). I may actually have the top done by Friday!  I am using fabrics from a couple Connecting Threads fat quarter packs (Heirloom Manor and Oh My Darling) with a cream background.
This pattern is from 2016 and it is finally the right time for me to make it. The houses are cute, cute, cute! Plus this is a pattern that begs you to have fun with the quilting process, too. I can't wait to stitch curtains in the windows, clapboard siding, bricks, roof shingles, a slight wave in the background simulating a soft breeze, and play with cursive Ls in the thin sashing.

Oh, quick question....should I change up the top left tree and make it all the same green print like the second tree? I'm leaning toward fixing that.

Linking up to #MCMQuilts (Main Crush Monday), #SlowSundayStitching, #MondayMaking and #TogetherWeQuilt (Connecting Threads hashtag), #ModaBeMyNeighbor.

Sunday, August 2, 2020

UFOs Abound

Oh boy. I fell off the wagon. I started new projects without finishing the ones hanging in the Black Hole closet.  Twenty lashes with a wet noodle (pasta, not pool noodle, please).

First, I dug through  my yarn-dyed plaids to make a dozen napkins for OUR LOG CABIN. [This week we finished negotiations on a log cabin home - really, an estate with acreage and a huge workshop for my hubby. We are beyond excited!] The napkins were a breeze to make. Kelly from myquiltinfatuation was my inspiration.  Done!

Then I decided the Jamestown Landing quilt on my bed needed matching pillow covers. So I found a stash of blue and neutral triangles leftover from making that quilt. Several Broken Dishes units later, I began contemplating a solid blue scrap to frame the units. Will need to think on that a bit. [sigh - UFO alert.]

Then I pulled out the project box for Old Tobacco Road, a free Bonnie Hunter pattern. Several years ago I had cut 108 red bricks with the thought of making this a red, white and blue patriotic quilt called Freedom Road.  I wanted stars instead of a pinwheel in the column between the red bricks. I had decided to frame the star blocks with light blue and neutral 4-patches. The holdup in my mind was deciding how to make the star blocks.  Applique or piece?  The answer was obvious once I finally thought it through.  Piece!!!!  But should I make a paper-pieced 5-pointed star or a 4-pointed Friendship star?  The Friendship star uses 1.5-inch dark blue and gold scraps and it is much simpler. After all, this is an itty-bitty 3.5 inch block. One test block surrounded by the other units quickly formed on the design wall. That's what I wanted!

I began cutting 1.5-inch strips to make 90 (NINETY!) star blocks. Seventy gold sets and twenty navy blue sets later, that got boring. I needed to sew some 4-patches and star blocks. These little star blocks are so cute! This will make a great leader-ender project. [UFO alert - although I had already counted this one as a UFO, so hey! Progress has been made.]

Okay, now for the real confession. For the past two Monday evenings with my quilting friends, I have been cutting 10-inch squares from my stash of Christmas fabrics to add to a layer cake purchased last year. I have been wanting to make a Christmas quilt using the free Anita's Arrowhead pattern. Anita published an alternative block size guide which included instructions for using 9.75-inch squares. I decided to sew a test block without trimming down my layer cake.

After cutting and sewing the pieces, the block was trimmed down to the nearest 1/2 inch which was 11.5 inches, the same as Anita's instructions for a 9.75-inch starting square size. One less cutting session. That works for me!  [UFO alert - 41 more blocks to go unless I get bored and decide to make the quilt smaller.]

On a higher note, I flew my airplane to a nearby airport so it can get outfitted with a new ADS-B transmitter so it will comply with the new rule for flying in controlled airspace. It was awesome to get back up in the air again. I brought the airplane back to its hangar home yesterday. I called a local instructor and made plans to go flying again and practice landings. Not that my landings were bad, just not as perfect as they should be. Really!