Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Aurora Borealis

As promised, here is “Aurora Borealis: North Wind of the Dawn.”

This quilt is available for purchase on my Etsy site.  Click here to visit.

View of the pebbling from the back…

DSC04782

DSC04777

The quilt measures 25 inches square and is made of 100 percent cotton, both hand dyed and batik.

*Note:  This post is scheduled to “go live automatically” during my quilt guild meeting when all of our challenge quilts are revealed.  I will return at a later time and provide you with a link to see the quilts that others have made!

Grinch for a minute

It's always good to be positive, upbeat, cheerful, happy, smiling, and supportive of others.  It IS, right?
But what if someone gave you one minute where you could be the exact opposite?   Just for ONE MINUTE?

I'm giving you permission.  Take a few seconds to think... close your eyes, imagine yourself as a green quilting Grinch.  What ONE THING in the  world of quilting do you just despise?  Now, don't pick on any particular individual or company.  Let's not be hurtful here... But unleash your inner Grinch and leave a comment about what one thing you despise about quilting, and then be done with it.  Release it into the atmosphere, never to be thought of again. 

I'll go first.  

I don't like some of the newer colors in fabrics; particularly the lime green, teal blue, bright yellows and reds.  They nauseate me, especially when mixed together.  
"Oh, the Who-manity."    But then,    "One man's toxic sludge is another man's potpourri."

There.  I feel better.
Your turn.

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Decisions, decisions...

I finished my Spools quilt... you can see it in a few days.  I really like how it turned out, and I even remembered to put a label on it.  Aren't you proud of me?

So I'm now looking at my list of projects and prioritizing.  I've done really well on sticking to my list, but I'm feeling a little bit iffy right now.  Here is what I have on the list:
  • Hand Quilt the "Yes We Can, Jane" quilt - needs to be prepared for quilting in the hoop - backing ironed, sandwich put together, stretched, basted/pinned - this is my first priority, then I can hand quilt at will during the cold winter months!
  • Barn Owl quilt - the top is about 1/2 finished, then it needs quilted (machine)
  • Scrappy Baskets - This is a full-size bed quilt for me, myself and I
  • Redwork Owls - Needs a few hours put into it before I hand quilt it... the few hours are to repair a measurement boo-boo I made.  You know how that goes!
  • Christmas Siggie Quilt from my DJ online group - I think I'm way too late to get anything done with this for this Christmas, don't you?
  • Add to list:  Double Irish Chain queen-size bed quilt for our bed to replace worn and and tattered quilt that is there now.  It should go together quickly, I have all the fabrics, and will machine quilt this for quick use
On top of all of this, I have committed to undertake a large project which will take up considerable time over the next 18 months - 2 years.  That's my best guess...

What to do?  What to do?  How do YOU make your decisions like this?
                                       

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Three Rivers, Michigan

A couple of weeks ago I mentioned that I had put a gadget on my blog that shows where my visitors come from.  It’s fun to see people visiting from all over the world!   There has been someone regularly visiting from a place called “Three Rivers, Michigan.”  I had never heard of that location, so looked it up on the map.  It’s 151 miles away from me to the southwest.
I’ve noticed since mentioning that fact that the person seems to be on the same time schedule as me.  When I’m on, that person also seems to be on the website.  Today I realized that the person from Three Rivers, Michigan is none other than….
ME.
We have high speed Internet through Comcast.  It comes to us from… Three Rivers, Michigan. Michigan
On the map above, I am at point A to the north.   Three Rivers is at point B to the south. 
151 miles away.
Things are not always as they seem. Good grief!

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Ready to start hand quilting

Some time ago I wrote a post about a quilt that a group of quilters from around the world has been working on for President Obama.  I ordered the backing fabric for it today, and after Thanksgiving will start to hand quilt it. 

Here’s the backing fabric I chose for it:

ObamaBackingI purchased the fabric from eQuilter.com:

Cream, Champagne, Sand
This vibrant blender is rich with textural qualities and done using a monochromatic palette that is sure to add just the right touch of visual interest to the back and borders of your latest project. Please prewash and allow for up to 7% shrinkage. 108" wide quilt backing, tonal blender from the 'Quilter's Blenders' collection.

 

finishedQuilt

Kathy Timmons designed the layout and sewed our blocks together with a beautiful setting that incorporated a stunning stripe by Marcus Fabrics called “Indigo, Pewter and Honey” from Judie Rothermel.  I tried my best to find some of the fabric from that line to use on the back, but no luck.  So this is a good neutral that will work with it.  The stripe has a bit of a gold color in it, and with our cream background will look quite nice.  The binding that Kathy (so nicely) prepared for us is in the blue stripe as well, so I think it will be perfect!

I will keep the members of the Yes We Can, Jane group informed of the quilting progress on my blog so that they – and all my readers – can see how it goes, one block at a time.  Keep coming back to this blog to see when your block/s are finished being quilted. 

I am so excited about this, and I hope you are as well!

Every Square Inch

I spent most of the day yesterday at Great Lakes Crossing shopping with a new friend.  I do believe we covered just about every square inch of the mall, which is huge!  I desperately needed clothes since my weight loss, she needed lots of warm clothes for winter in Michigan (since moving here from a warmer climate recently).  Our tastes in styles and colors match to a T, and shopping was a real pleasure for me.

I previously thought I was the only girl in the world who hated shopping.  I really disliked walking through crowds carrying a big, heavy purse and wearing a coat in a hot mall.  Nothing ever fit, I wanted everything to be big enough and styled to hide parts I didn’t want seen.  Now, finally, I can admit to the Sisterhood:

I get it!

Apologies to my hubby for making a big dent in our checkbook.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

A Hand Quilting Blog is Born!


Celebrate Hand Quilting is a brand  new blog for hand quilters, and I’m excited to share it with you! 
If you are
  1. a hand quilter, and
  2. if you have added a link on this site to a hand quilted item that you have made, AND
  3. if you have put the Celebrate Hand Quilting button on your blog, you are invited to be a part of the new site!
If you would like to participate by writing some blog articles about your own hand quilting, please send me an email at caron mosey at gmail dot com with the following information:
  • Your first and last name
  • Where you’re from(City, State, Country…)
  • Your email address
  • Your blog address
When I get your email, I will write you back shortly with details about how to proceed.  But you can start getting ready right away!
Our first topic, which will run through the end of November, will be about hand quilting tools, meaning thimbles, gadgets, scissors, etc.  Please go visit the blog at http://celebratehandquilting.blogspot.com/ and look around.
Then put your thinking cap on and get creative!

Celebrating Hand Quilt in a Big Way

CelebrateHandQuilting

 

If you recognize this button, you are probably a hand quilter:

I have had so many quilters email me and mention having a blog JUST FOR US that many quilters can actively participate in.  A blog where we can share what we’re working on, talk about tips, techniques, tools, and how we work.  A blog where hand quilters feel quite at home and understand our need to DO IT BY HAND.

I hear you, and I totally agree!

Within the next few days, I will be posting a link to a brand new blog that will do just that.  But I can’t do another blog all by myself.  So (1) if you’re a hand quilter, and (2) if you have added a link on this site to a hand quilted item that you have made, AND (3) if you have put the button above on your blog, you are invited to be a part of the new site!

You can start preparing now for your first article.  Yes, you can add articles to the new hand quilting blog!  Our first series of articles will be sharing about needles and thimbles.  So get ready… take a few pictures of the needles and thimbles you use the most, write something that talks about why you use what you do, and when you hear back from me, I will tell you how to put your article on our brand new blog!

I think this will be a lot of fun, and I look forward to seeing how it progresses. 

I hope you do, too!

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Tweeting About Hand Quilting

Are you a hand quilter?  Do you tweet? 

Include the hashtag   #handquilting 
when you post about hand quilting on Twitter!  That way we can search for you via Twitter and find your hand quilting tweets!

                                       

For New Quilters (and even "Oldsters")

Over the last few weeks, I've taken some time here and there to update my quilting resume (if that's what you call it).  It's a list of publications I have either written or been included in, exhibits I have participated in, shows I have served as a judge for, where I have taught, etc.  Do you know how difficult that is to do many, many years after the fact?  Oh, I've kept some notes through the years, but it is really pitiful what I don't have a record of.  But I know this:

It's never to late to start keeping track!

Find a method of taking notes and adding pictures that works for you.  You might want to keep track electronically by storing information on your computer (also, please save to a cloud or a flash drive as a backup).  Create a separate folder on your computer that includes a list of dates, events, shows, etc.  Tell what happened when, and if you entered a contest, tell what you won.  Be very specific!  If you don't want to do this electronically, get yourself a good notebook that you can add to through the years, and dedicate it to your quilt record keeping. 

Treat each of your quilts as if it were a newborn infant.  Keep a "baby book" on every single one.  Include photos of the quilt, date of birth, size, dimensions, fabric lines if you know them, fabric content, batting, backing, and any pertinent details you'll want to remember 40 years from now.  Whenever you show your quilt, write it down.  When you exhibit for a juried event, write it down.  You can write this journal-style, or you can keep a more formal list.  It's up to you, but just please, DO IT.  It should be noted that there are specific software programs that will help you do this, and I've heard some are better than others.  If you have a good word processing program, that will also do the trick (Microsoft Word, Publisher, etc.).

If you are a quilter who takes classes or attends lectures (which I am hoping you will all do), keep a list of those as well.  Take good notes, jot down the date and highlight the most important tricks you walked away with. If you take a lot of classes, it can be difficult to remember who taught you which technique.

Years down the road, you will be SO glad you took the time to keep track of all these little details.  Trust me, I know!  Your carefully kept records will help you see your progress as a quilter, and it is amazing as you look back on your earlier work and see how much your tastes have changed!

At the bottom of this page there is a link to my quilting resume so you can see the pathetic list that I have pulled together.  Please keep your own quilting resume, and update it frequently. Perhaps a good rule of thumb to help you remember is each time you make a new quilt label for a finished project, you make sure your records for that quilt are wrapped up. You will be thankful that you did, and so will your children, and their children, and on and on.

What are you waiting for?

Monday, November 14, 2011

Aurora Borealis: A Teaser!

Awhile ago, I gave you a sneak peak of the challenge quilt I was making for the Evening Star Quilters guild that meets in Davison, Michigan.  But I wasn’t very nice, and what you saw was kind of blurry.  So here’s an UPDATED peek for you:

Yes, I know, it looks kind of strange.  You didn’t think I’d show you the entire quilt yet, did you?  We can’t reveal our quilts until November 30th, so you’ll just have to wait a little longer.  But I know you’re my friends, so I hated keeping you in the dark like that!  This quilt measures exactly 25 x 25 inches square.  No more, no less.  That was a requirement.  It has binding on it (required), but I still need to create the label (also required).  The picture you see shows the quilt on my carpet; that isn’t tan fabric, folks!

Now, my hand quilting friends need to understand something.  I have a mid-arm Pfaff Hobby Grand Quilter, which allows me to machine quilt when I need to.  I’m not very good at it, and a good long-arm quilter will look at this little quilt and say “YUCK!”   But that’s ok, because this is just a fun quilt and not intended to be an heirloom.  It’s a playful quilt! 

Just to remind you, everyone in the guild that wanted to participate was given one fat quarter of this fabric:

2011 Challenge 001

 

We were allowed to use ONE other fabric on the front to go with it.  Nobody said how large the piece of fabric had to be, or what we could DO with it… such as applying dye, bleach, etc.  So I got kind of crafty and played around with some fabric I bought from my favorite “let’s play with dye” person, Vicki Welch.  Vicki has some great gradations, and one of them was just about perfect for what I needed.  But I did do a little playing with it to get it to look just right.  I don’t think she’ll mind!

So wait about two weeks and I’ll show you the entire front of the quilt. 

Really!  I’m not kidding!

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Get your “Eggface” on!

My regular readers know that on October 18, 2010 I had bariatric surgery to  help me lose weight.  I am now 124 pounds smaller than I was then, and I feel absolutely fantastic!  Compare the two pictures below:

July10.2010   November2011

One of my favorite websites that is food and surgery related is The World According to Eggface. Whether you have had surgery or are planning on having it in the future, her site has some great recipes for healthy food.  Check it out by clicking on her logo below!

 

Did you guess right? Quilting, knit and crochet vocabulary

Did you figure it out?  One term in each list does not belong. Did you spot it?


Quilting List


DSC02807

fabric thread applique' stitching
rocking stitch piecing baste hook
batting thimble sandwich long arm
hoop




Knit and Crochet List

knitting


yarn afghan garter stitch counters
circular needle gauge bind off bias
slipped stitch purl chain point protectors
loom

Friday, November 11, 2011

Quilting, crocheting and knitting

Let's play preschool ala Sesame Street, to the tune of "One of these things is not like the others?"

Here are the lyrics, in case you forgot them:

One of these things is not like the others,
 
One of these things just doesn't belong,
 
Can you tell which thing is not like the others
 
By the time I finish my song?


Quilting List
fabric
thread
applique'
stitching
rocking stitch
piecing
baste
hook
batting
thimble
sandwich
longarm
hoop

Knit and Crochet List
yarn
afghan
garter stitch
counters
circular needle
gauge
bind off
bias
slipped stitch
purl
chain
point protectors
loom


One term in each list does not belong.  Can you spot it?

NOTE:  please don't reveal the answers in the comments area... that will spoil it for the others who want to play!  I'll announce the correct answers on Sunday.

knitting a quilt????? NO!

By  Patrick D. Rosso, Town Correspondent
Uphams Corner's Strand Theatre will celebrate its 93rd birthday Friday.
To celebrate the occasion, the theater will be opening its doors to the public and showing off two brand new exhibits.
There will be a display of 93 quilts knitted by the New England Quilting Guild, along with a showing of Phyllis Toben Bancroft's award winning film "Burned".
Along with the short film and quilts, there will also be a color guard on hand to salute Veterans Day, as well as performers from the Boston Dance Companyamong other community groups performing on the theater's community stage
Admission to the event is free and the celebration starts at 4 p.m. Nov. 11.
More information about the event and the theater can be found on the Strand'swebsite.
Email Patrick D. Rosso, patrick.d.rosso@gmail.com. Follow him @PDRosso, or friend him on Facebook.
-------------------
Note to Mr. Posso,
Quilts are not KNITTED!  Knitting is done with yarn.  Quilts are made out of fabric, sewn together and either hand or machine quilted.  Please see the link below for examples of what quilts are.  I'm sure the New England Quilting Guild will be in contact with you!
Caron Mosey, Ed.S. and Hand Quilter
         Michigan Quilts!:   http://blog.caronmosey.com/

                                       
Edited 10:23 11-11-11  Thanks to Mr. Rosso for his quick fix of this boo-boo after I emailed him!

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

It’s November… Let’s Think Flowers!

What are your favorite flowers?  Every year about this time I think, “I should plant some tulip and daffodil bulbs out back.”  And every year… I don’t.  Why is that?

Caron Lee Flower ShopI love flowers.  My dad was a florist, so I was raised in the flower shop. (See my name on the building?) In fact, for the first six years of my life, we also lived there!  The shop was in one part of the building, we were in the other… and my bedroom was right over the top of the workroom.  My first “official” job was around age four, when dad would give me a small, badly worn broom, and I would sweep for him.  I can still remember all the stem clippings, rose leaves, thorns and what have you all piled up on the square linoleum tiles.

Light_Pink_Carnation_Flower_300I don’t know why, but my favorite flowers are carnations.  Pink.  I think it has a lot to do with the scent.  They were the first flower dad would let me work with.  He taught me so carefully how to cut the stem on a slant with a sharp knife so they would take up water better.  Funny how I can remember that like it was yesterday!  daisy

I also like daisies.  There are so many different varieties to choose from! daisy-flower

Here I sit, November 9th, still no bulbs purchased to plant.  The wind is howling outside, somebody else’s trash can has blown into my yard, and I’m thinking about flowers. It’s even supposed to snow this week!  YIKES!

What is YOUR favorite flower?

Monday, November 7, 2011

What do you do…

when you really want to post something every day, but don’t have anything new to show?

Pillow

You post something old. 

Don't you love summer flowers? Now that autumn is here in the United States (and winter is not far behind, you can bring them inside with this tan and blue pillow with yellow accents! The cross stitched flowers sing around the center of the pillow; the quilted edging in three colors ties in all the flowers and makes them jump alive in your home!
The pillow has been designed with your needs in mind. The polyester pillow form pops out easily with a velcro fastener on the back. Dry cleaning is suggested for the 16 inch square pillow top.

 

 

il_570xN.31092163

 

 

This pillow is available for purchase and would make a GREAT Christmas gift for someone on your list! 

Sunday, November 6, 2011

Polka Pots for Samantha

As promised, pictures of the finished quilt:

PolkaPotsFinished

The quilt I made for granddaughter Samantha for Christmas 2011 is now complete:

Polka Pots

by Caron Mosey

Longarm quilted by Lisa Burmann of Burmann Studios

with Hobbs 80/20 batting

pinwheel

Each block has a different polka dot fabric, as Samantha loves polka dots (that she calls polka POTS).  Her bedroom is lavender and pink, a very girly room.  Thanks to my friend Lisa for the perfect quilting!

Friday, November 4, 2011

A Stitch Here, a Binding Mishap There

Before I forget to mention this, please take a waltz over to Pippa’s blog at Welsh Quilts to see the bright yellow, whole-cloth and hand quilted masterpiece that she recently posted!   OMG, it is stunning!   Can you imagine the time it took to mark that quilt for stitching?  Amazing!

Yesterday I put the binding on Samantha’s “Pinwheel Polka Pots” quilt.  Yesterday I posted a link to a binding tutorial and said I always hand stitch the binding to the back.  Well, I got to thinking about it, and thought this might be the perfect quilt to have a machine-sewn binding, so I gave it a try.  Major FAIL!  I sewed the binding to the front of the quilt as usual.   Then I turned it around to the back, overlapped a smidge so that I could stitch in the ditch from the front to “grab” it, and things were whizzing along just fine.   And then… FAILURE.  I had gaps where the machine didn’t catch the binding on the back.

Back to the drawing board. 

You should know I have been known to ignore rules.  Here’s what I did to correct my problem.  I inserted the pins differently than what was shown in the tutorial.  Instead of putting the pins parallel running in the same direction as the binding, I put mine perpendicular to the binding.  I had been pulling out the pins as I came to them when they were parallel, and that allowed the binding to shift as I sewed.

This way with the pins perpendicular, I could keep the pins in place, and yes, I sewed right over them. 

I warned you that I break rules!

My old Bernina was quite content to sew over the pins this way, and the binding turned out fine.

Did you notice that I didn’t say “the binding turned out great?”  That’s because I really prefer the look of a hand-stitched binding on the back.  I don’t like the machine stitching showing.  So I will limit my use of this method to quilts that will be lovingly used, for machine quilted pieces that will receive a lot of washing, etc.  I won’t use this on my hand quilted quilts.

So Polka Pots is now finished, except for the label, a toss in the washer and then in the dryer.  Stay tuned!

Thursday, November 3, 2011

It’s a Pineapple Quilt Day!

pineappleIf you’re  a hand quilter, you definitely need to go over to Tim’s blog and see his brand new Pineapple quilt!  The amount of hand quilting on it is astounding, and he has only worked on it since June. 

There’s a great binding tutorial on Stitched in Color that you also might want to check out.  It’s the method I use, except that I don’t zigzag the binding at the end.  I always sew the back side of the binding by hand.  But this method is great for doing miters.

If you are a regular reader of Michigan Quilts! you know that I have a day job that has nothing to do with fabric.  I took some time off this week for the birth of my grandson, Fischer.  Tuesday and Wednesday, I spent time at the hospital getting to know him, cuddling, holding, and all the wonderfulness that comes with a new baby.  This morning, I watched The Quilt Show’s episode with quilt artist and author Gyleen Fitzgerald, which was delightful! Gyleen showed us how she makes pieced pineapple quilts, and shows a great ruler for creating them.  I need to get her ruler, as that is one quilt I’ve thought about making. 

Towards the end of the show, Gyleenleslie_caron talked about how she got her name, which was very interesting and made me think about names.  I was adopted at four months old, and my mother loved the actress Leslie Caron, so she picked the name Caron as my first name.  Her best life-long friend, Alma Zivic, had a little girl whose middle name was Lee, so I was given the same middle name, leaving me as Caron Lee.

When I started high school, every student shared a locker with another person.  I imagine that the office staff had a fun time partnering people up for lockers, as I was assigned to a locker with a girl who was one year ahead of me.  Her name?  Caron Lee!  We are friends on Facebook, and continue to tease each other about our names to this day. 

sweetbabyMy grandson, Fischer also has a unique middle name.  Fischer Hayes Mosey takes his middle name from his Great Grandfather, Robert Hayes Covert.  Not only is it my father's middle name, but it is also my brother's, my nephew Brendan's, and my grandpa Covert's middle name.  The name goes back in the family as a last name to the late 1700's, as Hayes was my Grandpa Covert’s grandmother’s last name.The name may go back farther, but that’s as far as we’ve been able to trace it.  It's such a distinguished name: Fischer Hayes Mosey. I think he'll be a president, CEO, or rocket scientist someday!

How did you get YOUR name?

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Welcome, New Friends!

I am really enjoying visiting all the great links that you have added to the

Hand Quilting list!

I am adding your blogs to the list of blogs I follow in Google Reader, and sometime soon will be creating a list of hand quilters on the side of my blog’s page so that they are easier for us to find. 

It’s fun to see where new friends are from… for example, someone from Three Rivers, Michigan keeps visiting my blog.  I didn’t even know where Three Rivers was and had to look it up on Google Maps!  Hello, fellow Michigander from Three Rivers!

I also have heard from several quilters in the Netherlands, Finland, Holland, Norway, etc.  I have family from that area of the world, so it’s great to hear from you!

DSC02531

Keep on hand quilting… all around the world!

My Grandson Has Arrived!

Introducing Fischer Hayes Mosey, born 11-01-11 at 12:32 PM. 
We think he’s a keeper!
Fischer

I could have held him all afternoon if they had let me!Fischer and Grammy

So could Bumpa!
Fisher with Daddy and big sister Samantha

Trio

And with Mommy!!!Kim

and Uncle LorenLoren

And Aunt Margaret

I love this picture of my son Sean holding Fischer!DSC04709

Jacob and little brother FischerJacob