(As always, pics are clickable to "embiggen").
Staying true to my challenge to myself to work only with my stash through June and July (and this just in - I'm extending it to August!) I've been working on a crumb quilt this past week.
The red crumbs are from the scraps leftover from Saucy Divo (in my header), but when I begn the quilt, I had no idea how much fabric the white strips would use up, and so I quickly blew through my stash of white scraps, and then added a further 4 metres (!) of white poly-cotton yardage I had on hand. I didn't like using up all my white like that (because after all, I can't buy anymore until fall!) but the top went together easily and reasonably quickly and I was quite pleased with the result. Here it is batted up and ready to go:

For the back, I used a length of red and white polka dotted fabric I scored at the Textile Museum's fabric sale (for a $1.00, I might add!) and added some red kitschy kitchen gingham. The back turned out well too:

As I made the top, I envisioned it as a big fluffy quilt, nearly a comfortor's thickness; so I uncharacteristically bought high-loft polyester batting *le gasp!*, and used two layers of it to get the thickness that I wanted.
It turned out to be as fat and soft looking as I had hoped once I got it batted up and pinned, but the problems began when I started quilting it.
I had envisioned quilting it with outlined hearts, so they too would be big, soft and puffy looking, but as I quilted them, I was watching "The Duchess" (a movie I highly recommend, by the way) and was not paying 100% attention. Because of that, I didn't realize that I was quilting the hearts so densely. By the time I was done the first 30 or so hearts, I stood back and looked at it, and realized - I didn't like it. *cries*
I decided to put off making a decision about un-picking the hearts until I'd quilted more hearts in the pattern I had first envisioned - a loose diagonal - with lots of air between the hearts, and came up with this:
which was more what I had intended. (Incidentally, this shot is also a really great pic of the borders, an unbelievably soft fabric called "minky" - its delightful to touch - feels like a soft warm furry baby creature of some sort.)
I'm going to finish up the quilt with a binding of red taffetta and I think I'm going to love it - if I get the quilting right.
*sigh*
So I need to decide whether to continue with the "densely hearted" quilt, or unpick and go with a looser, more freely spaced heart.
To un-pick or not un-pick?
Stay tuned to this bat channel...
Staying true to my challenge to myself to work only with my stash through June and July (and this just in - I'm extending it to August!) I've been working on a crumb quilt this past week.
The red crumbs are from the scraps leftover from Saucy Divo (in my header), but when I begn the quilt, I had no idea how much fabric the white strips would use up, and so I quickly blew through my stash of white scraps, and then added a further 4 metres (!) of white poly-cotton yardage I had on hand. I didn't like using up all my white like that (because after all, I can't buy anymore until fall!) but the top went together easily and reasonably quickly and I was quite pleased with the result. Here it is batted up and ready to go:
For the back, I used a length of red and white polka dotted fabric I scored at the Textile Museum's fabric sale (for a $1.00, I might add!) and added some red kitschy kitchen gingham. The back turned out well too:
As I made the top, I envisioned it as a big fluffy quilt, nearly a comfortor's thickness; so I uncharacteristically bought high-loft polyester batting *le gasp!*, and used two layers of it to get the thickness that I wanted.
I decided to put off making a decision about un-picking the hearts until I'd quilted more hearts in the pattern I had first envisioned - a loose diagonal - with lots of air between the hearts, and came up with this:
I'm going to finish up the quilt with a binding of red taffetta and I think I'm going to love it - if I get the quilting right.
*sigh*
So I need to decide whether to continue with the "densely hearted" quilt, or unpick and go with a looser, more freely spaced heart.
To un-pick or not un-pick?
Stay tuned to this bat channel...