Tuesday, 2 March 2021

Beyond Quilting

 Members have been sharing how they are keeping busy beyond quilting.

Getting outside is popular. Toni, Heather, Joyce, Rose Marie, and Kathy H report they are embracing winter. There is much walking, running, snowshoeing, cross country skiing, skating, and shovelling happening. More than one person said getting out keeps them sane. Elizabeth has been out with her grandchildren. Snowmen are fun to make. And they all visited the ice caves in Minto. Joyce reports they have even made a rink in front of their house on the Mactaquac Arm. And since New Brunswick has been doing well Covid-wise, Toni has been able to curl regularly.






Knitting and crocheting are also popular. Kathy A reports she has purchased 3 awesome knitting books full of great patterns written by two women from Newfoundland. They are Saltwater Mittens, Classics and Gifts. Kathy is working on gifts for next Christmas! 





Elizabeth loves being a grandmother and has been knitting and crocheting for her grandsons, and especially for her new grandson, Theo. He does not seem to object to the hat, booties and diaper cover.




Heather has also been knitting and crocheting. 



And look what Joyce has knit! 


Linda has made 2 baby blankets. She admits there are currently no babies in her life. Perhaps it is a case of "build it and they will come"?



Ethel has also been doing lots of knitting and Rose Marie has knit a sweater for a grandson’s 7th birthday. They have also been doing jigsaw puzzles.


Marilyn, Ruth, and Melanie are in the same bubble, so they got together to make cookies. Looks like fun! Will there be a repeat for St. Patricks or Easter?





Rose Marie mentions having weekly trips to the library. I am sure she is not the only person doing lots of reading. Joyce has been playing bridge online with her regular people that she has played with for over 40 years. Ready for a chuckle? Here is the trophy they play for.



Toni agreed to be a homecare worker to help out a neighbour until she could find someone. It has worked out great – they discovered they have much in common and really enjoy each others company. There is a beaten path in the snow between their houses. Toni reports it is the best “job” she could have! Definitely sounds like more than a job. 

Susan F has been making Christmas gift tags. I think this craft room looks pretty interesting. . .



Elizabeth has been visiting her mom regularly. Many of us know her from guild meetings and we wish her well.


Linda has been making very special birthday cakes for her grandchildren. 





Debbi D reports her recovery is progressing well. She has graduated from a cast to a boot, so instead of using her scooter she can now walk around the house with a cane.








Sunday, 14 February 2021

Pincushions and More

 

Our first online guild meeting was a success. We had previously been given a pincushion challenge and these were shared at the meeting. This herringbone pincushion looks difficult but was not and it was a great use of scraps. A variety of fillings were used including rice and crushed walnut shells. The directions can be found here

Herringbone Pincushion

Diane, Susan A, Susan F, Gisele, and Kathy H shared their pincushions.







Our March meeting will be online on our regular meeting day. We are challenged to make a different pincushion or a mug rug with some green in it. The pincushion directions can be found on YouTube at 

Sherri's Pincushion

Or if you have plenty of pincushions, here is a four-leaf clover block which can be easily made into a mug rug. Once you have constructed the block we urge you to layer it, do some straight stitching, and then bind it for a quick and easy mug rug. This is a great way to use up some scraps of green fabric.

Four Leaf Clover Block


In other show & tell, Christa made 6 placemats (3 of each design) for her son and his girlfriend.



Heather has made the Take Four placemats.


Diane recently finished a quilt and field-tested the pincushion in the March challenge.




Toni made 48 mug rugs (6.5” x 6.5”) to take to Scotland as thank you gifts for a curling trip scheduled for 2020, then 2021, and currently 2024. They were about half finished when the trip was first postponed. The mug rugs are now ready - for whenever.



Ruth has been giving some embroidery a new home. These pieces even use some lace from her wedding dress.



Ruth has also used leftover pieces to make a small quilt.




Sunday, 31 January 2021

January Show & Tell

 

January Show & Tell

I love these after Christmas winter months because for me there is lots of time for sewing. Later the garden and outdoor things will take over, but for now it is sewing heaven. The Covid encouragement to stay home has only helped it along.

Melanie got into candle wicking and made it into a Christmas stocking. And she did a quilt with umbrellas for her striped piece.



Debby H bought a new-to-her Husqvarna Mega quilter sewing machine and frame so she has been quilting things to learn and practice. She laments that there are other non-sewing things she has to do that take her away from it – housework, laundry . . .

She and Ella made a table centrepiece for sister, Dot, for Christmas. The block was called Dorothy’s Log Cabin. Have a look at this and all the other pieces.

 










      

Kathy H has been making things she can use: a sewing machine cover, some bowl covers, a purse for winter and one for summer, and a weekender bag. The weekender bag is “The Big Easy” pattern but made 6 inches taller so it will hold enough for retreat.





Pam is sharing “Thimbleberries The Village”. This is a quilt she had wanted to make for quite some time and it became her Covid quilt, pieced with fabrics from her stash since shopping was curtailed last year.



Christa has been busy. She has created a Christmas table runner for a friend.


And another Christmas table runner with her scraps.


Christa’s younger sister in Germany is the lucky recipient of her Corona quilt. It has over 300 two inch squares and is hand quilted.


Her current project is a green quilt requested by a nephew. Looking forward to seeing the finished product!


Toni made quite a few heatable/freezable rice bags for Christmas gifts and also reusable shopping bags in which to gift the rice bags.


Toni has also used Covid time to create. Here is her story.

A few years back, I attended the NB Provincial Gathering of the Guilds at which I was the lucky winner of a fun little game we played and won a roll of random colored, 2.5in., various length strips of fabric donated by the members of the host guild.  Yay!  I was asked to make something from those strips and to report to the next Gathering of the Guilds.

Well, when I returned home and looked at the strips, I didn’t feel any great attachment to them.  Each strip had its beauty but the colors were so random….. what was I going to do with them??  So they sat on my shelf for several years.  Occasionally, I would look at them but nothing came to me.  During that time, I did occasionally take a part of a strip to use in another project.  Oh well….

Last fall, I decided I would just sew the strips together in a strip quilt and back it with something cozy and donate it.  To me a strip quilt is sort of boring, so I put my strips together so that each color had some of the characteristics of the colors on either side of it and I placed them on the diagonal which created a new set of learning experiences for me.  I decided to space the strips with strips of black to “tie the quilt together”.  To me those two steps began to “work” and I began to like my project a bit better, but I still didn’t rush to finish the quilt.

Then after taking a Christmas break from quilting, as I began to work at it, COVID 19 struck the world followed by the Black Lives Matter movement and I began to look at my project very differently.  The strips began to take on meaning; the colored strips representing the different nationalities living together in our world with neighboring countries having many similar characteristics to the countries on their borders; yet the collection of very different colors making a unique quilt and the black strips indicative of the Black Lives Matter movement, the worldwide push to make our world a better place, tying all those colors into one unit.

As I was attaching the short border diagonal pieces, I realized I didn’t have enough fabric in the correct colors to continue that border all the way around the outside.  What to do now???  In my stash of fabric scraps, I found this black piece with little star designs that reminded me of the corona virus picture that had been front and center for several weeks already and that was disrupting life as we knew it – worldwide!  So I sewed that representation into the  border of the quilt.  That strip interrupts all the colors in the quilt; all the nations in the world, as the Corona Virus leaves no country untouched.

I was beginning to appreciate how this quilt was coming together with its little mistakes and make-do challenges; not a “pretty” quilt but meaningful and cozy none-the-less.

It is my hope that this quilt will bring to the current owner comfort, warmth and the sense that they are loved, respected and honored during this rough time in our lives and for many years thereafter and that when looking back at 2020, they will be able to find the good that came from that year.


Wednesday, 13 January 2021

Virtual workshop – Chandelier or Beads pattern

 

Our workshop committee suggested that since we could not get together, we could do a project in common with online resources. The quilt pattern is Chandelier or Beads depending where you are looking.

The instructions are from Jordan Fabrics and can be found here https://ca-jordanfabrics.glopalstore.com/pages/beads

The YouTube video is here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hfkq9PcLdHM

So far two finished projects have been shared. Christa used the pattern to create a table runner.



Gisele made a king size quilt with batiks for her daughter. She quilted it herself on her new longarm. In this picture it is just waiting for the binding.