What to do, what to do…

I hate this mood…wandering around my sewing room wondering which of my bazillion ongoing projects I should work on…I turn into Golidlocks “This is too hard, this is boring, this is missing pieces, this is too much cutting, etc, etc, etc…”

I finally decided on something last night and…yup, couldn’t find the pieces.  A whole quilt’s worth of applique pieces (fused and cut out) have gotten legs.  It’s almost inconceivable that they could have disappeared into this studio so thoroughly, but it has happened.

I ended up pulling out a hand applique project that I think I started working on last summer, I was planning on working on it on vacation.  I think I did a bunch before we left, and then hardly looked at it while on the road.

The pattern is called Betsy’s Closet, it’s designed by Acorn Quilt & Gift Company — it’s little girl’s dresses: very, very sweet. (And not surprisingly, done in my favorite color combo, red, white, blue, with some green and eventually some yellow thrown in for good measure…)

I finished the applique on this block last night (I just had some of the red check to do):

IMG 0930 What to do, what to do...It does need a little bit of embroidery, and I used some blue pen, so I need to rinse it out before I can press it.

Unfortunately, it’s apparently been humid enough that all of the blue pen I had used to mark these blocks has disappeared, so…I need to re-mark everything.  I’m using the technique where you trace the design on the wrong side of the background fabric:

IMG 0929 What to do, what to do...And then you baste your applique pieces in place, stitching along the lines you are going to sew:

IMG 0928 What to do, what to do...The pieces are way oversized, I think I was being more generous than usual, since I was going to be traveling while working on this.

After it’s basted in place, I then trace along the basting line, and trim the piece to size:

IMG 0927 What to do, what to do...(Uh, except I hadn’t traced the stitching line yet, I guess.  And you wouldn’t need to trace the line, you could just get by with following the needle marks left by the basting, but I find I need to mark the actual line.)

From this point, it’s your basic needleturn applique.  You take out the basting stitch as you need to, in order to turn the edges under.  I really like doing applique this way: for me, it is about as accurate as I can possibly manage.  The piece is basted in place and not going anywhere, with no pins to either poke me, or distort the piece.  There is also no glue or freezer paper involved, and frankly, any time I can avoid glue is a good thing, as I am supremely messy with glues and paints.

I’m using silk thread to applique — so far I’ve been able to use either a cream or a gray on all of the patches.  It just disappears!  I’m using a Foxglove Cottage Straw needle from Jeana Kimball (who is the author that I originally learned this technique of tracing and basting from).

I *should* be doing about a million other things, but working on these little dresses is about the extent of what my brain appears to be able to handle today.

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Happy Sunday!  Did you do anything exciting this weekend?  We had flashes of excitement here and there.  Mark got home Friday evening, he’d been in California all week.   He and the boys were out playing catch — and got to have their inner pyromaniacs entertained by the burning of the prairie across the road from us.

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Every spring they burn it off.  It’s a little crazy to watch.  You can’t see them in this shot, but there are a handful of our volunteer firefighters standing by, helping out.  The dogs were quite entertained by the goings-on.  There were a LOT of people for them to bark at.

Saturday morning was really exciting:  we picked up Mark’s brand-new truck.  It’s a Ford F-150 FX4 SuperCrew with 6.5 foot box.  It’s huge.  The boys have enough legroom in the back that they could easily be taller than Mark and still be comfortable.

The experience was partly exciting because it almost didn’t happen.  We started doing paperwork and discovered that we had misunderstood part of the deal with our rebates/financing options:  we thought we were getting a better deal than we were entitled to get.

I hate buying vehicles.  And we even like our sales guy!!

We did get things figured out to our satisfaction, but it took forever to go through the delivery.  The truck has Microsoft Sync, and we spent most of the time having the salesman explain that, and frankly:  Mark and I could have figured it out faster on our own…

It’s very awesome, plus the color matches our house, I think it’s called Red Candy Metallic.  Yum.

I finally got some pictures tonight when the boys came home from the farm.  I did get 2 phone calls from them while they were gone:  Mark’s cell phone is paired with the car (bluetooth) and it has voice commands, so he can push the phone button on the steering wheel, and then say “Call Home” and…voila!  They are talking to me!

They brought home the boys’ 4-wheeler, which is why the truck is backed up to the hill:  they were getting ready to push the 4-wheeler out on to the grass:

DSC02764 Snappy and Clever TitleI don’t remember what Will was talking about.  I’m surprised he didn’t throw his hands up in his face before I snapped this one:

DSC02767 Snappy and Clever TitleCome to think of it, that was really all of the excitement for the weekend.

Less exciting, but perhaps more interesting for my quilting viewers,  my design wall, although with terrible lighting:

DSC02769 Snappy and Clever TitleOn the left we have Holly and Mistletoe from Where the Cold Wind Blows by Blackbird Designs.

On the right we have some of my Dresden Plates — I posted about receiving these as a gift awhile ago.  I’ve now got 4 hand-appliqued blocks done, plus one is about 10 minutes from finishing.  Today I decided that I’m going to put 4 of them on yellow to make a wallhanging for the women that gave the blocks to me (I have a total of 40 blocks, and they are big, so it’s not like I’m going to miss the 4 for her…).  I’m doing the black and white polka dot version by hand, but I decided to do the yellow on the machine…it takes almost 2 hours for me to hand applique one, and less than 10 on the machine.  I’m going to have to resist the urge to switch to the machine for the polka dots…slow is not bad, it’s just…slow!  LOL

The applique on the holly and mistletoe quilt:  that will be machine, because there are a bazillion leaves and I am NOT doing them by hand.   By machine will be slow enough…

Have a great week, I hope it’s exciting, but not TOO exciting.

Suzanne

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