Delightful--that's what it means to me to go shopping in my own fabric stash. I intended to build a colorful quilt, and end up making 3 scrappy queen size quilts!
Look at this pile of vibrant fabric remnants I re-discovered in my sewing studio. Ah-ha! And they were just sitting there in the armoire for a long long time. Folded stacks of 1/4 and 1/2 yard hunks of fabric, waiting patiently for a second chance.
Quickly I grabbed up lots of yellow, orange, hot pink, and red. Then selected compliment colors for each: purples, blues, and I salt and peppered it with a bit of sage green, and a black and white stripe.
My recipe: cut remnants into 2.5" wide strips, and mixed thoroughly. I saved all the 1.5" cabbage and gave it to my friend Jerry who looms beautiful rugs. The slivers, threads and lint went to the waste management truck.
Top-right is the dwindling pile of 2.5" wide strips. I selected 6 strips and sewed them together lengthwise to form sheets of fabric, each 12.5" by 40".
After lightly pressing the seams, I used a 10.5" square. acrylic template to trim and divide the sheet into (3) rail fence blocks. Since I didn't have enough of the fabric sheet to produce (4) rail fence blocks I used the "Leftover" to sub-cut into 2.5" wide strips (shown at the lower left).
As I continued to build fabric sheets 12.5 x 40 and make rail fence blocks, the Leftover pile grew and grew (see lower left of photo).
Then my strategy changed! I decided to make the Leftover 2.5" strips into a separate quilt with the working title, "You're Kidding Me".
This is the countertop next to my 1992 Kenmore sewing machine--showing a couple piles of 6 strip sets ready to sew together to make 12.5" x 40" sheets. And way in the background is the Leftover strips to be sewn into 36-patch blocks. Still with me?
Yesterday afternoon's photo of the "You're Kidding Me" queen size quilt. I added busy black and white 2.5" wide sash and solid black corner stones.
(Not shown) Then the 2" wide solid black border got bigger when attached to a 4" finish fabric (black and white coarse weave patterned companion fabric). Wouldn't you know, I was tired when I left the studio last night, and failed to get a photo of the finished pieced quilt top. I promise, I will add more photos as I finish the You're Kidding Me queen size quilt. This morning I am sewing the backing with an art panel.
So far--I sewed 106 rail fence blocks--and they will become queen size quilts. The sashing for those (2) quilts will be a medium blue, and a medium gray. I've already picked out working titles for those quilts: Saturday Morning, and Spare Change.
I want to tell you how enjoyable the processes of rummaging through my fabric stash has been. I haven't shopped for fabric in the last 6 months. By shopping my stash--(stash busting) I feel good about making farmhouse scrappy quilts.
Above: During Construction--here's the first two rows of the You're Kidding Me queen size quilt. I pinned the 2-row quilt on the quilting frame to review and to measure. I wanted to understand and make decisions what I'd need to finish it. When finished, the quilt has (42) 36-patch blocks. 6 blocks per row, 7 rows in length. It's going to be 94 x 104 ample queen size when complete.
Updated 12/10/20 - I finished the You're Kidding Me Queen size quilt. Here are some pics.
My Sewing Machines: My go-to piecing sewing machines are--a 1992 Kenmore, and a 1954 Singer 301A. The Singer 301 stitches very fast, upwards of 1300 stitches per minute--so I use a blade edged presser foot to keep my piecing straight and accurate, a scant 1/4" seam allowance. The Kenmore is slower with a top speed of 900 stitches per minute.
About my 1992 Kenmore. I bought new machines twice over the last 30 years--and each time I used my 1992 Kenmore for a trade-in. What was I thinking?????
BOTH TIMES I realized my mistake and went back to the vendor and bought back my 1992 Kenmore. It is the best machine I've ever used.
Maintenance-Easy:
Every day I clean the lint out of the bobbin cavity and bobbin race with 3-4 stick cotton swabs. I find it especially important to clean the feed dogs using a straight pin to lift out lint build up. Believe me, my machine tells me (and shows me) when its time to clean.
Every 8-12 hours of sewing I install a new 90/14 sewing machine needle.
Every week I open up the front end, and add a drop of sewing machine oil to each of the joints of the needle bar assembly.
I arrange for Miss Kenmore 1992 to be serviced every other year by Ken Ropson (Mr. Wizard) of Green Bay, WI--he's the best in the business.
Thank you for looking at my work. I'm off to the studio to make the backing for You're Kidding Me quilt. I hope to have it on the frame to quilt by the weekend.