Today is the day I took my one-block quilt in for show and tell. Since I just started it yesterday, I was only able to make the top. It wound up as 32" wide and 34" square.
Today I'll show you the various options I tried out, and after the entire quilt is done, then I'll tell you which one I chose.
This is the section that stayed the same in all the options.
The focal point is the aqua skyscrapers in the upper right. The black stripe to the left is a Michael Miller print, and now that I look at it, the narrow strip with the stripes going horizontally make it look like a skyscraper at night with some lights on.
As a counterpoint to the sleek skyscrapers, I fussy cut a crude drawing of a house and used it in the left border.
As I mentioned yesterday, the block is based on Rachel
Roxburgh's Mouse in the House, a variation on Log Cabin and Courthouse
Steps. I made some minor changes from her block, like putting five
fabrics in that left column, when she had four. And I added a second
column on the right (which you'll see in the options below.)
In each of these options, the fabrics that will change are the upper border, and the two strips on the right.
So, here's Option 1. The large floral across the top gives it a spring feel.
The white strip gives the block some breathing space, and the yellow/green fabric is a print of various bridges, which fits in with the New York skyscrapers.
Option 2 swaps out the bridges for a dark purple to put a visual stop on that edge.
Option 3 brings back the bridges, but slides them to the left.
Option 4 keeps the bridges and purple on the right, but brings in a 1960's-inspired retro print for the top.
Option 5 loses the bridges and brings back the white.
And Option 6 brings back the bridges and drops the purple.
There were two of these options that I went back and forth and back and forth on. One looked better in the photograph, and the other looked better in person. So of course I picked the one that looked better in person.
I'm piecing the back now, and will have this ready to show you next week.
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Wednesday, July 15, 2015
Starting My One-Block Quilt
The July challenge for the modern club I'm in is to take a block you like and enlarge it to make a quilt out of it. The quilt can be any size you want, but it's made up of just that one block.
I thought I was done procrastinating after the two rush quilts I made in June, but this time I procrastinated more than ever. We meet tomorrow, and it was only yesterday that I picked my block and fabric. Today I start cutting and sewing.
This is the fabric.
And I picked a block from Modern Blocks. It's Mouse in the House by Rachel Roxburgh, and it's sort of a cross between Log Cabin and Courthouse Steps, two of my favorite blocks.
I have one day to make it, and when I show it to you, you're going to wonder why I even needed a pattern. Well, the answer is because I'm in a hurry and I want something to copy.
There's no way I'll get the whole quilt done, unless I make the block small. But I think I want it at least 2 feet square, so if I get the top done, that will be good enough for show and tell.
I thought I was done procrastinating after the two rush quilts I made in June, but this time I procrastinated more than ever. We meet tomorrow, and it was only yesterday that I picked my block and fabric. Today I start cutting and sewing.
This is the fabric.
And I picked a block from Modern Blocks. It's Mouse in the House by Rachel Roxburgh, and it's sort of a cross between Log Cabin and Courthouse Steps, two of my favorite blocks.
I have one day to make it, and when I show it to you, you're going to wonder why I even needed a pattern. Well, the answer is because I'm in a hurry and I want something to copy.
There's no way I'll get the whole quilt done, unless I make the block small. But I think I want it at least 2 feet square, so if I get the top done, that will be good enough for show and tell.
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Making it Mine - Little Yellow Dresser
Last week I showed you a cupboard I converted into something more my style. This week I finished doing something similar with a little dresser.
This is how it looked when I bought it many years ago at a botanical garden gift shop. I eventually got tired of the pastel colors and cottage-y look, so I made it live in a box in the basement for the last few years. I tried to give it away last month, but no luck, so I decided to keep it and use up more of my yellow spray paint.
This is how it looks after making it mine. It's a little thing, 8" tall, 6" wide, and 3" deep. The knobs are glued in, darn it, so I had to leave them alone.
Once again, I tried to dial back a little on all that yellow. I had wooden buttons the same shape as the flowers on the Washi tape. At first I put vertical strips of Washi tape on the middle drawer, and four buttons on each drawer. Too much, so I pulled all that off and got out lots of plastic buttons and pretty much covered the front of each drawer with a different color. Again, too much.
Back to Plan A, edited a bit. With less on the front, I was able to get away with adding some paper on top. It's pretty much the same yellow, but with a modern white chevron to lighten it up a bit.
When I added the trim to the top, I felt very carpenter-ish doing so. I used a tiny little saw and jig to hold the wood straight so I could get perfect 90-degree angles. Then I was very patient as I put on two coats of paint and gradually glued the sides separately from the front and back.
The interior of the drawers remains as it was when I bought the dresser. Not a perfect match to the Washi tape, but close enough. And it's nice to have that little bit of history.
This is how it looked when I bought it many years ago at a botanical garden gift shop. I eventually got tired of the pastel colors and cottage-y look, so I made it live in a box in the basement for the last few years. I tried to give it away last month, but no luck, so I decided to keep it and use up more of my yellow spray paint.
This is how it looks after making it mine. It's a little thing, 8" tall, 6" wide, and 3" deep. The knobs are glued in, darn it, so I had to leave them alone.
Once again, I tried to dial back a little on all that yellow. I had wooden buttons the same shape as the flowers on the Washi tape. At first I put vertical strips of Washi tape on the middle drawer, and four buttons on each drawer. Too much, so I pulled all that off and got out lots of plastic buttons and pretty much covered the front of each drawer with a different color. Again, too much.
Back to Plan A, edited a bit. With less on the front, I was able to get away with adding some paper on top. It's pretty much the same yellow, but with a modern white chevron to lighten it up a bit.
When I added the trim to the top, I felt very carpenter-ish doing so. I used a tiny little saw and jig to hold the wood straight so I could get perfect 90-degree angles. Then I was very patient as I put on two coats of paint and gradually glued the sides separately from the front and back.
The interior of the drawers remains as it was when I bought the dresser. Not a perfect match to the Washi tape, but close enough. And it's nice to have that little bit of history.
Monday, July 13, 2015
Monday is Fun Day - Relax in the Mini Garden
When you find good things on sale, you need to make them work.
I was at my favorite garden store recently, and as soon as I walked in the door, I spotted this mini couch with a big fat "half price" sign. The coordinating chair and table were also half off, but I restricted myself to my favorite of the three. That way I felt like I was being logical, instead of what I really was, which was buying something I didn't need.
I must have spent an hour looking at houseplants to go with it. I wanted something that looked like a tree and I couldn't find anything suitable, Frustrated, I walked outside and found tiny cedar plants. Perfect. Plus, a metal pot on clearance for only 70 cents. Ooh. A little crowded, but call it cozy instead.
I already had the blue bird house and I added some large rocks for "boulders".
The two cedars could transition to outside if I wanted to put them in the ground, which I don't. In the two weeks since I put this planter together, they've grown by about a third. There's some pruning in the not too distant future.
I have it on the corner of my desk, a good reminder to slow down and relax.
I was at my favorite garden store recently, and as soon as I walked in the door, I spotted this mini couch with a big fat "half price" sign. The coordinating chair and table were also half off, but I restricted myself to my favorite of the three. That way I felt like I was being logical, instead of what I really was, which was buying something I didn't need.
I must have spent an hour looking at houseplants to go with it. I wanted something that looked like a tree and I couldn't find anything suitable, Frustrated, I walked outside and found tiny cedar plants. Perfect. Plus, a metal pot on clearance for only 70 cents. Ooh. A little crowded, but call it cozy instead.
I already had the blue bird house and I added some large rocks for "boulders".
The two cedars could transition to outside if I wanted to put them in the ground, which I don't. In the two weeks since I put this planter together, they've grown by about a third. There's some pruning in the not too distant future.
I have it on the corner of my desk, a good reminder to slow down and relax.
Sunday, July 12, 2015
Looking Real Close
I decided to grow Coleus this year, and picked the brightest colors I could find.
Bright and pretty, that's for sure.
And when you look at it real close...
... it's even prettier.
Bright and pretty, that's for sure.
And when you look at it real close...
... it's even prettier.
Tuesday, July 7, 2015
Making it Mine - Little Yellow Cupboard
I bought a small wooden cupboard last month at a charity resale event. This week I decided to give it a redo and make it mine.
This is what it looked like when I bought it. Nice, but not really my style.
Some things you don't notice right away. Like those roses, for example. It turns out they are somewhat dimensional and hard to cover with paint. A spray of white didn't help; neither did a coat of yellow. My husband dug out a can of white Zinsser primer/blocker and that covered the original paint job, but the dimensionality of the roses was still showing.
I decided to cover the roses with more wood, and trim it out. A little trip to the hardware store netted me just what I needed, including more yellow paint.
Well, after spraying the heck out of the poor little cupboard, the raised areas of the roses didn't look a whole lot different than some of the runny areas and other gorp I managed to introduce. I decided to just let it be.
(I'm using the trim on another makeover project, and the flat little boards will just go into the wood department of our basement until somebody finds a use for them.)
Here it is after making it mine.
My original plan was just to paint it yellow and add a different knob. But it sure was bright yellow!
The only
reason I picked this color was because I wanted to use spray paint to
avoid brush strokes, and I had a can of it leftover from a few years
ago.
To tone down some of the yellow, I covered the front panel with two kinds
of Washi tape. This works so much better than ribbon. It's a little
pricey, but if you buy a few rolls now and then, it's not too bad.
The knob looks peach when viewed head on. It's really pink, but the yellow of the cabinet makes it look peachy.
Like I said, it's pink.
To go with the pink knob, I lined the shelves with pink paper.
The cupboard is 16" tall, 10" wide, and 6" deep. I haven't yet decided which room it will go in, or what it will hold. But I'm sure it will make the rounds over the coming years.
Monday, July 6, 2015
Monday is Fun Day - Sew Master
I found two toy sewing machines at an antique store this spring. One machine was pink, the other was green. One cost about half what the other did.
Lucky for me, I liked the cheaper pink one the best.
Lucky for me, I liked the cheaper pink one the best.
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