National Quilting Day – A Great Time to Sew

Today is National Quilting Day so of course I had to celebrate by showing you a quilt I’ve been working on. Since friends shouldn’t let friends sew alone, I decided to collaborate on a baby quilt project with a fellow sewing buddy of mine.

Saggy Baggy Elephant PanelAt the recent quilt show we went to, my friend Jessica found this adorable panel featuring pictures from the Little Golden Book story, “The Saggy Baggy Elephant”. We have a mutual friend who just had a little boy so we decided to make a baby quilt.

Jessica SewingLittle HelperWhile Jessica sewed, we had a “helper” hold many of the pieces for us.

I ironed the finished pieces and added some applique. We cut out the story pictures,  added colorful strips around each block and sewed them together in rows. Here’s the finished top:

Saggy Baggy Elephant Quilt TopI plan to finish the quilting and binding soon so we can present it to the new mom.

Happy St. Patrick’s Day – Celebrate the Color Green!

Tamara's FabricMy friend Tamara and I have several things in common. We both love the color green and we both like to garden, cook and sew.

Tamara is new to quilting, so we decided to celebrate our favorite green holiday with quilting and canning.  She picked out some green fabrics from my fabric stash to start on a quilt. In  return, she helped me preserve mounds of fresh green beans by canning them.

Look at all of these gorgeous shades of green! Needless to say, we’ll be having lots of green beans with dinner.

Fresh Green BeansCanned Green Beans

 

 

 

 

 

The Family Business

The family that works together stays together, right? Last night Jason said to me, “You know it’s a family business when we are all working together on a Friday night!”

This week was pretty busy for us as my hired helper was out of town and we had an uptick in fabric sales. To make up the slack, everyone pitched in to get those orders filled and out the door!

Warehouse JasonHead Label GuyMy husband and older son are in charge of pulling fabrics for orders and putting the bolts away when cut. My younger son likes to count the orders and attach mailing labels to the packages.

My favorite thing to do when not sewing is to cut out fat quarter bundles and quilt kits. That way I get to fondle the fabric and see how the colors work together.

Cutting Fat QuartersLast night I cut out 20 sets of 10 fat quarters from 4 different colorways of Paula Nadelstern’s Deja Vu. That makes for 2oo yards of cutting!! Whew am I tired!

Needless to say, when we have help again next week, I will be very grateful.

Christa’s Award-Winning Quilts!

I went to my guild’s annual quilt show this weekend and was thrilled to discover I had won three 2nd place ribbons out of 5 quilts I had entered. Here are pictures of all five quilts:

Jason's Space QuiltThis quilt is called “USS Jason” after my son Jason who designed the space shuttle block when he was 8 years old. It took me five years to finish but he loves it now that he’s a teenager! I quilted the stars with glow-in-the dark thread. It won second place in the “Juvenile Quilts” category.

Ultimate AppliqueI was thrilled to win a second place ribbon in the “Applique” category for this machine-quilted beauty. Notice the pins I’m wearing. The quilt show chairperson gave out buttons for each ribbon a quilter won for her quilts. What a fun idea!

Memory QuiltThis was the quilt I stayed up all night to finish! It was worth the effort now that it’s sporting a second place win in the “Show Theme – 25 years of memories” category.

Mystery QuiltNolly's QuiltThese two quilts didn’t earn any awards but I was still pleased to display them.

I just love quilts! Can’t you tell??

All In A Day’s Work

Many people ask me what it’s like to have a home based business. It is hard and challenging to balance all the demands of my time, but I do love it. There’s nothing quite like the thrill of a happy customer coming back for more.

Cutting OrdersI thought I’d show a few behind the scenes pictures of a typical work-at-home day.

Here’s my friend Marcie, happily cutting orders for me while I catch up on paperwork and new product listings.

You can see those shelves are a little too empty right now. It’s time to fill them up with more fun fabric products and supplies!

Here’s a typical day’s worth of shipmentsOutgoing Mail. I get about 30% of my business from International customers. There are lots of British and Canadian quilters out there and the Australians are known for sewing. But every now and then I ship to such exotic places like Thailand,  Malaysia, and Japan.

My kids love to know where the packages are going and I often wonder what will be made from all these beautiful fabrics. I love it when my customers email me pictures of their work so I can see the end product.

I get a UPS shipment at least once or twice a week and my deliveries arrive in rather plain looking cardboard boxes. But I can’t wait to open them up to reveal the hidden treasures inside!

Fabric DeliveryNew Fabric CollectionIt’s all in a day’s work!

A Little Catching Up This Week

I am very exhausted but happy to be so this week. Monday, I got my quilts turned in to be judged for my guild’s quilt show this weekend. I was able to finish all 5 quilts like I had planned but it took a few late nights to do it.

Here’s a few detail pictures of some of the work (the great reveal of all 5 quilts will be on Saturday, once they are displayed in public). This is the back showing how much quilting went into this applique quilt!

Back of the QuiltNext, here’s a picture of the exchange blocks all put together. I cut it close on this one, finishing at 11 AM on Monday morning. The quilts were due at noon! (You can see all the quilts piled up on top of each other).

Friendship Swap QuiltToday, I went and helped out with the set up of the show and helped handle the quilts during the judging process.

I volunteered for this position so I could be there while the judging was taking place and get a “sneek peak” at the winners.

I’m sworn to secrecy until this weekend but I will say I’m thrilled to know that a few of my quilts will be sporting ribbons when I bring them back home at the end of the show!

Floral Applique With Echo Quilting

I stayed up late last night adding more quilting to an applique wallhanging I made for my friend in Nebraska (see my earlier December post about our crafty exchange). I decided I wanted to enter it as the final quilt for my quilt show next weekend but it needed a little more quilting before I considered it “show quality”.

Here’s the “before” picture showing the echo quilting around the flowers. Where the blocks joined, there was an area of unquilted puffy space that I didn’t like.

Applique Echo  Quilting BeforeSo I decided to fill in the open areas with more echo quilting. (This picture’s not as good but you get the general idea!!)

Echo Quilting AfterThe extra quilting made  the quilt lie flatter and blended the quilting lines so that you couldn’t see where the echo designs didn’t match up perfectly.  Now, it’s ready for the show!

Group Exchange Blocks

For my guild’s quilt show next month we will be celebrating the 25th anniversary of the guild, Desert Quilters of Nevada.  A sewing circle I belong to exchanged these blocks to commemorate the occasion.

Each of us made the same block for everyone else, so that we ended up with a variety of same sized blocks in return. We had to use silver fabric somewhere in the block.

25th Anniversary BlocksI want to make a quilt using 15 blocks since that is how long I’ve been a member of the guild. In order to do this, I combined a few pieces together to get the right amount. (Notice my new design wall I bought when I went to Road to California last month!)

Combining Parts of Blocks"New" BlocksWho says you can’t improvise? If I can manage to get these blocks sewn into a quilt by Monday, I’ll enter it into the quilt show. Wish me luck!

Quilting Makes a Difference

I am in the midst of making quilt number 3 out of 5 for my guild’s show in March. (Quilt 4 is started and quilt 5 is just about finished so hopefully I’ll get them done in time.)

Here are some before and after photos showing how quilting enhances the overall design. First I marked the quilt design in blue washout pen and then quilted on the lines.

Marked Quilting LinesQuilted on the Lines

 

 

Here’s a closeup of the wreath quilting before I added some background stippling. The picture below right is the pieced portion before quilting. Both blocks need something more.

Quilted WreathPieced Block

Finally, the two blocks are quilted how I like them – lots of detail with designs to fill the space. Quilting really does make a difference. Now, on to the next quilt!

Quilted Block and Open Space(And yes, I will post pictures of all 5 quilts when they are completely finished!)

Canadian City Girl!

Let me introduce you to Geraldene from Canada and her beautiful City Girl Quilt! She used the stylish Blue/Espresso colorway from this popular line by Kitty Yoshida for Benartex.

Geraldene's City Girl QuiltIt only took about 1/2 yard of a dozen different fabrics plus some border material to make this stunning quilt.  She used a free pattern from Benartex for the design and enlarged it to be queen size. (You can get a copy of this pattern, called “Prince Street” from my website).  It was quilted allover with a meandering flower design and she backed it with a warm and cozy flannel fabric.

I just love to see what my fellow quilters are making with the material they get from me. Way to quilt, Geraldene!!