Saturday, January 25, 2020

Flags for my Tribe A Project Quilting Challenge

This week's Project Quilting challenge was to use our "team colors."  As I'm not a team person, I side-stepped and went with tribal flags to celebrate and remember all the "Molehill" kids. 


Two things shaped my idea:

My friend Gwen at The Hartley Hooligans invited her online community to mark that sad/sweet event of a child's birthday after their death with artistic or creative renderings of her name -- Claire --  which we then shared on Instagram.  Of course my contribution  was threads and fabric.



Additionally, this week marked the 10 year anniversary of the death of little Rachel B., a dearly loved and sorely missed young lady who was known for her sunny smiles, her love of horses, her messy hand-prints. . .  Tying in to the idea of thread-painting a name with free motion quilting that Gwen inspired, I also used the Scattered Sunshine logo from the website Rachel's family created to facilitate access to horseback therapy for other special needs kids.



And from there, I was off and making 8 more flags to commemorate, celebrate, and remember all the kids of the molehill, both those who have died and those who are continuing to live their unique, amazing lives.








(Note-- yes, our group does have two Daniel's and two Rachel's (in addition to me).

Each flag has little motifs or color choice that reminds me of stories or memories that I associate with each of the kids.  The molehill kids have been a treasured part of my life for very close to 20 years now, and there is a treasure trove of memories to draw on.

What will I do with these flags?  I have plans.  The molehill moms hope/plan/intend to have our 2nd get-together this summer at my house.  Pulling off an event like this is incredibly challenging, considering all the care needs and logistics for travel for 8 moms who do more than the average to keep complicated households chugging along, but hoping that we will meet up in July of 2020, I've got the backyard decor ready to to.  It'll look great draped around the fire pit and swings.  Festive, but not as flammable, as say, sky lanterns (inside joke there).  After our shindig?  I constructed them so that they can easily be made into pillow, should the recipient prefer a throw pillow over a wall hanging.

Thanks for a fun challenge, Kim Lapacek.  I learned some things as I stitched like a mad woman to complete these for the deadline.  Normally I would be tempted to try out more complicated techniques.  As I was working, I considred trying out couching to make the names pop more.  Or I considered using the rental Cricut cutter at our library to make stencils or vinyl transfers which would result in more uniform and polished motifs.  While that impulse to try out more complicated things is not all bad, it does sometimes lead to unfinished, stalled, frustrating zip lock baggies of projects that got too complicated.  I'm glad the deadline kept me in check and on task.  And who knows, I may yet go back and add in some things -- like grommets for hanging, or gilding paste to highlight certain portions.

Saturday, January 18, 2020

2020 Roman Style


This month, I'm following Project Quilting, Season 11 hosted by Persimon Dreams on Instagram.    Project Quilting  The first prompt is "Notably Numeric." 


 We're to make a quilted thing, from start to finish between Jan 5 and Jan 12, somehow relating to the numeric theme.


My thought process ran like this:
 I've seen several people warning us all to fill in the date completely lest we be victimized by someone trying to backdate checks or other documents when we lazily just write " '20 ".  Image result for 2020 on checks

This made me consider if and how this very issue may have been a problem for people using Roman numerals (Romans and others in their Empire, for example).
Image result for roman empire with roman numerals

I then thought about how this year's MMXX is a particularly interesting date, Roman numerically speaking, and would translate to fun graphics.  Or quilt blocks.



Since I had lots of scraps on my work table floor, I just used the rough cut strips to play with making some roman numerals in fabric.  No precision happening here, and that shows up in points not matching perfectly and my numerals being different sizes.  I decided to make that a feature rather than a flaw because this is play time.

Once I had my roughly constructed numerals stitched, I decided that a hot pad would be the very thing to use them up.  Hot pads in my house are very utilitarian, and I expect them to wear out and be thrown away after a year or two, so they are a perfect place to use scraps and improvisation.

My hot pads have 2 layers of Warm and Natural batting and one layer of Insulbrite in addition to the pieced front and the solid back.

I use the faux binding technique as it's fast and easy and there is no hand stitching at all (see above about how hotpads are by no means heirloom quality at our house).  I like to do some detailed quilting with only the pieced top and one layer of batting, then construct all the layers, and add some minimal quilting through all the layers, just enough for structural integrity. 

So -- about 15 minutes of doodling while I was on hold scheduling a plumber and 2 hours of playing in the sewing room, and I'm done with week 1 of Project Quilting.