Monday, August 29, 2011

It's been a while...

I really am bad at this regular updating thing. Whoops?

Since last updating, I've completed purple Christmas scarf, started and completed green Christmas scarf, picked out fabrics from my stash for a Disney Princess quilt, and not done ANYTHING at all on the Black and White and Red All Over quilt. Seriously. I'm four blocks away and have no motivation whatsoever. *sigh*

BUT--I did get my Owl Patch quilt back from Miss Nancy, and it looks gorgeous! And, apparently, she got enough compliments on it while she was quilting that she would like to hang it in the shop. =) I realize that this isn't a big deal to most of you quilters who have had your work in quilt shows and other impressive places... but it's a first for me!

And of course, as soon as it went on the bed, Byron wanted to hop on and cover it in his dog hair. We had a few words about that. Now to hurry up and bind it. *sigh* Have I mentioned that I hate binding?

Thursday, August 18, 2011

Oops, I did it again...

I've got four blocks and a border left before the top of Black and White and Red All Over is finished... so close. And yet... that fabric I bought the other day? The really cute Christmas fabric? Yeah, I started a new project. It's adorable! And small! And it'll be finished by tomorrow at the latest... But now that I've moved on, I don't want to go back to BWRAL. It's not that I don't like it--I do. I'm really looking forward to see how it turns out. But it's not new and fresh and exciting like all the other ideas swirling around in my head.

And when I went out today, I was bad. Again. I realize that Thomas Kincade is not considered a "real" artist by anyone who at least makes a stab at having good taste in art. But I have to admit that I love his Disney artwork. (Okay, I just love Disney in general.) And I found a cross stitch pattern for a Kincade Beauty and the Beast scene! So adorable! Must. Resist. Urge. To. Start. Working. On. Immediately. We'll see how long I hold out...

But at least I finished the Christmas scarf I have been working on the past couple weeks... I was watching Castle, sniffling at a cute proposal scene while tying in the ends. Now to wrap it, label it, and stick it on the "Completed Christmas Presents" shelf... and pull out a different color yarn and start working on another (slightly different) one. I really hate this yarn, but it works so well with the pattern that I keep buying it.

I think I'll keep Castle-ing while I'm working on the next one. Castle and Kate bickering makes for a great crafting soundtrack...

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Forgive me, Husband, for I have fallen off the wagon...

Well, I wasn't all that *on* the wagon to begin with... but I had decided that I wouldn't buy any more yarn until at least the new year and probably not until after we move next summer. (Theoretically, I will be making some sort of effort to actually use all the bucketfulls of yarn in my closet between now and then.) And I had declared that I wasn't going to buy any fabric during the month of August.

But the mister has been gone for a while now. He got home last Friday evening, only to turn around again and leave Monday morning for at least another week, if not longer. And even though I'm pretty used to him being gone, it still makes me sad. And you know what helps to deal with a case of the sads?

Fabric! And yarn! And Eeyore appliques!

I brought home some adorable Christmas fabric (that I picked with a purpose in mind, I swear! It's in the washer right now--I'm cutting it tonight.), three giant skeins of a yarn that I *hate* working with, but is perfect for a pattern that I plan to use for several Christmas gifts, and an Eeyore applique. Because I love Eeyore. And he totally understands what I'm going through.

I'm four blocks away from finishing the top of Black and White and Red All Over, about two-thirds of the way through Christmas-present scarf, and am determined to make SERIOUS PROGRESS this week while I'm alone with the dog.

Yes, Byron. Daddy left us. But he'll be back. And while he's gone, we're going to be productive. Really productive. Well, I'll be productive. You'll sleep.

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Weekly Update

Last Week: Not so good on the quilting front.

Sunday: 2 blocks, 2 hours crochet
Monday: 4 blocks, 3 hours crochet
Tuesday: 2 blocks, 1 hour crochet
Wednesday: 2 hours crochet
Thursday: 2 blocks, 1 hour crochet
Friday: block layout and planning
Saturday: 1 hour crochet

The mister was gone for the whole week, so I figured I could devote more time than usual to quilting--knock out the last 18 blocks for Black and White and Red All Over and put a border on... Yeah. That didn't happen. Not even close.

But the mister leaves again tomorrow for another week (or maybe two), so I have another chance to be productive. AND tomorrow is UFO day at the local quilt shop... so hopefully I'll be extra-productive. We'll see.

Saturday, August 13, 2011

I can see the light...

Black and White and Red All Over is this close to being finished. Well, the top anyway. And I am dying to post pictures of it... but it's a Christmas gift. Which means it has to stay under wraps until December. Boo. I'll be quilting it using my embroidery machine... which I've only done once before. I'm excited to see how it turns out, but a little nervous...

In other crafty news... When I finished the varigated purple baby afghan (see previous posts), I pulled out some leftover yarn that had been sitting around for a few years and started on an afghan for my dog. Or, more specifically, an afghan to protect the couch from my dog. The afghan I'm using for that purpose now is one I crocheted in high school--my first project that wasn't a scarf--and it's being slowly destroyed. Hopefully I can get the new couch armor done before Byron completely kills it.

But the problem is... the new Byron-blanket is boring. The colors are bland (chosen because they'll hide dirt pretty well), and I'm just doing a very basic double crochet, back and forth and back and forth. And I'm making the stitches as tight as possible (dog nails!), which is not my preferred way of doing things... so my hands get tired faster.

So I started another crochet project. It's a gorgeous, oversize lacy scarf in a varigated purple boucle yarn. I don't think I'm going to even touch the Byron-blanket again until it's finished. (And I'm pretty sure I'll finish my next crochet project--fillet crochet baby blanket featuring DUCKS!--before I get around to finishing the Byron-blanket.) I'd show you a picture of the scarf... but it's another Christmas present.

I foresee that this blog is going to be exceptionally boring and pictureless until after Christmas. *sigh*

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Academic Dishonesty... and Quilting.

At knitting club last night (yes, they let me come even though I crochet) we got onto a conversation about acadmic dishonesty and plagarism. As someone who has taught or TA'd at the high school, community college, and university levels, I've seen my fair share of plagarism. (And one of the women last night shared a story about her friend, who had a student who plagarised a paper--and it was his teacher's own work!)

But as we talked about stealing someone else's work in the academic setting, I started wondering about the crafting world and the oftentimes touchy subject of patterns and the "borrowing" thereof.

I'm one of those people who rarely sticks to a quilt pattern. I have plenty of books and magazines full of patterns, and I happily give credit when I use a published pattern (or combine two or three of them). But I am often inspired by pictures of quilts that I see when I'm browsing through QuilterBlogs. If I fall in love with the quilt instantly, I'll bookmark that particular post... but far too often, I end up sitting down with my graph paper (or more recently, EQ7) and vaguely remembering something I saw a couple weeks ago and thought was pretty, and sketching out a design that is similar, or just "inspired by."

So the question I have is--is this quilting plagarism? I don't make quilts to sell--only for my personal use or for gifts. And I'm sure many of the quilts I see and love weren't designed by the blogger who made and posted pictures of them, so it would be extremely difficult to go back and figure out who the original designer of the pattern was. And then comes the additional complication that sometimes people think alike--and two people who have never met or seen each other's work may design very similar quilts.

What to do? To blithely quilt on, giving credit when I can, and hoping no one jumps out of the woodwork to accuse me of theft if a quilt I designed was inspired by one of theirs? Or to stress and meticulously document every quilt I see that I think I might ever be inclined to imitate?

I think, for now, I'm picking the first option.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Weekly Update

Not as good this week as last, but some decent progress made.

Sunday: 1 hour crochet
Monday: 2 blocks Black and White and Red All Over quilt, 2 hours crochet
Tuesday: 1 hour crochet, block assembly and layout
Wednesday: 1 hour crochet
Thursday: 1 hour crochet, 2 blocks BWRAO
Friday: very sick, no work completed
Saturday: recovering, no work completed

Friday, August 5, 2011

Oooooh dear

Well. It's happened. It took a while to get there, but I have.

I'm halfway through the top of my Black and White and Red All Over quilt, finished with a couple tops for smaller Christmas presents, have't even started other Christmas projects... and I'm fighting the urge to go do something DIFFERENT.

Does anyone else do this? Get halfway through a project and want to start something new? I'm generally good about finishing--I just need to make sure I'm working on multiple projects in multiple "craft genres" to keep myself motivated and focused.

My scrapbooking supplies have been calling to me. I've got two years worth of pictures to take care of...

My yarn is calling to me. I could be working on more than one crochet project at a time...

But I'm not going to do it! I can't give in! (Actually, I was pretty close to giving in, so I bargained with myself.) Once BWRAL is completed (all of it, not just the top) as well as a September birthday gift, I can pull out the scrapbooks and work on them along with the rest of my Christmas projects.

It's a good plan. I think.

Monday, August 1, 2011

Counting Our Blessings

I've had plenty of time the think over the past week or two, which inevitably means I'm going to attempt to put those thoughts into some sort of order on a computer screen. And this time, I thought it was important enough to share with you.

If you're reading this blog, you have access to the internet, whether at home, on your phone, or somewhere like Starbucks or the library. If you're reading this blog, you are, statistically speaking, likely to be American and middle class. You might be a friend from grad school (well educated!) or a participant in the world of quilting blogs.

And if you are any of these things, you are, like me, so blessed. You might have a great job and a beautiful home and plenty of extra money for that gorgeous piece of fabric you've had your eye on for a while. You might be out of work, and struggling a bit to make ends meet in this difficult economy. But we still have so much--so many blessings to be thankful for.

I hate to speak in "Christianese," but I don't know a better way of phrasing this. Recently, God has put it on my heart (and the mister's) to have more of a global perspective. To stop focusing so much on what we have or don't have, to look beyond what's right under our noses.

Now, obviously, we can't solve world hunger on our own. We can't adopt every orphan child. But we can do something. So we started by sponsoring two preschoolers in the Dominican Republic. For the cost of a dinner out, we can help feed, clothe, and educate a little boy or girl for a month.

Our church has an outreach to the homeless in our community. There aren't many school-age children in the program, but there are a few. So we picked a name and I used some of this month's quilting money to buy school supplies for a little 2nd grader who loves Tinkerbell. It's not much, honestly. As a quilter, I can say that it equates to about four yards of fabric. But it means so much to that child, to her family who can barely afford to eat, much less buy school supplies.

I'm not trying to get preachy, or to say that going out to eat or splurging on fabric is bad--not at all! But many of us lament to our friends and family about what's going on in the world, or yell on the internet about how bad things are. Doesn't it make more sense to put our money where our mouth is? To say, "I can't fix everything, but I can help out a child in need. Just one child." Or maybe there's another organization whose goals you support that you can give the cost of a Starbucks drink to--just once a week, or once a month.

I've certainly gotten used to my middle-class luxuries: a working car, air conditioning, an expensive hobby, etc. And I'll be the first to say I would be really, really sad if I had to give them up. But we're not supposed to hoard our blessings. That $32 a month to sponsor a child does them so much more good than it does me. It makes almost no difference to our budget. It's one dinner out. A couple yards of fabric. But (and please excuse me for being a little overdramtic here) it could change a child's life. Make the difference between malnutrition and health.

Maybe you are one of those who has been drastically affected by the economic downturn, and you're glaring at me for my presumption in writing all this. So you don't have extra money to send somewhere--no one is judging you, least of all me! But do you have time? An hour or two a week? Is there an organization you could volunteer for? A soup kitchen you could visit? I'll be honest, I'm really bad at this--it's easier for me to give money than time. And that's something I'm still working on.

I haven't quite managed to wrap up my thoughts to a satisfactory conclusion (my mother, a research writing teacher, would be so disappointed in me!) so I'll just leave with this--if you are interested in sponsoring a child overseas and don't know where to start, you can check out Children of the Nations or World Vision--they both are doing amazing things.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Weekly Update

At the beginning of the summer I set a goal for myself--to quilt, crochet, or otherwise craft for the duration of one CD of an audiobook every day until school started. This being a little more ambitious than I could handle, I have since modified that goal--to quilt, crochet, or otherwise craft every day--even if it's only a couple minutes. And this past week was a success!

Sunday: 3 hours crochet
Monday: 2 blocks of Black and White and Red All Over and 2 hours crochet
Tuesday: 2 hours of Pink Jungle Quilt and 4 blocks of BWRAO
Wednesday: 4 hours crochet, 1/2 hour of layout/planning
Thursday: 1 block of BWRAO, 4 hours folding fabric
Friday: 1 hour crochet, 1 hour organizing the sewing room
Saturday: 1 block of BWRAO, 20 minutes crochet

A few days (noticably today) I slacked off a bit, but all in all, not too shabby!

Saturday... already?

Finally, a couple projects I can talk about!

I've been working on a baby blanket using a purple/green/tan varigated yarn for the past month or so. Recently, I've begun using darker/brighter/non-pastel colors for baby blankets and loving the results. It occured to me that new moms probably get sick of pastels after a while--so I ventured off into other color territories. This is not to say that I don't love traditional baby yarn--I do! (And have several very large buckets filled with pastel pinks, yellows, greens, and blues...) But it's fun to branch out and experiment a bit with color.

I wasn't too sure about the pattern I'd chosen, but by the time I'd completed square 30 or so, I figured I might as well finish it... and it turned out beautifully!
I absolutely love the scalloped edging--it's more elegant and a lot more involved than my usual crochet borders, but I think I'm going to have to use it (or a version of it) on other projects.

My crochet comes with me just about everywhere I go--church, Bible studies, doctor's appointments--anywhere I might be sitting still for an extended period of time with enough light to see my hands. And this project has garnered more compliments than any other I've worked on. I think it's the gorgeous colors in the yarn... Even though I've gone on a yarn diet and forbidden myself to buy any more before we move next summer (or until I've gotten through most of my stash, whichever comes first) I'm seriously tempted to head back to Hobby Lobby and buy up the rest.

Another project I've been working on is this: a pink jungle quilt! (Please pardon the bad quality of the picture.)
I'm discipling a young woman this summer (we're going through Elizabeth George's book A Young Woman's Guide to Making Right Choices) and she decided that since she was already hanging out in my house, she wanted to learn how to quilt as well. (It might, perhaps, be more accurate to say that she wanted a pink jungle quilt for her room and knew that "learning how to quilt" (ie: picking out fabric and having me make it for her) was the fastest way to that goal.) =)

We got most of the fabric for the blocks cut this week--we'll finish cutting next week and, if all goes well, start sewing the week after that.
The colors and fabrics are not what I would have chosen (I'm not an animal-print person in general) but that's the joy of personal taste! I get to work on a project I would have never made for myself! I'm looking forward to seeing how this one turns out.

Friday, July 29, 2011

Getting Organized

Does anyone else measure their creative endeavors in terms of movies and TV episodes? As in, "I quilted three NCIS episodes yesterday, and crocheted the extended edition of Return of the King the day before that." No one else? Just me then... well, okay. We moved my old TV into my quilting room, so I generally turn something on while I'm working.

Yesterday, I folded fabric for two entire BBC Miss Marple miniseries. Why??

The state of my quilting room has been giving me fits. It's a relatively small room, and has been pulling double-duty as both a library and a quilting room. Inside it are stuffed five bookcases, a desk, three folding tables, an ironing board, several rolling carts of drawers, and a makeshift design wall. (There is, thankfully, a closet, which is filled with two more carts of drawers, four gigantic plastic buckets of yarn, two buckets of finished projects waiting to be given away, piles of fleece, and... fabric. Stacks and stacks of quilting cottons which have gotten totally out of control.)
(Please note how the bookcases become a secondary design wall when necessary.)

I decided to read Caroyln Wood's Organizing Solutions for Every Quilter and actually do something about the mess that was my quilting room rather than just complain about it. I woudln't say that many of her ideas are new--I've seen them implemented while reading other quilters' blogs, but it was a great place for me to start. And I began by folding fabric. Hours and hours of folding fabric. (The good part--I had forgotten about some of my fabric, so it was almost like going shopping all over again!) That folded fabric is now in nice, organized stacks--some of which fit nicely into my newly-aquired hanging canvass shelves (yay! more space!). The rest will have to fit (somehow) back into the (very limited) closet shelving. Neatly, this time.

The next step will be acquiring pegboard and hanging my most-used quilting implements within easy reach. (And, of course, training myself to actually put them back when I'm finished with them.) And then will begin the slow and agonizing process of clearing out the non-sewing nonsense that hangs out in the corners of this room, which was the catch-all when we first moved in, and never quite recovered.

It's going to be a process, and I'm sure I'm going to want to tear my hair out more than once... but I'm looking forward to the finished result. Whenever I happen to get there.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Today

Today, I am not going to allow myself to be claimed by inertia.

Today, I am going to complete two blocks of my "Black and White and Red All Over" quilt.

Today, I am going to allow myself to attempt an experimental quilting project.

Today, I am going to take the time to cook a healthy dinner for the mister and myself.

Today, I am going to finally get around to going to the knitting club at B&N.

Today, I am going to accomplish things. Small things, perhaps. But that's all right. I'm only talking about today.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

WIP Wednesday... on Thursday

When I first started this blog, I was excited and wondered why on earth I hadn't started a blog before.


It's several weeks later, and I remember why. I can't seem to manage to update on any sort of regular schedule... oops. I've resolved to be better about that. We'll see if it makes any difference... =)

As I was photographing all my recent projects to share, I realized that almost all of them are gifts for people who *might* be reading this blog, so I can't do a proper WIP update--teasers only!


Owl Patch--front and back finally completed and sent off to the lovely Miss Nancy for quilting. (First time piecing a back--I really hope it turns out!)


WIP - Dr. Seuss!

WIP - Black and White and Red All Over


WIP - Giraffes


WIP - Fruit (yes, working on this one makes me hungry...)


WIP - Snoopy! (It's meant to be a gift, but I might have to get more fabric and make one for me...)


Yes, these are all works in progress. I should probably get better at finishing one project before starting another... I'm looking forward to finishing and gifting these so I can show real pictures! (Which won't be until Christmas, actually...)

Saturday, July 9, 2011

The Benefits of Being Married to an Officer...

I didn't get much sewing done yesterday, because I was out all day.

Where, you might ask?

Well, you see this picture?

I was hanging out on the very top deck, watching the Blue Angels fly over (and during some passes UNDER) my head.

The mister's ship is being used as the centerpoint for the Blue Angels Air Show this weekend. So we spent a day out on the water (best seat in the house!) being impressed by the pilots and their planes.

He's back out there, doing it again today... and I'm catching up on my quilting!

Saturday, July 2, 2011

The Things They Made

It's date day with the mister (Our two-year engagement anniversary! yay!), so I've only got time for a quick update before we're off used-bookstore-ing, eating Thai food, and getting massages. (Best date, ever, yes? Especially if you've been bent over a sewing machine every day for the past couple weeks.)

So, in the interest of timeliness--pictures! Today's category is crochet.

Fall colors afghan made for our new home shortly after moving in.

Things for a baby girl. (No, this is not an announcement. I just love making baby things.) =)

Made for baby Gabriel - the son of a friend from church.

This is Lee, my Scarecockroach, named after a childhood crush, the dashing Lee Stetson from Scarecrow and Mrs. King.


Spring afghan made using varigated yarn.


Butterflies!

And, I will leave you with one last photo that is most definitely not in the crochet category.

(This is Byron. Byron is not impressed. But he's cute.)

Friday, July 1, 2011

Did I mention...?

That I am totally and completely in love with owls right now?

I just ordered six yards of Alice Kennedy's Bright Owl fabrics. So much for cutting down on my fabric consumption... Adorable Owls!

The question remains, of course--what to do with it?? I ordered twelve half-yards--one of almost every print in the collection... I'm thinking a crib quilt, but have no idea of a pattern yet.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

The Creative Process

I've always been facinated by the creative process. I'll pick up a finished product--whether it is a book, a quilt, or a particularly delicious cookie--and wonder what inspired it and how it went from inspiration to that finished product. 

Sometimes, for me, it's very simple.

1. Fabric Lust
That moment when you see a particular fabric, fall in love, and simply have to have it.
I have to admit to a deep and abiding love for Winnie the Pooh. Even when I try to branch out, I keep going back. This might account for the five or six different Winnie the Pooh fabrics that currently reside in my stash...

2. Finding the Perfect Pattern
It's fun! It's bright! And it has large spaces to showcase Pooh, Piglet, Eeyore, and Tigger! (Pattern from Fat Quarter Quilting by Sun Penn.)

3. Putting It All Together
It certainly wasn't a difficult block, though I made it harder than it needed to be. Sometimes you have to learn by trial and error... or maybe it's just me. =)

4. Finishing It Up
Quilting done by the lovely Miss Nancy. And the binding still needs to be done, so it's not actually finished... but it's close. I haven't made too many quilts at this point, but this is definitely my favorite so far. I don't think I'm going to be able to give it away.


Of course, if you're me, not every project goes quite so smoothly. More often than not, the creative process is something like this...

1. Fabric Lust
I still squee a little every time I look at this fabric. They're SO CUTE! I'm definitely on an owl kick right now.

2. Looking Through Every Book You Own To Find a Good Pattern
And going through quilt blog after quilt blog, waiting for inspiration to strike. But nothing seemed right.

3. Deciding to Design Your Own

More than one sheet of graph paper was sacrificed for this cause. I had one pattern all drawn out and I was ready to cut... when I realized I had absolutely no desire to sew partial seams. Whoops! Back to the drawing board. I had entirely too many pages of measurments, checking and double-checking my basic arithmatic. In my defense, it's been a long time since I had math!

4. Realizing Your Pattern is Completely Crazy, and Deciding to Go For It Anyway




There are four sections to the quilt top. Three and two-thirds are finished. A few more seams to sew, and then for the borders! Right now, I'm thinking a narrow green border and a wide pink one. Unless anyone has any better ideas... =)

When it's finished, it will fit a twin-sized bed, reaching nearly to the ground on both sides. I can see this one in a seven-year-old girl's room. Problem is, I don't think I know any seven-year-old girls...

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Welcome!

Back in the 1760s, a fellow named James Hargreaves invented the "Spinning-Jenny," which was kind of a big deal, as it allowed someone to spin multiple threads while using only one spinning wheel.

Fast forward a couple centuries, and in the 1980s, God (with an assist from a lovely young couple named Rob and Heidi) created a Quilting Jenny, which was not quite as big a deal, historically speaking. She learned to sew, crochet, and cross-stitch from her mother, and eventually, armed with a sewing machine and a pile of books, ventured off into the wide world of quilting.

This blog is meant to chronicle that journey. I hope you'll come along for the ride (or at least for the pictures of gorgeous fabric and an adorable basset hound).

I'm Jenny--the twenty-something wife of a wonderful Coast Guard officer (who is, incidentally, an enabler, and encourages the purchases of fabric, notions, yarn, quilt books, and new sewing machines when what I really need is someone to tell me no). We currently are stationed in Pensacola, Florida, where we are working on our happily ever after, accompanied by our hound, His Drooliness, George Gordon Lord Bryon.