Saturday, February 18, 2012

Camping with the girls - fancy quilting on busy fabrics

Some quilters say that it doesn't make sense to put fancy quilting on busy fabrics in scrappy quilts because the quilting doesn't show very well.  That is one approach.  Another alternative is to use fancy quilting to add even more texture to the quilt.  It all depends on how much time you want to put into the quilting.  I am growing fond of Camping With the Girls.  I plan to keep it for myself.  I want it to be special so I don't care how much time I spend on the quilting. 

I collect good quilting stencils in assorted sizes.  (Why would I collect bad ones?)  Then I wait for opportunities to use them.  For this quilt, I was able to select 4 different stencils to fill space.  This is one of the spaces to be filled.


This is the stencil I selected for the space.


It would be difficult to mark a fancy shape like this well enough to see on the fabrics in the space to be filled .  In addition it would need to be done for each of the 12 blocks in the quilt.  In the end this visually-challenged quilter would have trouble seeing the markings well enough to quilt.  An alternative is to use Golden Threads paper.  This involves cutting the necessary size squares from Golden Threads paper, marking the quilting design on one of the squares, pinning up to 15 layers of the paper together, and then stitching through the layers with your sewing machine (no thread in needle).  The end result is that you have up to 15 pieces of the paper with the design marked on it.  You'd want to use a heavy needle such as a jeans needle to make the perforations more visible.  These are the papers with the perforations showing the quilting design:


Notice the beautiful fabric in the background.  That is the upholstered seat of my relatively new dining room chairs.  A little Christmas gift to myself.  Back to the subject at hand.  Notice that the layers of Golden Thread papers were pinned together so they wouldn't move during stitching.  I used to do the perforation step free-motion which was quick and did not involve turning the paper.  Now I use the walking foot with the stitch length set on 1.5.  This results in greater accuracy and perforations that are closer together, which makes it easier to remove the paper after quilting.

The Golden Threads paper is not cheap and is only available in pale yellow.  Someone told me you could just buy regular tissue paper in whatever color is best for the current project.  I tried that and will never do it again!  Regular tissue paper is not as durable as Golden Threads paper so it made a terrible mess.  It was awful.  Really.

When ready to start quilting, peel off one of the papers and attach it to the area to be quilted.  If you look at both sides of the paper, you will notice that one side is smooth and the other side has bumps.  Place the paper on the quilt with the bumps up.  That side is easier to see.  Pin the paper along the edges to hold it in place.


Determine a good place to start quilting to have the minimum number of starts and ends.  This stencil was a continuous line design with one start and one end.  I make it a habit to quilt the right half of the design first because it is usually necessary to roll the quilt on the right in order to quilt the left half of the design.  Be sure to replace the jeans needle with a normal needle prior to quilting.  Don't try to pin all of the papers before rolling the quilt.  The papers will get torn due to the rolling and handling.  Pin each paper when you are ready to quilt that block.

Next comes everyone's least favorite step - removing the paper after stitching the design.  Some quilters wait until all quilting is finished and then remove paper while watching TV.  I prefer to deal with it one block at a time.  If left until the end the papers get torn and little scraps get distributed all over the room.  I am not a fan of cleaning so I try to keep things neat as I go.  This also allows me to examine my quilting stitches to make sure tension is good before moving on to the next block.  I find it helpful to have good tweezers to remove little bits of paper that are stuck under the stitching.  After I think all of the paper is out of the stitching, I use a pet hair pickup brush to get the tiny pieces. 


Then I admire the block that I just quilted.  I get up, move around, have a drink of water or some beverage of choice, and then move on to the next block.  It's good to have breaks when doing very precise work.


After I have quilted all the fancy shapes in the entire quilt, I will probably add some stippling which will make the quilted designs stand out more.

I love quilting fancy shapes!

Wednesday, February 15, 2012

Camping with the girls - milestone

The ditch quilting is complete and all the pins are out.  That is always a milestone.  I've selected 4 stencils for some fancy quilting.  There's been a little despair.  My free motion ditch quilting is not as precise as I had hoped. 

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Camping with the girls - let the quilting begin

The quilt is pinned - rather heavily I might add.  I am a very methodical pinner.  For each block I determine the best way to pin considering how it will be quilted.  It then follows that all blocks will be pinned the same way.  There are 11 pins in the star blocks, 13 in the Delectable Mountain blocks, and 16 in the four-patch blocks.  I use a lot of pins because the first step will be to quilt the long vertical and horizontal seams between the blocks and I want to keep the intersections of each group of 4 blocks as square as possible.


It took a long time to upload that picture.  I had to eat cookies while waiting.  Anyway...

I am using one of my favorite battings, Quilters Dream Cotton, in Request (thinnest) weight and Aurifil 50/2 thread in tan (color number 2325).  I put a new Schmetz Microtex sharp needle (80/20 size) in the sewing machine because there are thick seams in some places.  (Normally I use Schmetz Microtex Sharp 70/10 with the 50/2 thread.)  The stitch length is set on 2.3.  The walking foot is on.  I am ready to start.

I am at the stage where I think this quilt is going to be great.  At some point (generally around the half-way point) it is inevitable that I will despair and think it is not going to be great because one thing or another didn't turn out as well as I hoped.  At that point you just have to forge ahead and work through the despair.  As I hit the home stretch, I am usually very happy with the quilt.

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Camping with the girls

This is a Miss Rosie's Quilt Co. pattern called Elizabeth.  I named my quilt Camping With the Girls because I purchased the pattern on the way to one quilt camp and pieced the blocks at another quilt camp...and no boys were present at either camp!  The quilt is 68" x 68".


I just finished sewing all the rows together so ignore the fact that it is not quilted yet.  Ignore the amateur photography with distorted blocks and poor lighting.  Ignore any stray threads you might see with your eagle eyes.  While this quilt is not exactly the same coloring as the photo on the pattern, it has the same look.  I love, love, love a quilt like this.  It is warm and cozy and comforting.  Bright and white quilts don't create the same feeling for murky me.

The quilt contains three kinds of blocks - Sawtooth Star, Delectable Mountain, and Four-Patch - set on point.  This makes the quilt interesting, but it also complicates the pressing.  The pattern gives good directions, which I did not follow 100%.  I thought I knew better, but that was not always true.  However I would probably do it my way again if I ever make this quilt again.  I can be stubborn.  Oh, yeah.

The quilt is actually a medallion design with the four Delectable Mountain blocks in the center.  Then there is a row of Sawtooth Star blocks on all four sides with Four-patch blocks in the corners.  And so forth.  This is a closeup of the quilt center:


Normally a medallion quilt is assembled from the center out.  Because all of the blocks in this quilt are the same size (8" finished), the blocks are sewn into rows and then all of the rows are attached to each other. 

There are at least fifty prints in this quilt.  That makes the top more interesting and creates a texture before any quilting is done.  The lightest prints are in the background of the star blocks and in part of the Delectable Mountain blocks.  There is a range of tan or taupe with red prints in the Delectable Mountain and the Four-patch blocks.  The centers of the stars are shades of red with some rust mixed in.  The star points and Delectable Mountain points are a range of browns.  A few prints had green or blue in them.  While piecing, I occasionally wondered if a particular block was going to be too different to use with the other blocks.  If so, I would make a replacement block.  In the end, all of the original blocks were used.  No replacements were needed.

Here are closeups of two other sections of the top:


Next step --> prepare the backing and pin the quilt.  I chose not to mark quilting lines because the fabrics in the top are too varied and generally too dark for easy marking.  This top may require a Golden Thread paper solution.