Sanity at last

Finally, I can breathe.  A lot has happened in eight short days.  I did all the Christmas shopping for 14 recipients, put up the tree and finished decorating for Christmas, made two quilts, spent Christmas @ my brother’s house, and the past three days at the in-laws.

This year was nuts.  Quite frankly, the December 22nd semester end date did not work so well for me.  That left two days to get everything ready for Christmas, something I normally have about a week to do.  I was exhausted and felt too rushed to really enjoy the time with family.

I now have almost two full weeks at my disposal before I head back to work on January 9th.  I know I’ll enjoy the time off, but yikes.  We have this late “get out for winter break” date again next year.  I’m going to have to seriously readjust my schedule for the next Christmas season.

One thing that we did do this year that worked for us was to bypass the big honking Christmas tree for a 3 foot tree that sits on the table in the living room.  No more need to move half of the living room furniture to accommodate the tree.  I can put out selected pieces from my Dickens Christmas village around the tree and the rest in front of the family room fireplace.  It looked really nice.  Bonus: once the old tree is donated to Goodwill, I’ll have a more storage space under the stairs accessible from my studio.

Notes:

  1. For me, it doesn’t feel like Christmas until the mantle is decorated and the tree is up.  Put it up by the first weekend in December.
  2. Handmade Christmas gifts need to be started sooner than December 23rd.
  3. Order gifts online around Thanksgiving so you don’t have to get in the crowds, pay exorbitant shipping fees or worry about things arriving in time.  The deals really didn’t get much better and the selection was definitely picked over by the week before Christmas.
  4. Host a dessert party or small dinner party for close friends if the holiday invites received don’t work for my schedule.  We were invited last minute to a friend’s get-together on Christmas Eve, but by that time I was too frazzled and grumpy to be a sociable guest.  I really missed the usual holiday festivities with friends this year.  Our schedules simply didn’t mesh.

Fit for a princess (and completely from the stash)

Here’s Allison and me with her Princess quilt.   She is absolutely thrilled that she finally has her own quilt and no longer has to use her sister’s hand-me-downs.

The finished quilt is 41″x52″.  The center is a length of Disney princess fabric I trimmed to mimic a center panel.   Inner border is 2″ and outer border  is 4-1/2″.  All of the fabrics came from my stash.  The center panel is quilted in an all-over loopy meander.  This was my first attempt at free motion quilting something bigger than a placemat. There were some challenges, but I’m pleased with the finished quilt.  I’m eager to move on to the next quilt top.  And as Leah Day of the Free Motion Quilt Project advises, it truly is a matter of practice, practice, practice.  My loops looked a whole lot better by the time I got to the end.

The binding was attached using the back-to-front method.  I used stitch #29 – a wavy “S” – on Jewel to machine stitch the binding (hey – it’s a kid quilt that will be washed many times).  Hint:  Using foot A instead of the recommended foot F gives you better control over the binding fabric as it is stitched in place.

Sugar Mama's Princess Quilt

Twisty Tees Wall Quilt

Here’s the finished quilt.  Customer was absolutely thrilled and exclaimed that this one “looked much better than the one they’d seen in a magazine”.

The finished size is 30″x45″.  The backing is done in a smaller zebra print.  The binding is hand-stitched to the back.  The batting I used is Warm & Natural which has 8″ quilting lines.  I simply picked a motif in the center of each graphic and machine quilted around that, along with ditch quilting around the inside of each t-shirt block.   It’s strictly my personal preference.  I like my t-shirt quilts to still look like t-shirts when I’m finished.  Some of the “longarm quilting” out there in t-shirt quilt land looks like an afterthought with random loops and squiggles with no regard for placement or accentuating the t-shirt graphics. My extra bit of machine stitching in the middle means block will be secure will be sturdy enough and it still looks like a t-shirt quilt, plus you can barely see the stitching unless you know where to look.

I normally launder my quilts before delivering them to the recipient.  Not this one.  See the t-shirt in the upper right hand corner?  The t-shirt came to me runs and all.  This is the result of using paint pens/markers that were not permanent or were not set properly.   Fortunately, I thought to run a damp white cloth across one of the letters before throwing it in the wash.  Nuh-uh.  I spot cleaned the marks on the pink t-shirt instead.

Future note to self – test paint pen t-shirts for color fastness before cutting up.  Offer to launder with dye set solution for an extra fee.