Rainy Friday Night Fun

Cutting apart four patch blocks made from half-square triangles and rearranging to make a star pattern block.

This is one of the projects I set aside to work on at Friday Sew Days. Today, I finally finished sewing all of the HSTs into 4 patch blocks. For me, pressing and detailed cutting are best done at home away from all the chatter that results when we get together.

I spent this stormy Friday night doing exactly that. All of the blocks will be cut and flipped according to the pattern instructions. Here, I’m stacking them up on a design board. Everything will be ready to transport to the next Friday Sew Day.

Our guild meeting is next Friday, so it’ll be a couple of weeks before I attend Friday Sew Day again. Honestly, I’m likely to continue sewing in the interim so I can get the blocks done. It’s been fun to see the few blocks I’ve sewn together take shape. The completed top is going to be so pretty. The FMQ double loopy meander I plan to quilt will also complement the design. This particular quilt will actually be donated to a specific charity through my quilt guild.

Quilt 2024 – virtual quilt camp this week

If you have some free time this week, head over to the Quilt2024 site and register for a free, 5 day virtual summer camp for quilters that starts Wednesday, July 17th. There are six sessions that go live every day at 11 AM EST and remain available for 24 hours. Should you need more time to watch the replays or want to view everything on the first day, you can sign up for a paid registration. Free is fine for me!

I watched a little bit from each of today’s sessions, then went back and watched the replays that interested me. Yes, there’s a bit of a sales pitch involved, but the two sessions that I went back and watched were well worth my time. I made sure to download any free patterns and tutorials that were available. I was very pleased to discover that my local library system actually has multiple copies of Carolina Moore’s bag making book. I quickly placed a hold on that one!

Five additional sessions are on my watch list for Thursday and Friday. Hopefully, they’ll be as informative as the two sessions today were. Some of the instructors participating in this event also teach similar, more in-depth classes at regional and national quilting events. Watching them in action here helps me decide if I want to take a F2F class with them in the future.

As much as I like in-person classes, I find myself attending “YouTube University” more often these days. It’s convenient. Replays allow me to pause and review the instruction as needed. It’s also more cost effective. Unless the class is local, I have to factor in travel costs. I usually opt to stay home and make certain projects along with the corresponding YouTube video(s). I’ll sew along with a friend or join a group sponsored by a local quilt shop. Lately, all of the classes I’ve wanted to take are in Utah and Idaho. Can’t justify the cost of the retreat nor the travel costs in this instance.

Improving my FMQ skills

Quilt sample showing spiral meander pattern
Improving my spiral meander FMQ with each section I quilt

This is my second quilt using the spiral meander FMQ design. (My first attempt actually turned out fine – especially after the quilt was laundered.) The stitches here are more consistent, as are the size and spacing of the spirals. I also switched back to using Glide thread – which my machine really seems to prefer.

While sewing down the binding, I experienced a mishap with my machine, which I thought was going to require a visit to see Mr. Marc. I managed to get the machine to sew again, but a series of broken needles had already wreaked havoc on the bobbin case (my own fault for not remembering to change the needle plate). See the white “knots” in the picture? A new bobbin case and switching to purple tip needles took care of those.

Sadie and I had a therapy dog visit on Saturday at Gigi’s Playhouse in Roswell. Afterwards, Sadie & I paid a visit to the new Sew Sew Studio Duluth location. These folks are also a Janome dealer and I spent my birthday money on the specialty ruler work foot (offers greater visibility), a replacement FMQ bobbin case plus some accessories for my Elnita EC that my local dealer said weren’t available.

I have been happily stitching away this hot, steamy Sunday afternoon. I can’t wait to share the finished trio of quilts in a few days!

A picture of a sewing machine set up for machine quilting.
My set-up for free motion quilting