the quilted tortoise

Saturday, 31 March 2012

March 2011


21 March 2012
Mouthy stitches swap #1 received!

Today I received the most beautiful red and aqua hexagon pouch from Amy of Thread Robin!

Amy stalked beautifully and got my taste spot on! The red and aqua, the hexies, the spots and stripes and the perle stitching…and how gorgeous is the tortoise zipper pull!

Amy has made the pouch so beautifully and the little details are just wonderful! How cute is the love heart with the word “sew” stitched in it?

and this gorgeous hand stitched label…

Part of the swap was to include some scraps and Amy has sent me a great collection!

You can see the pouch I made here and the Flickr group here.

19 Mar 2012
Pouchtastic

The in-laws left last night after 8 weeks staying with us from the UK. The reminder popped up earlier in the week that Sunday was UK Mother’s Day. While my MIL has been here she’s taken great interest in whatever it is I’ve been making so I thought she might like some little home made goodies of her own.

This pattern is Jeni’s lined drawstring bag made using Washi. I definitely need to make a bigger one of these for my knitting projects.

This one is just some scrappy 2″ patchwork squares and Essex linen in natural. The size of this was based around the 8″ zip I already had.
I am really not a great photographer, however I brightened up these pics a bit using Hadley’s easy iPhoto tutorial.



11 Mar 2012
Wiksten tank {one}

I have long been coveting the Wiksten Tank and Tova patterns. There’s such an amazing collection out there…
Every time I saw one I’d jump on to the website to order…and they’d be sold out…
I finally got my mitts on both patterns, I have to say they are expensive and the postage to Australia is airmail so while they arrive quickly, it costs a bomb!

I made this one using one of the Washi prints by Rashida Coleman-Hale.
The Wiksten Tank is a very basic pattern – it would be a perfect beginner’s trial for dress making. The pattern instructions are for French seams so no serger or finishing of raw edges required – fantastic! I could immediately tell the neck opening was too low for me (I am only 5’2″) so I went ahead and added about 1″. The length also ended up too long and an inch came off here too. The arm openings are perfect – no gaping!
Next up…the Tova!
11 Mar 2012
4×5 Modern Bee {round 2}
2012


for Suzy - raspberry, cream and a hint of black on white
This is my 2nd quarter playing in the 4×5 modern bee. Last quarter we all had similar colours and they were all colours I had a plenty! This quarter the colours were a lot more diverse so it was really fun to try different things.

for Katherine - red, white and blue on white
The block design is by Monica Solario-Snow; the Happy Zombie and is from Quilt Dad’s Block-a-Palooza. Fantastic instructions and as always Monica has such gorgeous and cool presentation.

for Manda - cobalt/royal blue, lime and aqua on white
I originally thought of making Swoon blocks as I have some Marti Mitchell templates that make a 12″ block. I decided I have made enough Swoon blocks and should try something new. In the end the cutting and assembly of this block was quite like Swoon after all!

for Melanie - grey, green and blue on white
I really enjoyed using the different colour combinations. I hope my hive like them…

for Lyanna - tangerine, aqua and grey on white
Check out the flickr group here.

February 2012


26 Feb 2012
Camelot {block 1 and block 4}

I have been wanting to make a start on Trish Harper’s Camelot quilt for absolute ages and I promised myself it would be at the top of my to do list this year. This weekend was a hot one in Melbourne, hot enough for me to stay indoors with the air conditioning and some calm, relaxing hand stitching.

Camelot {block 1}
This quilt is not for the faint hearted as it consists of 16 different hand pieced circles. Having said that, I find hand piecing so much more forgiving than machine piecing. It’s much easier to fudge bits and make things work. The seams tend to know which direction they want to lie and they feel less bulky. The blocks do come together quite quickly – I made two of the blocks this weekend, one each day – including choosing and cutting the fabrics by hand.

Camelot {block 4}
My colour theme for this quilt is dark & royal blue, red, pink, grey and text prints. I’d really like the background fabric that the circles all sit on to be a newsprint text fabric too.
There are some absolutely beautiful finished Camelot quilts, just have a look at Lizzie’s and Valentina’s. There’s also a flickr Camelot group if you’d like to look at the different blocks. You can buy Camelot and other patterns from Lizzie at Broderie.



19 Feb 2012
Ruby double hourglass {part 1}
2012


One of my goals this year is to make some king size quilts and keep them for myself! I have been buying up some of my favourite Ruby fabrics by Bonnie & Camille. I love this range. I love the colours. I love the prints.
I wanted to use a traditional block design and have the overall quilt look scrappy. I’ve paired the Ruby with Kona White. Yes this is very typical of me and yes it is very conservative of me :). I still love a lot of white in a quilt and while I am really keen to try other colours…just not yet…

I found this Cluck Cluck Sew easy double hourglass tutorial from 2009 and thought it would be perfect for the Ruby. It uses 2 1/4″ strips so it’s easy to cut and quick to piece. I had a couple of hours unexpected sewing time this afternoon so I played around with five of the fabrics just to get an idea of how they’d look and the size.

The blocks will be 6 3/4″ finished. Allison includes pressing instructions which is something I love in a tutorial or pattern. This means that all the seams nest beautifully and can be sewn without pins and line up perfectly. I love how fresh and crisp they look. Once I have the 20 different Ruby fabrics I have all mixed up I think it will look great!
I also can’t wait to see how big it ends up!
12 Feb 2012
Loulouthi dress Cynthia Rowley 2215
2012


I have been in love with this Anna Maria Horner Loulouthi print since it came out and had been coveting my fat quarter’s worth without finding something to do it justice.
When I saw this Cynthia Rowley dress made up by Make Something it was love at first sight. For me, the two together would be a match made in heaven…

I really love the way it’s turned out! Since I have been dressmaking for about 25 years I have a bad habit of getting impatient and therefore slack with my planning and preparation. I was determined to do this fabric justice though so I made up a toile – which is just a fancy word for a practice piece!
I won’t rant and rave yet again about my frustration over pattern sizings and how I am a size 10-18 depending on my body parts – ridiculous! But as I said, no ranting…
Needless to say the toile was worthwhile! I had to expand the waist about an inch. I am making this dress for work and don’t want to wear the shirt underneath so I made the armholes smaller and shoulder seams wider so there is no chance of underwear glimpses or any more skin that there needs to be :)

Why does my hair seem to want to go in only one direction???
You know what I absolutely love about this pattern? Aside from the pockets of course – LOVE a dress with pockets! The bodice is fully lined so no messing about with neck and arm facings that have awkward edges and have to be shoved back in once you pop the dress on. It has buttons at the front and an invisible zip in the left side. I won’t show my age and go on and on about how amazingly fabulous and easy sewing buttonholes with a modern machine are!

Success! I do love it and would proudly tell someone at work I made it! Now that is a first for me!



5 Feb 2012
Mouthy Stitches zippered pouch swap #1
2012


2011 was my first year of swaps, bees and quilt-a-longs and I participated in a few and had a blast! Only problem is that I don’t end up with many finished projects, rather an assortment of blocks that may one day be quilts. Like most, I made a resolution this year not to bite off more than I can chew and to finish some big queen size quilts and keep them all to myself! I’ve even made a list to try and keep myself focussed – I’m just not game enough to share it :)


When I spotted the Mouthy Stitches zippered pouch swap I simply could-not-resist! Susan, Hadley and Cindy are hosting and they are all fab so I really wanted to play along…and a zippered pouch isn’t a big time commitment is it??
The 90 spots in the swap went in record time and I have never seen so many mosaics go up in so few days. The chatter and comments are amazing, such awesome participation! So every morning and every evening I am on there stalking my partner and commenting on all the group photos.
I’ve been wanting to play around with some paper pieced hexagons for a while and after studying my partner’s likes decided this would be a great project to try them out. I took a class with Sue Daley recently and had her papers and templates and a Sewline glue pen ready to go. Cutting the fabrics and gluing them to the papers came together really quickly and could easily become addictive. Whip stitching the hexies together takes a bit longer and took me a bit of getting used to. I teamed the hexies with some natural Essex linen and perle thread quilting.

I thought hexies on both sides might be a bit too much so decided to let the linen and some perle stitching be the feature on the back. The stitched hexagon has my partner’s first initial stitched in it so I have kept that hidden for now.

I’m really pleased with how it, however I feel quite nervous hoping my partner will like it. The group is producing some amazing work and my partner is showing plenty of skill in design and construction. It’s not due to go in the post for another week and then it has international shores to fly to so it may be a while before I find out. Fingers crossed!!

January 2012


28 Jan 2012
Swoon { part 4 }

You may recall from my last Swoon post I was trying out a red and aqua theme and it just wasn’t working. I really loved all the feedback I got and decided to ditch the red and aqua and make a multi coloured Swoon. At the bottom of the post is a layout that I’m toying with so if you’d like to give more feedback but don’t want to see the individual blocks please scroll down :)
I was going to sit on it for a while and mull over fabric choices, but because the Swoon-a-long is on with over 650 members, how could I resist??
So I pulled more fabrics and this time I made five blocks at once!! I do love an assembly line for Swoon, but I have to admit it did take me two weekends to get these guys done.
So here are the newbies:

Fabrics are Amy Butler Soul Blossoms and Happy Mochi Yum Yum

Fabrics are Sweetwater and Happy Mochi Yum Yum

Fabrics are Denyse Schmidt from Spotlight

Fabrics are Sarah Fielke From Little Things

Fabrics are Amy Butler Soul Blossoms and Sarah Fielke From Little Things
So I now have 11 blocks and I only need 9! I think I will take out one of the plainer aqua ones and make a baby quilt with it. Here is the layout I’m considering – what do you think????

And here are all 11 blocks for you to see if you think I should change what gets kept!

that's me at the other end perusing the blocks (although you can't see the glass of wine in my hand which is required for such tasks!)
I would love your feedback!
You can find the flickr Swoon-a-long group here.
14 Jan 2012
The Farmer’s Wife Quilt-a-long {round 5}
2012

Another batch of Farmer’s Wife blocks! I included seven in this batch to take my total blocks up to 40! I really enjoyed this batch and am happy with my colour combos. Let me know what you think…
Block 39 Friendship:

Fabric is Treasures and Tidbits (blue and red), Kaffe Fassett (green), Happy Mochi Yum Yum (yellow) Dear Stella (grey).
Block 54 Kitchen Woodbox:

Fabric is Loulouthi (green), Terrain (floral) and a Spotlight spot (pink).
Block 58 Mother’s Dream:

Fabric is Loulouthi (blue corners), Kona Tangerine (Pantone colour of the year!) and I think the other is an Echino.
Block 61 Northern Lights:

Fabric is Happy Mochi Yum Yum and Kona Plum.
Block 69 Practical Orchard:

Fabric is Terrain.
Block 81 Snowball:

Fabric is Loulouthi and Kona Cerise.
Block 109 Windows:

Fabric is Sketch (blue centre) and Michael Miller Aqua Red (red centre and aqua border).
You can find the flickr group for the FWQAL here :)


6 Jan 2012
Swoon { part 3 }
2012


For me half of the time spent making Swoon blocks is checking and double checking I’m sewing the correct pieces together, so once I’ve got my head around that it’s far more efficient to make more than one block at a time. So this time I went for three. They are really big blocks – over 20″. Feels strange having such big blocks, especially after playing with the Farmer’s Wife blocks!

I’m doing aqua and red on a white background. Over the last few months I’ve been buying fabric for them and I have been focussed on making each block either predominantly aqua or red. I’ve been trying to mix up the fabrics and not end up with a group of blocks that are all from the same line.


I’m not sure if I like them. I think latest aqua blocks are too samey? I think the Swoon quilts in the Flickr group I love have better contrast in the colours used within the same block as well as the overall quilt. Not sure what to do now? Do I leave it at these six? Do I use the blocks for smaller projects? Do I leave the samey ones out and try to bring in more colours? Do I just sit on it for a while and see what I think of them in a couple of months? Do I keep going and choose fabrics with better contrast? Is it just my terrible photography skills?
Not that I’ve inspired you, but you can find the Swoon pattern here and the flickr group here.
4 Jan 2012
Sewaholic crescent skirt


Alas I am back at work today so the sew-a-thon is over :(. I still can’t believe how much I managed to achieve in the break, it’s been great! It’s really quiet at work so I thought I could sneak in a post!
Some wonderful friends gave me a Kelani Fabric voucher for my birthday! I got a load of patterns from Alice at Backstitch and decided to try the Sewaholic Crescent skirt. It’s gathered onto a yoke. I wanted something fun and a bit quirky so I chose this folksy matryoshka doll, windmill, horse, bird and heart design.
As always pattern sizings confuse me and according to the pattern packet my body measurements range from a size 10 to 16!! I decided to make the size 12 which ended up way too big. I probably should have gone with the 10, maybe even the 8. It’s still a little on the big side even with all the excess baggage my waist is carrying from Christmas! I think it would look better fitted so I’ll need to motivate myself to take it in a little more. I’m really happy with the way it turned out, it will be great fun for Summer weekends.
Thanks B&R for the great gift!



2 Jan 2012
The Farmer’s Dozen {round 4}
Jan
02
20
Wow, now I am really on a roll with Farmer’s Wife blocks! Instead of my usual 5 at a time I have managed a dozen!! This brings me to a total of 37 blocks. The official quilt-a-long is up to week 27 so that’s 54 blocks. I have no idea how many blocks I’ll end up making although I know I’d like over 50. I’m along for the ride so we’ll just have to see where I end up. I’m definitely more motivated now I have more than just 5 blocks!!

For the first few in this batch I think I was after quantity more than quality. I’m sure you’ll notice that I’ve taken the easy option of selecting fabrics from the one range. After 3 blocks I think I realised this takes the fun out of it so I started to mix it up again. Block 5 Bat Wing is pretty terrible but I’m not a re-do kind of girl. I’m a let’s-hope-when-the-whole-quilt-is-made-it-won’t-stand-out kind of girl.
I introduce to you….{insert drum roll}…the Farmer’s Dozen…
Block 2 Autumn Tints:

Fabric is Hullabaloo
Block 4 Basket Weave:

Fabric is Terrain
Block 5 Bat Wing:

Fabric is Treasures and Tidbits
Block 7 Birds in the Air:

Fabric is Denise Schmidt from Spotlight and the dots are from Spotty also
Block 8 Bouquet:

Fabric is Liberty, Sweetwater and two from my stash
Block 10 Bowtie:

Fabric is Amy Butler, Happy Mochi Yum Yum and Kona dark rose
Block 12 Broken Sugar Bowl:

Fabric is Loulouthi and Kona Lagoon
Block 17 Cats & Mice:



Fabric is Amy Butler and Kona pomegranate
Block 18 Century of Progress:

Fabric is Denise Schmidt from Spotlight, spots from Spotlight and Kona aqua
Block 19 Checkerboard:

Fabric is Terrain and the background is from my stash
Block 31 Evening Star:

Fabric is Kaffe and Kona tangerine
Block 84 Spool:

Fabric is Tula Pink and Amy Butler
Block 88 Star of Hope:

Fabric is Portobello and Kona aqua
You can find the flickr group for the FWQAL here :)
1 Jan 2012
4×5 Modern Bee {round 1}
Jan
01
2012


for Laura: green, grey and aqua on white
I want to join every swap, bee and quilt-a-long I see. I can’t help myself when I see all the gorgeous things being made and I love the sense of community it brings. I love the concept of sharing with folks on the other other side of the world and I love stumbling across folks who are actually right around the corner!

for Leona: blue, green and white
Alas I can’t join in everything and I have to be careful that my sewing time on weekends doesn’t end up becoming consumed by little bits. Having said all this the 4×5 Modern Bee is right up my alley so I joined up last quarter and got partnered up with some great ladies. The flickr group for the bee is such inspiration to me – the block, the colours, the fabric choices – I love it all. If you’re not familiar with this bee you make a block of your choice in the colours requested by your partners – so five blocks in total plus one for yourself if you like.

for Naomi: navy, lime and aqua
I got a bit carried away deciding which block to make and originally decided on one of the Camelot blocks. The block I chose has over 60 pieces, hand cut and hand pieced. It didn’t take that long really to prepare my sample block in my own colours, but then it dawned on me I’d have to do this five more times and that would take quite a chunk of time. The Camelot quilt has 16 blocks and is a project that you don’t tackle expecting to finish in a weekend. It’s high on my list for this year and when I thought about the fact that I could have made 6 blocks for this I realised how overly ambitious silly I had been!!

test Camelot block
So, back to the drawing board! I’ve had the book Modern Blocks: 99 Quilt Blocks from Your Favorite Designers compiled by Susanne Woods on my bedside table for a while and the bottom left block on the cover by Lara Finlayson caught my eye.

They were great fun to choose fabrics for and pieced up really quickly. I made my block the traditional pattern – I didn’t do the extra block in the bottom left like the book. It was being off centre that I loved.

for Jess: aqua, yellow and grey
My bee blocks have been packaged up and posted off the the US and the UK and I’m looking forward to receiving five in return!

for Jill: robin egg blue and apple green
I’m going to continue to join this bee each quarter until I have enough blocks for a quilt top. You’ll notice I still have to make this block in my colours red, aqua and orange! You can find the flickr group here.