(Cattle grazing along a bike trail.) |
I am planning to gift it to a nephew (who doesn't read this blog—I don't think, anyway). He's an avid hunter and has a birthday in a couple months. I'm hoping he will like the fall colors.
I had a couple extra blocks left, so I made two throw pillows. One to go along with the quilt and one to keep.
Recently, the hubs and I took a little road trip to the southwestern part of the state.
(View from Wyalusing State Park overlooking the Mississippi River - note smoke haze in distance from western wildfires) |
I thought I had cut enough strips/pieces for the quilt, but when I came to the end of the fabric I'd cut for the predominantly light blocks, I counted them up and compared it to the pattern instructions, and realized I was only ONE-THIRD of the way done making them! And that was just the light ones. Then there were the same number of predominantly dark ones to make. Augh!
When you're only part way through making the same quilt pieces (and, let's be honest, bored with the process), what do YOU do?
Soldier on? Work on something else? Cut more bits? Put it away completely for a while? Bake some brownies?
(Recipe HERE) |
That's the current plan, anyway. Stay tuned...
In putzing around the sewing room, I recently rediscovered a piece of vintage decorator weight fabric among the stash. It was fairly small and had a gnarly seam running through it (by the manufacturer), but I thought it might make a nice tea towel if I could piece it together somehow.
But I know me. If it's "too nice" a fabric, I won't want to get it all stained up using it. And how many "nice" tea towels do I currently have languishing in drawers, unused? (Answer: Quite enough already.)
Looking around my sewing space a few days later, I spied my flatbed scanner with its vintage embroidered dresser scarf tossed over it as a dust cover. Thus, a plan was hatched to go ahead and make the tea towel but use the piece as a new scanner cover.
And it makes me smile to now see it in use, serving a function versus decorating a different drawer.
(Courthouse Steps quilt in children's bedroom at Villa Louis.) |
(Log cabin quilt in butler's quarters at Villa Louis.) |
(Metal insert in door arch at Villa Louis.) |
There were a few stops along the way for fabric shopping. A Ben Franklin store had a small table of fabrics at $2.99 per yard! I bought a few.
At another very nice quilt shop, I left empty-handed but took a picture of this cool steampunk-inspired vintage sewing machine turned lamp.
Pretty cool, huh?