Friday 17 October 2014

S's 'Into each life some rain will fall' quilt top finished



I think this is probably my fastest quilt top finish ever!

I cut it out Saturday 20 September and completed sewing the top together on Sunday 21 September!

I had a weekend in Melbourne three weeks ago with dear friends.  So dear, that my girlfriend, who isn't even slightly into quilty stuff drove me halfway across Melbourne to Amitie (one of my top five favourite quilt shops) to pick out fabric for the back.




One half rainy days - since we all have some sad and dreary rainy days in our lives - and one half coming up flowers...although in this case they are more a kind of Asian inspired chrysanthemum!

So now, with quilt top finished, since I and my sewing machine are in Perth, and Niece S is in Wellington, we will go through some complicated logistics, planned to go like this:
- I send top and back to Wellington with my hubby (who was with me in Perth, with kids, for the school holidays)
- meanwhile back in Perth I make up a quilt label from bits on leftover fabric
- Hubby takes quilt to Sue Burnett, professional quilter extraordinare, in Wellington, for a simple all over rose pattern
- then I keep my fingers crossed that Sue might be able to quilt it for me before I have a week back in NZ in mid November
- if so, I buy something to bind it with, and borrow my sister-in-laws machine to finish it off - then...
- my favourite step...I get to hand it over in person to Niece S as her late birthday and early Christmas present.

It's a grand plan...no room for anything to go wrong there....


Do you like the duck wondering what on earth these mad people are doing?

Sunday 12 October 2014

Cross Currents for Kate - Finished!




Oh my it is so good to have a finish!

This quilt has taken me almost 18 months, six months of hunting out fabrics and a year in the making.  I'm inordinatly proud that it is entirely my own design...created on the design wall...and redone several times over because of:
- taking it down to create other quilts in the interim
- putting it away because I'd lost my mojo and could not think how to proceed any more
- picking it up and replace it after the wind had blown it off - twice!

So I'm delighted that it has turned out pretty close to my original rough sketch.


 
(Taking this photo we were given a hilarious running commentary from an older lady who was convinced either the quilt, or my hubby or me was going to end up in the water...and she wasn't diving into rescue us!)
 
I had the top custom quilted by Sue Burnett of Busy Bee Quilting and as ever she has done a fabulous job.  Her quilting is best seen on the back.
 
There are clouds in the sky, shells on the beach and a variety of different waves including turbulence where the currents meet in the middle of the quilt.
 

She has also included an orca.....you can just make it out in this photo....




And a seagull, that mirrors those on the front of the quilt....I love how the seagull is flying up the path of the waves.



I was keen to include a single yacht, off doing its own thing.  The two brigh blue fabrics in this photo are both silk, so it will be interesting to see how well they wear.

 
 
Not the best photo of the label - its a little hard to read, but I managed to sneak in a little of this wonderful whale and fish linen (released to late for me to include in the top).
 
 
 
 
Now the quilt will travel back to Wellington, New Zealand with my husband, and then up to Auckland as a late birthday/Christmas present.
 




Tuesday 23 September 2014

Far far away....starting another project

I have lots of fabulous neices.  Two of them have had a particularly rough year.  While I am yet to start a planned quilt for the Niece E, I decided to leap frog over hers and start something for Niece S first.

I bought the Lewis and Irene, Threaded with Love Town and Country fabric below, the one with the great houses and trees some months ago.  I loved it so much I went back for an extra 2m...so this has inspired my colour choices.  The rain clouds will go in....into every life some rain will fall...but rain also brings new life

Then I saw this and decided it would be the perfect design.  I can't wait for my copy of the book to arrive so have guesstimated measurements and will work on each picture square at 5inches finished.

Finally I have gathered up a variety of choices out of my stash, that I thought might appeal to Niece S ..how many frogs must we kiss till we find a prince....and in the meantime some of us might hope to run far far away....away from domestic chores....but sooner or later the sweet fruits of summer will return.


Keep your fingers crossed for me that I can get this one completed faster than some of the others I a working on!

Saturday 30 August 2014

Churn dash perhaps?

About a fortnight ago on one of my 'discover my new city' drives I visited Calico and Ivy, a lovely quilting and knitting shop in Mosman Park that has some beautiful fabrics including Liberty.  I told myself I was visiting to try to find just a little fabric for more of my hand pieced hexagons.  But despite my best efforts, (actually let's be honest no resistance was shown at all) a bundle of gorgeous brown, pink and cream found its way home with me.

While back in NZ I remembered I had a fat quarter bundle of English Garden Grey Abbey fabrics, so put this altogether with some natural linen from my stash and this is what you get....


One of the things I have been challenging myself to do for awhile is make more use of the pile of quilting books I have.  I am a big Denyse Schmidt fan and have spent much time pouring over 'Modern quilts: Traditional inspiration'.  I have adapted one pattern from this book already, the rail fence quilt I made for my Dad and blogged about previously.  And I have been thinking about making a churn dash quilt for some time....so I am thinking....


The final critical ingredient is my beloved sewing machine.  It is finally in Perth.  I bought it back with me this last week.  With the help of a very accommodating work mate, it was transferred on and off three separate flights.  Today I face up to checking whether it has come through undamaged.  Wish me luck.......





Saturday 23 August 2014

Liberty smocked childs dress 1968




My mother and my grandmother made every effort to dress us beautifully.

This blue and white liberty smocked dress was made in 1968 for my sister, for her second birthday party.  It is size 18mths - 2years and very tight fitting through the bodice.

I think this is where my personal love affair with Liberty began.  The fabric is so pretty with its blue flowers (I think they might be violets?) and so soft, yet extremly hard wearing as this dress has been worn a number of times, first by my sister, and later by other young cousins.

This is my sister at our combined birthday party, looking beautiful but slightly disconcerted, with her matching blue dolly cake...(check out the wonderful Mum's with their great 1960's dresses behind).


 
And here we are together.  I love the short hemlines that were standard for small girls in the 1960's.



My grandmother worked the embroidery on white organza across the front of the dress.  I adore this embroidery. It is worked in a single strand of DMC cotton so is very fine.  Five colours have been used; a soft green, mid blue, soft pink, bright pink and a soft yellow.

The pattern was her own and while it is repeated, the repetition is not exact so I suspect she repeated the second side by eye rather than working over a traced pattern.









My mother worked the beautiful smocking, which is repeated front and back in five different shades of blue.  The smocking is worked in three strands of DMC cotton and includes stem and cable stitch in various combinations.  There are 25 rows of smocking, with the back identical to the front.



 
 
 

The dress is front bottoning, although the buttons are simply for show.  It does up with a series of tiny hooks and handworked eyes.

The neckline and sleeve cuffs are trimmed with a purchased organza trim, edged in blue.

 
 
The back is reasonably simple, just the repeated smocking - no embroidery. 
 
 
 
 
 
The dress was made with a deep hem that has been let down in the intervening years, so it now appears much longer than in the photos above.
 
It comes with matching knickers, in the same blue Liberty, in case your wee poppet is active and wishes to spin around in her pretty dress.
 








WIP Latest set of hand pieced hexagons

It has been very quiet on the stitching front as I commute between Perth and Wellington, get settled into my new role and try to spend a little time with my family.  Oh and pack up my fabrics and sewing machine!

But I have managed a few more hand pieced hexagons...




My favourite in this group is the wee hedgehogs wandering in a circle round the brown gingham. 

Hedgehogs are one (of the many) things I am overly enthusiastic about!  They were introduced to New Zealand by the British in the 1800's.  However they were either not introduced to Australia, or did not survive, so they are one of the things I'll miss as we make our home in Perth.



 
 
I'm pretty happy with the blue daises too, I was very careul to try and get the pattern perfectly lined up and I think it has been worth the effort!
 
 


 
 
It will be great to have my sewing machine with me in Perth, from now on, but with the ability to machine sew restored to me, this quilt might remain in the 'go slow' pile for awhile longer.

Saturday 26 July 2014

WIP Kaffe Fasset Tapestry Garden - Sunlight through Glass Quilt

 

In May 2007 my dear friend Christine and I attended a Kaffe Fassett class in Wellington.  She has blogged about it here.  It was so exciting to actually get to meet him and Brandon, and have the chance to get a few pointers on each of our quilts.  I learnt and a lot, even though some of the lessons are still being absorbed.

The class was based around the Tapestry Garden quilt first featured in 'Kaleidoscope of Quilts'.

I love the colour blending approach Kaffe Fassett employs, where by placing similar tones/colours next to one another the eye becomes confused as to where one block finishes and the next begins. 



I decided that since the quilt top itself was a learning exercise, I should continue skills building by attempting to free motion quilt it.  The down side of this admirable self imposed goal, was that the quilt top is HUGE, 241cm by 158cm.  Certainly the biggest I have ever tried to quilt myself.

Consequently my enthusiasm for the quilting has waxed and waned!




I finished sewing the top not long after the class, I think it was completed by October 2007.  I think I began quilting it in New Zealand shortly after, then stopped while we moved to Australia.  I started again in Melbourne, sometime in 2008 and did some more in Singapore in 2010 (boy was it hot!  I had air conditioner blasting and still could only manage about an hour at a time!).

Inspired by Christine, who has recently finished hers, I got mine out again, and have spent another 7 hours on it over the last week, while back in New Zealand with family.



While I have definitely made some good progress, it is still not finished.  However, I am enthused again, and my FMQ is improving. Slowly.  Parts of the quilt top are awful...but there is evidence of steady progress.

Given I am now back in Perth for a month, without my sewing machine, there will be no further progress for awhile, but I'm OK with that.  I'll aim to finish it within the next 12 months!





 

Friday 25 July 2014

WIP Hand stitched hexagon Mosaic Quilt





In March 2008, not long after we moved to Melbourne, I attended a class at Patchwork on Central Park, with Adrienne Armstrong to hand stitch a hexagon quilt.

Adrienne designed the pattern based on this quilt......



featured in the book 'Historic Australian Quilts' by Dr. Annette Gero.  The original is attributed to Frederica Mary Josephson of Sydney, c1850.  (If you are unfamiliar with the books Dr. Annette Gero has published on historic Australian quilts, they are well worth checking out - beautiful quilts in beautifully produced books).

While some of the other women in the class finished making their blocks over the six weeks of the class, life got in the way for me.  I made a good start, but got nowhere close to finishing.

But I like a slow burn project....a REALLY slow burn project...so I've been stitching away ever since.  I go in bursts.  There are some periods when I make no blocks for months.  However it is a great project to take travelling, and since I'm doing a few long haul plane flights at the moment, I'm underway again.

Here are some of my earliest blocks...  I so love the wee girl in the spotted headscarf....and lots of bits of Liberty have made their way in...



Here is the detail of some of the blocks from the photo at the top.






There is an intended deign ethos - but I keep straying from it - I have always wanted the finished top to be scrappy, to have lots of interest, (Adrienne's original had some amazing fabrics that kept me looking for ages), and to have something of a vintage feel to it.   And I have tried to use scraps from many of the other quilts I have sewn while working on this, the photo below includes some of the feature second hand shirting from the quilt I made for my Dad.


 



 

The top needs 233 complete hexagons.  So far, I have made 186.   Can I just say that again.... 186 handstitched hexagons....For someone who is a little inclined to start many more things than she finishes, I'm very proud to have persisted this far). 

And I WILL finish this, because I love it.  Only 47 to go - and then the fillers for around the edges.

Here are the blocks I am working on at the moment - auditioning background.





It's all about the journey really......

Do you have any slow burn projects on the go?

Saturday 12 July 2014

1940s smocked child's dress

I come from a long line of creative women.

I want to share some of the textile treasures we hold in the family, through my blog.  Why?
Because they are objects of beauty and careful craftsmanship, currently stored away in cupboards and drawers.  They deserve to be more widely shared.  Further, I want to create a record for family members, and as a source of personal inspiration.

The first of these vintage textile treasures I want to share is a smocked dress, made for my mother, Wendy Williams, in circa 1942- 1945.





This dress is made from trabalco.  A fabric I had never heard of before.  It has the appearance of cotton.  I can find advertisements for trabalco fabric in womens periodicals from about 1919 - 1940 but no further information.  My mother has told me that trabalco was often used for childrens clothing in the war years when few floral cottons were available.  She remembers this dress as being well starched and somewhat scratchy to wear!

The dress was smocked by my grandmother Dinah Williams (nee Sloman) and sewn up by my great grandmother, Esme Sloman (nee Sommerville, b December 1886, d 1959).  My grandmother, who we called Gee, enjoyed smocking, tabestry and knitting.  I can recall her hand stitching, but never saw her sit at a sewing machine, and am not certain if she even owned one.  But she had little need to, since my great grandmother, known as Gargee, sewed clothes beautifully.


In this photo you can see my grandmother and three of her four children.  My mother is second from the left.  Both she had her sister are wearing smocked dresses, similar to the one featured in this post.

The dress would fit a little girl between about 3 and 6.  It has a chest size of 60 cm.  It is machine sewn with beautiful French seams at both sleeve and side seams.  It buttons down the back (8 green buttons, now faded), and is smocked front and back.  The dress has cream (now discoloured) collar and cuffs edged with blue blanket stitching.  It has a small hem, only 1cm, and shows no signs that the hem has been let down at any stage.  (It was common to make smocked dresses with big hems that could be let down so the child could continue to wear then as they grew).


The fabric on the outside of the dress is faded from the bright Kiwi sun.  But on the inside the colours are still bright.


I love the colours of this dress, picked up in the smocking, so bright and pretty.



The smocking is 10cm (4inches) deep, in 6 colours; dark navy, white, mid pink, yellow, green, mid blue.  There are 7 bands of smocking ranging from 1-6 rows of stitching in each band, using three stitches stem, cable and wave stitch, with a mirror image repeat from the 6 rows of blue wave stitch in the centre.


My favourite part of this dress is where it has been invisibly mended.  At some point the dress has had a deep rip, down the edge of the back placket, from between the 6th and 7th buttonhole almost to the hem of the dress.  My great grandmother has carefully repaired this rip, using herringbone stitch on the inside, and covering this on the outside, by a piece of fabric, perfectly aligned, appliquéd over the rip, making the mend almost invisible.  It speaks of such care and pride in the work and the importance of ensuring a wartime dress can continue to be worn.

This is the mend from the inside...


And this is what you can see on the outside...


The dress is too fragile now to be worn.

At some stage I want to use the colours, the squares of the gingham, and maybe the patterns of the smocking as inspiration for a quilt.  Perhaps a mini quilt?