Monday, March 29, 2004

Zach's quilt


A quilt for our baby nephew!! As the label says, made for Zachariah Alec by Uncle Matt and Aunt Andrea. This one is a 12x20 grid of the 4" squares (making it roughly twin size), and has pockets all over the front, as well as bits of fleece from the back to tie it all together.

Machine pieced, hand tied with yellow yarn, polyester batting.

The first memory quilt (SewingBAG)


This was the first "memory quilt" that I made. A client approached me with the idea - it was made of his dad's old clothing as a memento for his mom after his dad passed away. Incorporated into the grid of 6" (?) squares of clothing were five 12" denim squares, each embroidered with the names of their children and grandchildren and framed with the red plaid that we chose to visually tie the quilt together and also to use for the backing (wrapped around for the binding as well.)

This quilt was machine pieced, hand tied with red yarn, and used polyester batting (8oz?).

Flannel and t-shirt memory quilt (SewingBAG)


 This is one of many "memory" quilts I made for clients of my sewing business. This particular one is a combination of college and high school t-shirts and a collection of flannel pajamas that the recipient's grandmother had gotten for all of the grandkids for Christmas every year. We pulled in some of the flannel pajamas onto the quilt top to make enough material, and also used some of the solid parts of the t-shirts to do the same (and to unify the color scheme - the green is a good example of this - I also used the green as my inspiration for the cotton fabric I bias cut for the binding.)

This was machine pieced, hand tied with polyester batting - probably an 8 oz weight. The back of the quilt (top photo) was a new adventure for me, piecing together all of the random bits and fitting them to make a correctly-sized rectangle.

Sunday, March 28, 2004

Owen's quilt



This was the quilt Matt and I made for our first born child, before we knew who we were expecting (boy or girl). We liked the color combination, thinking it would go nicely with the yellow in the bedrooms upstairs, and although the purple/blue was maybe a hint feminine, we thought it tended blue enough that it could go either way. We were especially delighted with the fabric we found for the border - the same blue-purple, but with tiny kitty paw prints all over it.

I took these photos of the set of three quilts after finishing Leah's the summer after Reuben was born. Owen, in the photo above next to his quilt, is five years old when the photo was taken.

The quilt was machine pieced (my first venture into curves!), machine quilted to echo the geometric pattern of the quilt, and used 100% cotton batting.

Saturday, March 27, 2004

VCBC quilt




This was a fun quilt - I believe I made this one while still working at the Hancock Fabrics store, because I think it was a store display model (meaning I didn't have to pay for the supplies, just do the sewing. That means I must have made it in 2004, even though the photo was taken in 2006.

Featured are two version of beautiful batik flannel, highlighted by black and turquoise sashing. The quilt has polyester batting and was machine quilted at the borders, and then hand tied at four points in each large square with aqua yarn. I believe it was a twin size.

We donated this quilt to Village Creek Bible Camp for their quilt auction.

Isaac's quilt



A small one - 9x12 grid of 4" finish size squares. This one was made from khaki pants instead of denim for a different, more sophisticated :) look for the first child of one of Matt's best high school friends (Kathy). The batting was polyester, and the backing was flannel. Another feature was a large-scale square with a functional pocket.

Machine pieced and serged (showing), and hand tied at every single intersection.