Saturday, March 8, 2025
Sunshine in my Sewing Room!
Friday, February 28, 2025
The Scraps Come MARCHing In!
Welcome to March! I always love March because we usually get our first real taste of Spring. Never mind what the calendar says. The sun shines warmer and at a higher angle. Days are noticeably longer, daffodils and other bulbs begin appearing and birds that have been gone for months are back, chirping their little heads off. It seems that with every passing year, I appreciate to a greater extent all the little things that Mother Nature gifts us with!
First, some random disheartening news for us. The Veteran’s Administration turned Bruce down for benefits after 8 months of calls, exams, tests, forms, etc. Not because he didn’t quality physically - he did. Two of the three cancers he’s had in his adulthood are directly attributable to his service in VietNam in 1972 (the chemical Agent Orange): (1) the sarcoma in his right arm that we fought with surgeries for ten years and eventually led to the amputation of his arm in 2020, and (2) his current CLL - Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia. We were rejected because we “make too much money”. Two monthly Social Security incomes and his RMD - Required Minimum Distribution - required minimum monthly withdrawal from savings of all seniors 75 or over. Well, crap on a cracker. Luckily we have excellent (read: costly) private health insurance, but we just feel like we got the middle finger from Uncle Sam. Thanks for your service, Bruce, but don’t let the door hit you on the way out. Oh, and you will be owing us all the copays for the dozens of exams and tests we put you through over the last eight months before we got around to simply checking your income level. Insult, meet injury. It’s been a tough week.
But enough whining. As always when the going gets rough, I turn to sewing. Fewer calories than alcohol, and a lot more fun. Cue up the soothing instrumental music (reserved for particularly stressful times) and sew the afternoon away….
The first goal this week was to put the final border on my SAHRR (Stay at Home Round Robin). This week’s hostess was Emily from The Darling Dogwood. Emily called the kite shape. I’ll admit that I love that shape but took the easy way out. I only put the kites in the four corners of the final border so that I could frame the quilt with a solid(-ish) border. Here’s the finished top.
The top now measures 46.5 x 58.5”. This time I tried to pin the quilt neatly to the design board. Of course, I had to pin it sideways and then rotate the photo, but that’s just how it is. And trying to pin it straight obviously doesn’t work for me, LOL!!
Now, we have until March 24 to finish - quilting and binding - our tops. The final linkup will take place then, and I’ll be participating. Pictures and links to come at that time. It’s been another fun challenge, and I’d like to thank all the ladies who hosted this year’s challenge. They put in a lot of work!
Those who’ve read my blog for any amount of time know that I adore sewing string blocks. One of my goals this year is to sew ten (8.5”) blocks with black centers every month. I call these Nann’s strings, because she introduced me to them. My blocks are sewn in 4.5x8.5” halves, and then two are sewn together to make an 8.5” block. It turns out that after two months sewing these between other projects, I already have 30 blocks! Yep, I loves me my strings!
And these are the two I did in February. Try to ignore my awful orange spikes. Remember the galloping horse rule!!
With a new month comes a new color for the Rainbow Scrap Challenge. For March, Angela has called for us to dig into our yellows and enjoy their cheer! I’m down for it! On Friday, I spent a pleasant afternoon sorting the scraps, making piles, and cutting out my RSC blocks for the month.
All I can say is that the string pile in the bottom right corner doesn’t look as big in this picture as it is in real life. I’m hoping to get 30-45 blocks from it. I can hardly wait to dig into.
Today Bruce and I plan to go on a long walk and then maybe have a coffee date at Barnes & Noble. I’ve got beef and chicken strips marinating for fajitas tonight, so the remaining prep will be easy. Other than that, you can find me in my sewing room.
Have a good week, friends!
PS. To my dear friend TW (you know who you are), I’m so sorry I forgot your special day. You are always in our thoughts and hearts. We’ll call you this week to catch up.
Saturday, February 22, 2025
A Drive-By Post
Yikes! I usually write my blogpost, or a good portion of it, on Friday evenings so that I can just touch it up and publish on Saturday morning. But I totally forgot last night. So here I am, scrambling to get something written before flying out the door. Ruby and another of my friends from the neighborhood (Maureen) and I are all heading up to Park City to play at the Habitat for Humanity. That’s where, every Saturday morning, H4H has huge box loads of clothing for $2-3. This is all new, current stuff - Amazon overstock. If you’re interested in knowing more or seeing pictures, let me know.
But let’s get to business. This week in the Stay ar Home Round Robin, our hostess, Brenda at Songbird Designs, is hosting the fifth round. She called for Log Cabin blocks. This is what I came up with for this penultimate round:
After last week’s “framing” round, I wanted to include just a little bit more background white in this round. The 3” round boosted the quilt top measurements to 38.5”x50.5”. Remember that this is a kid quilt, so I’m not going for BIG or too much white!that bottom border is really bugging me, so I plan to trim a bit from the white - it looks too “eased in”. I’ll recheck the measurements and fix that this weekend before the sixth and final round is called on Monday.
I’ve planned this orange fabric that I’d like to use as my primary color for the final round. We’ll see, though, what our prompt will be.
For the Rainbow Scrap Challenge, I finished six flying geese blocks (6.5”) using blues, the February color of the month for the Rainbow Scrap Challenge.
I’m also working on 6.5” blue crumb blocks, which I’ll show next week along with my update on the black-centered half-rectangle string blocks. Oh! And I still have to complete two Halloween blocks next week to keep up with my plan of two per month. I’ve got those all cut out, so the sewing should be relatively straightforward.
Next Monday is also our February HOA Board meeting, and it will be my first time presenting as Treasurer. But I am prepared. And then on Tuesday afternoon (after my Tuesday morning Weight Watchers workshop), the HOA Board has a legal seminar to attend. But hey - after that, my week is FREE - FREE I tell you!! I plan to cloister myself in my sewing room and not come up for air until Thursday or Friday-ish. Wish me luck!
Friday, February 14, 2025
Running Hot, Cold and In Circles
This week I have a cool blue quilt finish that hasn’t been shared here before, the weekly progress on my hot-colored quilt top for the Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR), and some news (read: whining) about the beginning of the seasonal onslaught of HOA work.
Let’s start with the blues. No, I’m not going to sing for you. You’re welcome. Blue is the February color for the Rainbow Scrap Challenge. This week I completed the string blocks - 60 of them. Four groups of 15 for Quilts for Kids; the “cools” referred to in the blog title
The blocks are 6.5” square. I love making string blocks, and there is more of that planned for later in the month.
This week I also finished a quilt from scraps I obtained last year. At the 2024 World Wide Quilt Day festivities held here in the Salt Lake Valley at the Sandy Senior Center, they were distributing quilt “kits” made of miscellaneous scraps that were semi-color-coordinated. You had to sign up to take a kit and every kit had a number. They retained a picture of the scraps so that they could verify that you used most of the scraps. We were also free to add our own scraps. The challenge was to use the scraps in a quilt, of any design, and ultimately donate it to charity. Easy Peasy. I do that all the time with my scraps and Quilts for Kids.
But. (You knew that was coming, eh?). The kit looked charming on the outside, but some of the pieces were totally gag-worthy. Also, two long strips I was given had the selvage edge and little holes (you know, from the reels during the printing process) along the length of them. After trimming that off, about half the length was unusable for a 3.5” width, the minimum piece size I needed. (Clear as mud?) but I included it, along with a couple questionable gray pieces and teal pieces. I added the white and the navy. Here’s what I can up with.
What drew me to this kit was the cute dolphin WHALE fabric and the bright blue water fabric. but the stripey stuff was a challenge. Anyway, the pattern I originally drafted was for 10” (finished) squares, but I had to reduce them to 8” to accommodate the scrap sizes. The individual block pieces are cut: center white strip of 2.5x8.5”, and two side strips composed of a 3.5” square and a rectangle of 3.5”x5.5” pieces. The colored side pieces are flipped on either side of the center white strip. When sewn, it makes the 8.5” square. When the blocks are sewn, they’re flipped horizontally and vertically, like a sort of basketweave pattern. I interspersed 8.5” squares of the dolphin fabric and used almost every square inch of it.
Honestly, I was disappointedly in how the colors panned out. But it’s done, and it will be donated after I check it in at WW Quilt Day to be entered into a random prize drawing. I already have the Quilts for Kids label on it. I quilted it with loops. It measure 40x55”, a decent kid size.
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This week we were also challenged with Round Four of the SAHRR. This week’s hostess was my friend Wendy of Pieceful Thoughts. She challenged us to make sliced blocks. You know, cut the block, insert a strip or turn it or otherwise manipulate it. Clever!
This is where my hot-colored quilt top started out after last week’s round 3:
And here is where it ended up after I added this week’s round 4:
I knew the top was due for a calmer round free of angles, giving the quilt a bit of an interim frame. I was also going to type here that it would give the eyes a place to rest, but can you really say that about assorted dancing vegetables on a yellow-orange field? Probably not. In its current state, the top now measures 32.5x44.5”. If you’d like to see how the SAHRR quilt tops are shaping up after four rounds (I highly recommend it), visit Wendy’s blog and linky party HERE.
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Running in circles: New Accounts Payable system for the HOA. Drove across the valley one morning (in single-digit icy weather) to meet the accounting staff at our property management company and be introduced to the new program. Then conducted a meeting at our clubhouse same afternoon so we can train and transition the landscape volunteers to monitor and report issues - relating to pests and landscape - so I can unload the coordination of that onto someone else. It will happen, but now I am in charge of working with Bug Busters (our pest control company) too. That’s in addition to the Treasurer duties and writing the monthly newsletter. And did I mention that we have a legal seminar one afternoon in a couple weeks? Gotta know the governing statutes and where HOA responsibility ends and homeowner responsibilities start (or vice versa). It’s going to be a crazy year, and I’ve all but decided that I won’t run again next year for office.
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That’s it. On Saturday (either today or tomorrow, depending on when you’re reading this), I have Quilts for Kids, then on Sunday, Ruby and Cousin Kim come over for the Church of Bernina, which is what we call our sewing day. Heaven knows how sewing restores our souls!! Have a great week!! xo
Friday, February 7, 2025
Sewing the Blues
What a nice week! Not weather-wise, because it’s February. It’s cold and windy, rainy and snowy. But I got in a lot of fun sewing time, friend time and on Saturday both my sons and families will be over for an evening of Mexican food and fun. I bought some mini roses potted in cute ceramic ladybugs for granddaughter London (now age 15) and my daughter-in-law Kim. And chocolate too (naturally).
So, let’s start off with this week’s round for the Stay At Home Round Robin. Our hostess for Round three this week was Gail, and she called STARS. This is where my quilt top was at the end of last week:
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Last week’s progress |
First I added another red stop border to separate this round from the spikey half-square triangles of the previous round. I decided to further lengthen the piece by adding a row to the top only. I sewed up my favorite Friendship Stars with flip corners because I love the pattern it gives.
I know these photos look wonky. That’s because I’m in the (bad?) habit of pinning the four corners snugly and forgetting about pinning along the long sides. Really, it is not bowed.
Have a good week, my friends!
Friday, January 31, 2025
Blue February, SAHRR Round 2 and a Finish
Well, we’ve made it through another week of cold weather. At least (or maybe unfortunately, depending on your perspective), we’re getting another abundant snow storm. A couple of my friends and I were planning to drive up to Park City (40 minutes in good weather), but the snowstorm has forced us to postpone our Girls Day Out for the time being. But there’s always plenty of sewing to keep me out of trouble (theoretically), so I’ll take solace in that!
Let’s start with the pink scrap quilt that I quilted this week. I had to make an emergency run to JoAnn Fabrics to buy some sewing machine needles before I started because I was down to my last 80/12 needle in the machine. And let me tell you, that place might as well shut their doors. Yes, I know they’ve filed for bankruptcy again; this time liquidation instead of reorganization. Our store had removed fully half the lighting. Every other fluorescent tube was gone. Try looking for needles sizes in a half-lit store with wonky 70-year-old eyes. Talk about a needle in a haystack. I did manage to buy two packs, but wow, their shelves already looked meagerly stocked, yet unopened cartons were everywhere. Obviously not enough staff. And their ridiculous sales still continue (Buy 2 get 3 free on thread). What numbskull thought *that* was a good business practice? No wonder they went bankrupt. I got my needles (and some backing fabric for my SAHRR quilt) and was glad to leave.
Anyway, I finished quilting the scrappy pink Midnight at the Bubblegum Factory hodgepodge quilt. It finished at 39x43”. It was my last finish for Pink January in the Rainbow Scrap Challenge.
I hadn’t decided whether to add the chains on the side, preferring to wait until Round 2 was called by this week’s hostess, Anja. When Anja called half square triangles for Round Two, I sewed the chain on and added a little red stop border to bring the size up to 20.5 x 26.5”. Here’s what it looked like at that point.
One of my goals for each round is to incorporate all four major colors (red, orange, yellow and purple) as well as the coordinating print fabric. Now this may change in future rounds, but for now that’s what I’m trying to do. So I made six half-square triangles of each color to embellish each corner, and cut squares and rectangles of the print fabric to incorporate. This is what I came up with.
The camera keeps making the purple look like black, but I can assure you that in real life it’s a very rich royal purple.
Friday, January 24, 2025
Round One
Saturday, January 18, 2025
Winter Adventures
Let’s pretend that sewing and quilting are adventurous, OK? That’ll keep me honest for using the plural “adventures” in the title instead of the singular “adventure”.
In my blogpost last Saturday I mentioned that my friend Ruby and I were going over to her sister Cathy’s house to learn to load and operate their new longarm machine, and indeed we did just that. I hope there’s not going to be a quiz, because this pea brain will take more than one session to “learn” how to operate it! But I’m pretty confident about loading it now, and I at least understood what each step we took was doing and how it fit into the whole process (like marking the beginning and ending of each row). The machine had some bothersome quirks, and the woman who was training us said that those little quirks were not acceptable. It turns out that the manufacturer replaced the whole machine this week (well, the whole computer and arm). Aaaanyway, I’m still relying on my own machine for quilting my smaller donation quilts, but I look forward to another longarm training session soon.
The real adventure this week came in the form of a day trip with my friend Ruby up to Crystal Hot Springs in Honeyville, Utah. It’s an hour drive north of us, north of Ogden and Tremonton. The Hot Springs have been there forever. In fact, the information placards said the springs had been used and enjoyed by over 450 generations of Native Americans before the white settlers came along.
According to the following placard, Crystal Hot Springs has the highest mineral concentration of any place on earth. I hope the information in the sign is readable - if you care to read it.
Here are some (poor) pictures of some of the pools. It was a cloudy day, but that didn’t dampen our spirits.
A single visit to the Hot Springs is $18 per person, but you can buy a 10-visit pass (good for 2 years) for $50. Bruce is anxious to try it, so we’ll be buying that pass, you can bet on it!
So that was my non-sewing adventure, and we can turn to my Adventures in Scrap Wrangling next!
For Pink January, I sewed some string blocks (6.5”)
And some crumb blocks (also 6.5”).
I finished sewing the pink Midnight at the Bubblegum Factory quilt top together. It will get basted and quilted in the coming week - at least, that’s the plan - and I should be able to show it next week. But this week I did finish up another donated quilt top into a quilted and bound little number.
I’ll be taking this quilt (plus the 13 others I’ve finished since Thanksgiving) to Quilts for Kids this morning.
Back in my post of December 21, I talked about a Halloween quilt I’m going to make this year; sixteen blocks (12” each, finished size) surrounding a haunted house panel. I’ll be doing 2 blocks each month for 8 months, giving me all of September to sew it together and custom quilt it. Here are my first two blocks for January.
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Today, Saturday, Cousin Kim is coming over and Bruce and I will take her to lunch at this cute little cafe and gift shop nearby. Then she’ll be giving us haircuts (she’s a licensed cosmetologist). My hair needs 2-3 inches chopped off to restore its “perkiness”. Kim will be back over on Sunday to sew (Church of Bernina, LOL) with Ruby and me. The adventures never end here at Chez Kizerian.
Oh! My amaryllis finally opened this week! It has FOUR blossoms!
And you can see the swelling of a bloom-to-be on the adjacent stalk. What a treat!
The Stay at Home Round Robin actually begins on Monday with our first round design/motif assignment. That will give me several days to work on it before next week’s RSC and SAHRR post.
Have a great week. Linking up to Scrappy Saturday.