Sunday, November 9, 2025

Finished Manx square projects...

Finally, I finished a couple of projects using Manx squares I created months ago.  

One square had been completely stitched before I realized the directional fabric I'd used for the back side had not been placed going in the direction that corresponded to the front.  Not exactly an end of the world problem, but it bugged me enough that I just put it aside and contemplated never doing anything else with it.  Until last week.  Watching a tutorial on how to sew an envelope pillow cover, I was inspired to try it.

A super simple, but very effective back to use when you want to be able to remove a pillow cover.



You can't tell from the first photo that the pillow is really too small for our largish blue sofa, which at first seemed to be the obvious place to park it, but it looks kind of cute on the red recliner in the same room:


The only problem is, it's not a practical pillow.  I'm not going to want people sitting against it, smashing all those folds made by hand-stitching every piece of fabric. Since I'm not into having pillows I have to move just to sit in a chair, I'm not sure how long it will take up residence in the red chair, but for now I'm enjoying seeing it finished.  It will probably float around the house for a while looking for its perfect home.

I also finished the project I made with the four coordinating Manx squares I was working on a couple of months ago


This, I decided to finish into either a table-topper or a wall hanging.  I added triangles to the back corners where a dowel or even a flat piece of wood can be used to hang it.


Can't see them?  

Here's a closeup of one:


Now, normally, one would only need to put these triangles into the two top corners, but some may recall me mentioning how my Manx squares skew into something less than square by the time I finish making them.  I can trim them down more or less square so they look decent individually, but they are not perfect matches of each other. Well...  imagine sewing together f
our imperfect squares, and you may understand how my finished project can look more or less wonky depending on how it is hung. Since it was nearly impossible (holding it out at arm's length) to figure out which side would be the best to hang it from, I decided to just sew a triangle into all four corners so I could figure it out later - when I can hang it and stand back to see if there is a better side to hang it from.

Ah!  Another idea just popped into my head!

It is only just now occurring to me as I'm typing that this may actually look better (and less obviously wonky) hanging diagonally.  In which case, I should be able to place a wooden slat (maybe a dowel, or even a sturdy piece of carboard) going across the middle into opposite corners, that can hold this taut as the whole thing hangs from a ring sewn into the top corner.  

Here, I just snapped a picture of it on the diagonal (though I think it looks better held up on light wall):


Oh my goodness!  I like that idea a lot!   I just went from being glad it's finished, but not sure what to do with it, to being downright excited to find a spot for it!

That's all I've got on this blustery Sunday.  Snowflakes are falling, but melting as soon as they hit the ground. We'll see 50's and 60's again next week, but today I am (too soon) feeling in a wintery mood.  Brrrrr...

Sunday, October 26, 2025

First baby quilt finished...

If you've read the backstory here, you'll understand what a precious project this has been. And why getting it finished as perfectly as I could has felt important to me.  


Is it perfect?   

No.  Nothing handmade really is, but I am very pleased with how it turned out.  And thrilled at what I've learned in the process.

Last week I told how I underestimated how much fabric would be needed for the binding.  

I don't mind admitting that this past week I ripped out* the binding the first time I sewed it on, because the stitching wasn't straight enough, and I think the sewing tension was a little off.  But the second time worked beautifully.


Little white bows 
on a sweet pink background 
for a sweet little baby girl. 


The tied quilting was a perfect first experience for me.  It saved my mental energy to focus on learning how to make a neat binding.  And getting decently mitered corners.  And learning how to tidily join the ends of the binding strip.  I cannot tell where it begins and ends.  Which is exactly as it's supposed to be.

Hopefully, it will be handed of to my friend Marti this week and I can start contemplating the next quilt.  


Because I'm sure there's another quilt inside me now.  And all this learning mustn't end here.  😊



* for the non-sewists reading this...  Ripping out isn't as violent as it may sound.  It consists (especially in such a precious project) of painstakingly picking out every single stitch, one at a time.  At least, that's how I do it.  It's delicate and somewhat tedious work, but so worth it when the finished job is done well.

Sunday, October 19, 2025

Learning new skills...

When I was last here, I was chomping at the bit to finish a baby quilt I was helping a friend with. My friend picked out fabric to bind the quilt with, and I did my best to calculate how much would be needed.  I felt so sure I was bringing home a sufficient amount of fabric - actually a smidge more than needed because you know...  you just never know...  

With fabric cut and bought, I thought I'd get the quilt done lickety split.

Now might be a good time to mention, if I haven't already, that I've never made an actual quilt before, and I had never actually properly bound anything before.  My previous lick-and-a-prayer hot pad bindings became kind of embarrassing as I watched video tutorials of quilt makers working their magic to make beautiful mitered corners, and niftily joined binding strips.   

Another thing I might mention is that while I can be meticulous when it comes to details of many things, and I'm a big "measure twice (actually thrice) and cut once" sort of gal, it might surprise some that math is no where near my favorite thing to do. 

I confess... my eyes glazed when watching videos as quilt makers rattled off the math used to figure how much fabric is needed to make binding.  "Way too complicated", I thought.  The formulas seemed unnecessarily confusing, and I just couldn't summon the mental energy to try to understand what was being explained.
 
Knowing I had brought home a smidge more fabric than I thought I would need, I was confident there would be plenty.

After watching numerous videos, I began to appreciate things like... the amount of fabric that is lost when stitching strips together to create the entire length of binding, how much fabric is folded into a mitered corner, the seam allowance that is required when sewing the binding on, and nevermind that I knew I'd have to iron the binding folded over double - it just didn't dawn on me, that I needed to cut each strip of binding twice the width of what would actually show, and I had to take the seam into account twice - even though I was only making one seam. If that last bit confused you, I understand

By the time I had watched half a dozen videos and felt confident about proceeding, I realized I was going to need more fabric.  

Since Hobby Lobby puts their fabric on sale every other week, and there is no hurry to finish this blanket, it has been on hold until I can get in there this week and purchase what is needed to get this project finished already.  I only need to buy a smidge more.  😄
 
The learning curve in making this simple baby quilt has been steeper than I imagined, but it's been worth it.  I almost feel like I could go back and tolerate watching the math of calculating binding and understand it now.  Some of us just learn better hands-on, you know.

And I've not been twiddling my thumbs.  As I watched numerous videos on how to create and sew on binding, I remembered that I had some potholders I started making a year ago for gifts, but hadn't finished.  

You know what they needed to be finished?  

Binding. 
 
So, with a video at the ready on my phone beside my sewing machine, I set to work - perfecting mitered corners, and joining the ends of the binding.  


One of these days, I'll show the fun potholders I've made, but that will be after they've been given away.  My guess is the potholder recipients don't bother themselves with the fact that I have this blog, but on the off chance they do...  I'm keeping the pictures to myself for now.

In addition to binding the potholders that had been languishing in the "finish-it-already" basket, I made a binding and attached it to the colorful Manx square hotpad I showed in my last post.


It's not perfect - as a close-up of the back exposes, 🠋 but putting it aside and after not staring at the stitching for a day or so, I've concluded the person I give this to (and hopefully, I'll manage a second one) will love it simply because I made it for her.


While all this sewing has been going on, in the quiet, usually late hours, I often knit dishcloths.  I've made a dozen or more since turning my attention to autumn colored yarns, and these were given to youngest son for his birthday a week ago:

For anyone who might want to know, the dish towel was purchased at Hobby Lobby.  I knew son would love the dapper doggies.

And lastly, my fun fox got some stitching love recently, and I'm feeling the draw again to (hopefully) complete the pillow I want to turn him into.  We'll see how long that draw holds...


Sometimes it seems ridiculous to have multiple unfinished projects waiting in the wings, but then I have experiences like with the quilt binding, and I realize it's nice to have other things to easily put my hands to when plans don't go as I expect them to. 

Are you a one-project sort of person?  Or do you have multiple hobbies and projects started at any given time?




Sunday, October 5, 2025

Some unexpected fun projects...

I mentioned in my last post (about sewing with a friend) that I had a second friend who recently asked me to help her with a sewing project. Well... time flies, and since I was last in here my friend Marti has been to my place a couple of times to work on a project together.

With Marti's permission, I will share the backstory...  

When Marti was in highschool, she made a baby blanket as a sewing project for Home Ec class.  When she had her first baby a few years later, she was able to wrap her sweet little baby girl in that blanket she'd made with her teenage hands.  I think it was when Marti was pregnant with her second child (and she learned it was a girl), she bought and cut out fabric to make a similar baby blanket for Baby #2.  But, as we've all experienced, life got busy, and her plan didn't quite pan out. The second blanket was not finished. 

Now...  leaping forward 37 years, my friend's second child is pregnant with her first baby.  Recently, when Marti was at my house, I showed her some things I'd made recently, and with a glint in her eyes she told me her story of the unmade baby blanket.  Telling me she had kept the fabric and cut-out squares all these years, she asked if she could pay me to sew it up into a baby quilt.

A reflexive "No" came out of my mouth - mostly because I have made it something of a policy that I don't make things on commission.  There was also the fact that I'd never sewn a quilt before, and I knew I'd feel stressed if I took it on with the expectation of being paid.  Knowing her daughter, though (since she was a young girl), I was excited by the story, and knew I'd love to have a hand in doing something so special. I readily offered to give it a try, and if I thought it was something I could do, I'd be happy to make a blanket for Marti's newest grandchild - as a gift to Marti and her daughter.  And then...  another thought popped into my mind, and I suggested, "I have two sewing machines!  What would you think of us work together on the blankets!?!"  The baby blanket would get finished, and we'd get to spend time together!

I'm happy to say, she said yes, and soon after, we began.

Now, for a little more back story (again, I share with Marti's permission)...  The reason my friend even asked me if I'd be willing to take the fabric squares she had cut out many years ago and sew them into a quilt is because sewing them together herself had become nearly, if not completely, impossible. My friend has been losing her eyesight for years, and recently was diagnosed as being legally blind.  If I understand correctly, it is perhaps a hereditary, maybe even congenital, condition that is causing her loss of eyesight.  

While Marti has been present each time, and has been a big help in the making of this baby blanket, it became apparent at our first working on it that actually sewing wasn't something she could easily do. 

Marti had already done the hard part - once upon a time cutting out all the squares for this blanket. While we worked together, she also picked out some seams that hadn't come together well in the first attempt, and just a couple of days ago, we pinned the layers together and tied every single corner with a sweet piece of white yarn.  


Tomorrow, hopefully, we'll go together to pick out a fabric that will work well for a binding.  I can't wait to see it finished.  And I can't believe I now want to start my own quilt of some sort!

But there is another project I want to finish first. Some time back, when I was first working on Manx squares, I was telling a couple of friends about them.  One of them, a retired Home Ec teacher, showed so much interest, I thought right then, "I think I'll make her a couple of Manx hot pads!"  Recently learning she had had her kitchen painted - in yellow and green - I asked her if she could send me a picture.  She also has a piece of colorful artwork on the wall in one picture, and having been to her house before, I knew she liked color. 

So, I dug through my stash, and bought a few more colors, along with some insulating "batting" to finally make her a couple of Manx square hot pads.  Except for the binding, I've finished the first one.  



I wish I fully understood why these squares skew so badly as I'm making them.  Here's a picture to show you the skew:


Anticipating this, I chose a non-directional fabric for the back, and I can "fix" the skew by trimming it down square.  But I wish I knew why mine do this when none I've seen online seem to turn out this way.

Or maybe other sewists just don't show them untrimmed.  🤷

Hopefully, next week, I'll have at least one of these projects finished.  



Sunday, September 21, 2025

In the bag...

Recently my friend, Cindy, mentioned that she had purchased a used sewing machine, but she wasn't an experienced sewist so learning how to use it was a bit of a challenge. I'm not sure where my confidence came from, but I offered, "I'd be happy to look at it and see if I can show you how to use it!"  She immediately took me up on the offer, and as of last Thursday we've now spent three afternoons over the last few weeks sewing together.  After looking the machine over, learning how to thread it, and practicing different stitches, we decided making a project together would be a fun way for her to learn to sew.  She said she'd like to make a bag. I suggested I find an easy looking video tutorial and we follow it together.

There are quite a few tutorials available on YouTube for sewing a tote bag, and I eventually settled on this one:

What I like about the above tutorial is that it includes a lining, and uses fusible facing to give a little more structure to the bag.  And the presenter really does a good job going step-by-step, from cutting fabric to sewing a finished bag.

An experienced sewist could follow the instructions and probably finish a bag (including cutting the fabric) in a couple of hours.  Because we were taking it slow, and I thought some extra explanations might be helpful, it took us two afternoons to finish our bags.  

Cindy sewing the lining for her bag

Actually, only Cindy finished her bag last week.  I had not bought quite enough webbing (for the handles) to finish a second bag, so I ended up making a trip to Hobby Lobby for more and only today had the time to finish mine.  


I like this fabric more than I thought I would.  To be honest...  on the bolt this looked a little bit corny (to me, anyway), but finished up into a tote bag, it's pretty cute.  Since my friend also crochets, she loved the granny square print.  Now, I like it so much I'm thinking of heading back to the store and seeing if they still have any of this fabric left.


The video tutorial adds a sectioned pocket along the bottom of the lining (that gets sewn into the seam), but I wasn't paying close attention to my own bag and I sewed the lining together - completely forgetting to add the pocket along the bottom edge.  Realizing my mistake soon enough, I was able to sew a smaller pocket higher up onto the lining before sewing the outer bag and lining together. 

I lined my bag with this bright green fabric, while Cindy's has a red lining. I'm pretty pleased with how they turned out:



This next week, another friend is planning on coming over to sew a totally different project.  This was all very spontaneous, and while I wasn't looking to do anything like this, I am thoroughly enjoying it.  Both sewing, and hanging out with friends while doing so!