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Spring Clean Your Studio Blog Hop!

Welcome to my studio here at Pinwheel Productions Quilting! I’m excited to be a part of this blog hop for several reasons. First of all I love getting to see how other people organize and manage their sewing spaces. I get ideas of things to try and ways to approach my own studio without ever leaving my house. Second, I always need some impetus to clean up my studio.

I am a pile person. I have been a pile person all of my life. As I work, I make stacks of things. There are stacks in every room of my house, and like dishes and laundry it is a continual battle to keep up with them. I have noticed in my studio, that as I work, I make piles of stuff. I work til something hits a critical mass, then I clean up. I will note that finishing a project is not always a clue to pick up, though maybe it should be. My primary key that I need to clean up is when I need my whole cutting table to square up a quilt. The cutting table and the ironing board are my two worst points of accumulation. It used to be the long arm, but in this studio setup, I’m using my long arm a lot more than before so it stays fairly neat.

This studio is new for me. I built the house last year and moved out here in August. I designed the room specifically to fit the long arm and allow me to have a sewing room in this house, despite the house been a smaller footprint than my previous house. I have hard floors so rolling my chair is easy and so is cleaning up threads. My favorite part of the room are the lights I have in the ceiling over my sewing space and over the long arm. I have noticed that I do more work during the day when the light is good, so in this studio I needed enough lighting to be able to work at night. I have 10 LED can lights and a ceiling light and when they are all turned on, it is BRIGHT in there.

The storage you see is only about half of the fabric storage – it’s IKEA Kallax with drawers and bins and so far it is working well. The other half is in my master closet and we are not going to look at that. The hash tag was spring clean your studio, not tackle that giant mess that exists in your master closet. Good thing too, I’m still not ready to face that after moving. I’ll get there, one project at a time. I’m in the process of cutting up my stash right now anyway; I’m really focusing on scrappy scrappy quilts so having precut strips and squares is a big help.

The biggest change with this studio clean out is that I finally have my pin cushions on display. I love pin cushions. I make them and I have people gift them to me. I’ve always had this idea that I could use the upper shelves of this bookcase to display my pin cushions, but I never got around to cleaning up the junk so that I could do so. I now can present to you my pin cushion display (well most of them anyway, there are still some that aren’t up there because they are too big or they are in use around the house. Yes I have a lot of pin cushions)

I’ll leave you with the view out my studio window of my back yard. I like to tell myself that I’m supporting the bee and butterfly population by leaving the back 3 acres unmowed, but honestly it’s because I’d rather be in sewing than out mowing. This time of year the wild flowers are starting and I already have some wonderful Indian Paintbrush blooming and giving it color.

If you are wanting to keep up with the blog hop, below is a list of all the participants along with the date of their post. If you get behind, no worries at all, you can always go back and check out a post after their date. I hope we can all enjoy the virtual tours, and learn some things about how others manage their studios!

April 1 – Sam Hunter – http://www.hunterdesignstudio.com

April 2 – Marian Pena – http://www.seamstobesew.com

April 3 – Jennifer Fulton – http://www.inquiringquilter.com/questions

April 4 – Martha Wolf – http://Www.pinwheelprodns.com

April 5 – Jennifer Strauser – http://www.dizzyquilter.com

April 6 – Steph Carton – http://www.theelimonster.com/blog

April 7 – Simone Fisher – http://www.simonequilts.com/blog

April 8 – Kate Colleran – http://www.seamslikeadream.com

April 9 – Carlina Moore – http://www.alwaysexpectmoore.com

April 10 – Jen Frost – http://www.faithandfabricdesign.com/blog

April 11 – Leanne Parsons – http://www.devotedquilter.com

April 12 – Becca Fenstermaker – http://www.prettypiney.com/blog

April 13 – Sarah Myers – http://www.quilted-diary.com

April 14 – Mitzi Redd – http://www.reddhomestead.com

April 15 – Jeanette Larson – http://www.Jenonthefarm.com

April 16 – Camille Ainsworth – http://www.stitchinthenw.com

April 17 – Becky Philips Jorgenson – http://www.patchworkposse.com

April 18 – Bobbie Gentili – http://www.geekybobbin.com/category/blog

April 19 – Janellea Macbeth – http://www.janelleamacbeth.com/blog/

April 20 – Lisa Ruble – http://lovetocolormyworld.blogspot.com

April 21 – Debra Davis – http://www.tuning-my-heart.com/blog

April 22 – Rona Herman – http://www.Ronatheribbiter.com

April 23 – Sue Griffiths – http://www.duckcreekmountainquilting.com

April 24 – Sarah Ruiz- http://www.saroy.net/

April 25 – Jessica Caldwell – http://www.desertbloomquilting.com/

April 26 – Tammy Silvers – http://tamarinis.typepad.com

April 27 – Ebony Love – http://www.lovebugstudios.com/blog

April 28 – Cheryl Sleboda – http://blog.muppin.com

Spring Cleaning is HERE!

I’ve teamed up with a bunch of quilters on line to do a Spring Clean Your Studio Blog Hop! Starting April 1, every day a different quilter will post on their blog before and after photos of spring cleaning, discuss their favorite parts of their studio, things they’d like to change, and some tips for keeping ahead of the clutter.

I’m scheduled for April 4, so I will have an out of sequence post on a Saturday, but I will publicize it the Monday afterwards as well. I will also be posting the list of participating blogs so that you can visit other blogs to see what they are doing. If you are on on social media, follow the hash tag #springcleanyourstudio2020 and #springcleanyourstudiobloghop to keep up with what folks are doing

This is a great opportunity to follow along, get to see a lot of different sewing spaces and maybe tackle your own studio in the process. I hope you join us!

Little Steps to Big Progress

The cover photo to this post may not look like much, but it’s the hanging sleeve going on my quilt for the Dallas Quilt Show. The quilt has to be dropped off on Wednesday, March 11, and this photo was NOT taken Tuesday night at midnight.

Most of my life, I have managed deadlines by waiting til the very last minute, then burning the midnight oil. This is not a good plan for a number of reasons, obviously, but I never seemed to be able to get myself in gear earlier than the night before something was due.

A few years ago I started to notice a shift, and this past year it’s really been noticeable to me that my planning skills and execution are getting better and better. I’m doing things well ahead of my deadlines, and leaving myself time to adjust and handle unexpected bumps in the process. So here is my show quilt, and it’s Saturday and I’m putting on the sleeve rather that late Tuesday night.

I really wish the rest of this blog post could tell you what fantastic tips and process I have used to effect this change, but honestly I’m not really sure how I came to make the change. I’m keeping my calendar and my lists the same way I always have done. Looking really closely at what I’m doing, the only thing I can put my finger on is that I’m getting much better about not getting distracted by bright shiny projects on the way. I’ve noticed I’m able to tell myself that I realize something is very appealing but I have something else I need to finish first. Who knew this old dog could learn such a useful new trick. I need to get better at planning out my blog posts next!

Doing the Dishes – the mundane tasks in life

One of the great disappointments of adult life, is that absolutely everything you do has two parts – one the great fun, and one the mundane maintenance. Like doing the dishes. I love to cook, but it makes dishes. Lots of dirty dishes. I love having a variety of clothes to wear but wearing clothes makes for lots of laundry.

Sewing is no different at all. Sewing anything means cutting stuff out, which I hate, and cleaning up the sewing room when I’m done, which I also hate. Oh and don’t get me started on ironing. I tolerate all these things, and do them somewhat grudgingly because I enjoy the primary activity enough to make it worth while.

The last couple months, I have been metaphorically doing the dishes on my website. A friend helped me do a major overhaul, pulling out things that I don’t use, cleaning up stuff that has broken, and fixing really weird stuff like how the header would insist on staying on the screen as you scrolled down. I couldn’t figure that one out at all.

You, my dear Reader, will probably really not notice much difference at all, other than that stuff WORKS correctly now, but it took rather a chunk of time and effort to get it to that point. I know going forward that I will have to do the dishes on the website regularly to keep working smoothly, that’s just part and parcel of having a blog and website. It feels pretty darned good to have this done. It’s like after a long weekend, getting the kitchen cleaned up to where I only have one or two things to clean makes it seem so much easier.

In all things, I am learning that keeping up with the dishes as you go is much easier than doing nothing for 3 days and having a Mt. Everest of dirty dishes to over come. I know this but putting it into practice is tricky. I do tend to procrastinate (I know. You are all shocked. Thank you for that.) so I have to push myself to do just 5 minutes worth now, so that I don’t have 5 hours worth later.

So in life. Keep doing the dishes. Do them often. Keep up. Everything has dishes.

Making Something Out of Nothing

One of the things I have always loved about quilting is how a whole lot of stuff comes together to make a lovely quilt. Thanks to a group who loves swaps, I have really come to appreciate the really scrappy quilt. We have exchanged a lot of things: hourglass blocks, 5″ squares, log cabin blocks, lots of stuff – and since a number of people have been involved in the swaps, the stack of stuff I get back tends to be a very random, unrelated stack of things.

The last few years, my eye has been drawn to really scrappy quilts. I’m using patterns that focus on the contrast between light and dark more than a specific color or style of fabric. I have been cutting up my stash (that’s a long term effort for sure) and more and more, I am finding fabrics that on their own, don’t go with anything, but when cut up fit right into my scrap quilts

I am also noticing, while working on several projects at the same time, that there is a whole lot of chaos and nothing for a long time, then all of a sudden there are blocks that can be sewn together as a top. I don’t think I will ever get tired of watching all of the chaos and destruction of my cutting table suddenly coalesce into a stack of blocks that are enough to make a quilt. This is the one and only are of my life, where my effort directly translates into taming the insanity and creating something good. I seem to really need that a lot of late.

One of my projects is a quilt made up of 256 6″ squares with a circle appliquéd on each one. When I started it was a stack of pretty fat quarters in a plastic box. Then it was a stack of circles cut out and a stack of squares. I’m about half way through the applique process and all of a sudden I have a box of finished blocks and I can now start to see what the finished quilt is going to look like. It’s so exciting to see it start to come together.

Another project is 169 6″ pineapple blocks. So far I have 26 completed, but that’s enough to see my happy little stacks coming together and I can see the promise of that project coming together even though there is a long road of strip cutting and piecing ahead of me.

I know no matter what all happens out there in the world, I can continue to make something out of nothing happen in my sewing room.

When Quilting Goes Wrong, Have a Ripping Good Time

There is a running joke about me and seam rippers. I even have a mini quilt on the wall, made by a dear friend, that is a paper pieced seam ripper. I hate to rip. I will do a lot of things to avoid ripping. That being said, there are times when it is just necessary and I have to suck it up and do what is right.

I tried a new design on the long arm over the holiday. I have wanted to do a nice Baptist Fan for ages, and I got a design and gave it a whirl. I need to note that this is a tricky pattern, as the rows have to nest exactly for it to look right and in 14 years of owning a long arm I have never been successful at doing this.

It was with great trepidation and excitement that I got a pattern and of course, started it off on an important quilt, not on a practice quilt. I’m not sure what is wrong, but it wouldn’t sew off. Keeps saying there’s an obstruction and it stops. I think somehow it’s a combination of the speed of the machine and the long sweeping arcs of the pattern because the error always happens on the outermost two bands of each fan. EVERY TIME. Oh my lamb chops, I was tearing my hair out. One third of the way in to the first row, I realized that I was not going to be able to figure this out right now, and that this wasn’t the quilt to do the figuring on. So I started over using a design that I know my machine loves to sew out and it went without a single hitch (which is another sign that it’s something with that design, not a problem with my machine alone).

So now I have a completely quilted quilt, with 1/3 of the first row that includes a badly formed baptist fan. Heavy sigh as I contemplate the seam ripper. I spent 4 hours last night sitting in my big chair with the TV on while I painstakingly removed the quilting stitch by stitch. I know for me it is much easier to do that when I can manipulate the quilt instead of leaving it on the farm and picking it out there, but what a nightmare. I’m probably about 75% of the way done picking out just that 1/3 of a row, but it will be so worth it. I keep telling myself that over and over.

I’m going to have to go back with something that matters far less and try to figure out what is wrong with the fan design. When I just trace the pattern (computer only, no needle running) it traces fine, so I suspect that the speed is too great on the longest arcs, so the needle drags just enough to make the machine think it has hit an obstruction so it throws an error. I have some ideas on how to counter act that problem but it’s going to take some practical testing to figure that out.

This hits the big question in my quilting life. I want it to be easy. I don’t want to have to test on 3 different quilts to figure out exactly how I have to hold my mouth to sew this pattern off. On the other hand, knowing how to combat this behavior for a pattern with long arcs that could move too fast would be really useful knowledge. I need to suck it up and do this but I need to do some research first so I have some clue of what I’m doing. In the mean time, I still have a lot of ripping to do…..

A Wealth of Friends

Quilting has brought a lot of things into my life – there is always a quilt to warm you in my house. There’s fabric to warm you; lots of fabric. There’s a whole room dedicated to quilting but the biggest things that quilting has brought is friendship.

This weekend I spent with 70 or so ladies from the Dallas Quilt Guild at a retreat. There was sewing and laughter and singing and reminiscing of friends who were no longer with us and more sewing. Sewing can be a solitary pass time, but quilters have always found ways to create a community. Women used to gather around a frame to quilt a quilt together in a quilting bee. While many modern quilters still hand quilt, a lot of us do not, and have found other ways to share our passion and our community.

At retreat, we all bring our sewing machines, and equipment, and projects and setup in a resort ballroom and sew for a long weekend. I always get a ton of work done at a retreat because I don’t have the distraction of housework and laundry and there is somebody else is doing the cooking. Some ladies don’t sew much at all, but enjoy the maximum companionship for the weekend instead. Another nice benefit is getting to walk around and see what everybody else is working on. There are always some new techniques or patterns that I’ve never seen before, as well as a lot of “well I started this in 1998 and I’m finally going to finish it”. I brought a bit of both with me on this trip.

Quilting means there is always a common connection so it’s easy to make new friends. I went on my first Quilting Cruise in 2015 – didn’t know a single person in the group but I figured that since we were all quilters, I would make a few friends. That excursion has led to a treasured group of friends who still travel together all over the globe, sewing and knitting as we go.

Over the years I have noticed that my work friends tend to come and go. We are friends because we are thrown together by a project and the regularity of work and as jobs change, those friends come and go. Quilting has given me a circle of friends over the last 30 years that has remained very constant. Throughout our lives, quilting is the thread that ties us all together. This weekend especially, I am renewed by those connections. I can sew at home any time I want, but retreating reminds me of the wealth of friends I have gained through quilting.

What am I doing here??

I think I’m having a bit of an existential crisis with my quilting business. I started this seriously back in 2004. I like to design patterns. I like to teach. I like to write. In this day and age, that means having a business, and having a website, and having a blog. Along with those items come a lot of nit picky details. Things like taxes, keeping up the website (I had a whole other post on that) and all of these things come at a cost. Literally. I find myself at a cross roads.

A year ago, I set a goal for myself to write on my blog daily, and here I am now, having hit 53 out of the last 55 weeks (I think, that’s a mental calculation, didn’t keep it on paper). As we get to 2020, I’m thinking about what I should tackle next and I think it’s time for a new website. I converted to WordPress about three years ago and boy have I learned a lot – which is code for boy have I done a lot of things wrong and I think it’s time for an overhaul. Because I didn’t fully understand WordPress when I moved over to this platform, I ended up with a website with a TON more features than what I really need. I will never use those features yet they are built in and I have to maintain them or the whole thing goes south. Doing a redesign will take time and money and I know will be worth it but there are days I’m really regretting moving away from Blogger as a platform. I remind myself that we can’t grow if we stay always in the same spot without trying anything new.

I really want to develop a site that lets me share my love of quilting and the things that I work on and design for myself. It doesn’t have to be complicated to accomplish that, and I’d like to be able to spend more time quilting and less time trying to keep my site going. If you look now, I think most of my secondary pages are broken, not sure why, and if you noticed there’s not a featured image on this post, it’s because Word Press has decided that I can’t upload new photos, so until I get that figured out, there won’t be any new images on the blog. Yet another thing that was working great and is now broken.

I’m curious to see where 2020 takes, but I know I will get there in style with a new website. Keep your eyes on this space, I should have something to announce in the February time frame.

Never Too Late

I started seriously quilting 30 years ago. That’s a long time for me to work continuously at a skill. The only things I’ve done longer than that are sew clothing, knit and play the piano. I’ve come a long way in 30 years, just like I’ve come a long way from when I started to knit and when I started piano lessons.

I can still remember my first trip to the Dallas Quilt show. I don’t know the year, probably was early 90’s sometime, but what I do remember was having my breath taken away by a quilt. It was a log cabin block with appliquéd floral wreaths on them. It spoke to everything in quilting that appeals to me and I immediately signed up for the block of the month kits for the quilt. I got the first one and started right away and it didn’t take long for me to realize I was in way over my head. The piecing of the blocks wasn’t bad, but the hand appliqué was awful. I knew I had the option to do machine applique, but that’s not what I wanted for this quilt. I wanted hand work to go along with the bits of embroidery that were incorporated in the patterns.

I collected all the block kits and set them aside a long time ago. Many lifetimes ago actually, many houses, many moves and several states ago if I am really honest. There were times I wasn’t sure if I even still had it, but it wasn’t something I would have gotten rid of if I had come across it while downsizing.

This past weekend, I worked more on unpacking my sewing room. I am down to 16 boxes and this is the closest to being unpacked than I’ve been in a very long time. I was getting down to the bottom of a box when a green fabric caught my eye. It was my Log Cabin Wreath kits. I pulled them out of the box and it looks like they are all there, including the one that I started and put away all those years ago. The green fabric is very dated now. It’s very early 90’s quilting, if you know what I mean. The background fabric is fine, and most of the fabrics for the wreaths are fine, but I will probably update the green. Actually, what I might do is keep some of that green, as a nod to the original project, but make the green part scrappy and add in a number of other fabrics.

I am positive now, that my skills have matured to the point where I can do this project justice. The patterns gave me the same jolt of excitement that they did all those years ago. I am beyond excited that I still have them after all these years, and I cannot wait to get started on this project. I know I have 85 billion projects already in work but this one has been waiting for a very long time.

Odd vs Even

As long as I can remember, I have heard the design guideline that the eye is drawn more to odd numbers of things than to even numbers. Somehow the even numbers looks like it is missing something to make it symmetrical. I didn’t realize how much this had applied to my quilting too, until recently.

A few years ago, a pattern called St. Louis Sixteen Patch by sewfreshquilts (you can google it to find the tutorial) was popular on InstaGram, and as indicated by the title, the block is a 4 x 4 layout of squares. I made it with a stack of fat quarters and ended up with a quilt big enough for my bed, so that is where it resides.

A group of friends came over to sew last weekend, and one of them noticed the quilt and said that she’s starting to look more and more at blocks with an even layout instead of odd, and it got me to thinking.

I have always tended to favor blocks with an odd layout – a 9 patch, and a carpenter star are two good examples. They are symmetrical no matter which way they end up in the quilt, and they make some nice secondary designs. When it comes to the actual quilt, I have always used an odd layout because it makes the quilt feel finished somehow. Now I’m finding myself playing more and more with variations of a 4 patch: the sixteen patch, a double 4 patch, and pinwheel blocks to name a few. It changes the look of the finished quilt, but I like the designs so I’m going to keep exploring this.

What are the blocks you are playing with now? Do you favor an odd layout vs an even layout?