Sunday, July 12, 2009

FREEZER PAPER APPLIQUÉ CATS CLASS

It was a fun-filled Saturday for those who attended the Pussy Willow Gang appliqué class at the Attic Window Quilt Shop. The women made such cute cats and they called out to be shared. Above is Julie’s cat, waiting to be sewed onto the background.

Above Yvonne is applying starch to the edges of the fabric that extend from the template.

Julie uses a stiletto to pull the fabric around the template as she applies a hot iron to get that crisp crease.

Barb’s cat is ready for the templates to be removed so the pieces can be arranged and glued to the background for final sewing.

Yvonne glues down the pieces of her cat to make an easy-to-take anywhere hand sewing project.
Barb’s cat is now glued to the background and ready sewing.

Lee Ann’s cat just needs it whiskers and it will be perfect!

Several people have asked “what is the discount” on fabrics at the Annual Christmas in July PJ Sale. Chris said that is a surprise! She said that people should come early, because the earlier you come the better the discount. Also, remember that you receive a special gift during the first hour of the sale, but only if you have your PJ’s on.
Have you ever heard of making a purse out of a book? Check out Make A Purse Book and see how it's done. Interesting! Bet that teenager would love it.
Until next time: Happy Quilting
Caroll

Friday, July 10, 2009

DIG THESE SPOOKY SHOES

I’ve had such a good time making these witch’s shoes for Jane’s Spooktacular Halloween Swap that I just had to show them to you. Of course I got all the fabrics at the Attic Window Quilt Shop. (How do you like the baggy hose?)

Each one is a little different, as I was using up my scraps. There are 12 of us in each group. I’m in group 5 and am anxious to see what others are doing. I will post this pattern in September for you who are not in the swap and would like to make a little Halloween wallhanging of your own.

Have you ever made a mouse pad? Yes, you can run your mouse over this star point block with no problems. Check it out at Quilted Paradise.
Until next time: Happy Quilting!
Caroll

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

CHRISTMAS IN JULY

It’s that time of year again: Christmas in July. This lovely block is just one of many blocks from a quilt sample at the Attic Window Quilt Shop. It is called Holiday Redwork and the pattern (from the Stitch Connection) is available at the shop. It’s shown in Redwork, but can also be done in appliqué.

Remember, all the month of July (oops I goofed. I was supposed to say) CHRISTMAS fabrics are on sale at 20% off. The Annual Christmas In July PJ Sale will take place Saturday, July 25th from 8 to 10 a.m. If you come into the shop with your pajamas on during those two hours that day, you will receive a special discount. Come in during the first hour and you will also receive a special gift, but only if you have your PJs on! (No pajamas, no discount.)

This is a picture of Maggie’s Shooting Star quilt. It is a Laundry Basket pattern which can be purchased at the shop. When I saw the individual blocks earlier I just couldn’t imagine how it was going to go together and here it is. What a lovely quilt.

I always hesitate to tell you to go to certain sites for patterns when we have such lovely patterns right here in the shop. However, you bag lovers might want to check out this DYI blog. It has lots of bag ideas.
Until next time: Happy Quilting!
Caroll

Sunday, July 5, 2009

MAKE THIS GIFT FOR SOMEONE SPECIAL

Lee Ann has done it again. She made this beautiful diaper bag as a sample for the shop. What new mother wouldn’t love to have this? Got a baby shower coming up? This diaper bag is sure to please. The pattern can be found at the Attic Window Quilt Shop.

Above is a picture of Colleen’s newly finished quilt. It is Felicity’s Garden which was a BOM at the Attic Window Quilt Shop. She quilted it herself and did a fantastic job.
Maybe be a little late for this year, but just in time for next year’s celebration. Make It Do has a great tutorial for a fireworks table runner.
Hope everyone had a wonderful July 4th. Until next time: Happy Quilting.
Caroll

Tuesday, June 30, 2009

ARE YOU A BAG LADY?

Whether you are a bag lady or not, you are going to love these bags. Above are samples for Cindy’s upcoming classes at the Attic Window Quilt Shop. You will be able to see the dates and times when the next newsletter is published. The teachers have been diligently working on getting their classes prepared for the next session. I’ll let you know when you can download it off the sidebar when we have it completed.

Cindy also made this billfold. Inside there are lots of pockets for credit cards and a zippered area for your money. This is a fun project to make and would make a lovely gift. You can purchase the pattern at the Attic Window Quilt Shop.
NOTICE: Julie says she has lots of notions for those making the patriotic doll that was pictured in the last post. Supplies are on a first come basis so if you are interested, sign up for that class now by calling the shop.
Homeberries has the cutest Whimsical free hand embroidery designs. Check it out.
Until next time: Happy quilting!
Caroll


Sunday, June 28, 2009

PATRIOTIC PINCUSHION DOLL

This is Julie’s Patriotic Pincushion Doll. She’s holding all kinds of cute little (and I mean little) notions. There is a link on Julie’s blog to where you can buy the tiny buttons. You can purchase the fabrics at the Attic Window Quilt Shop. Check the calendar for Julie’s next doll class. This class comes is just in time for the July fabric sale at the shop. During the month of July there is a 20% discount on all fabrics. Be sure and stop by and take advantage of this great sale.

Quilt with your inner geek. Do you know a little boy or girl who are into robots? Quilting On A Budget has a cute pattern for a robot.

Until next time: Happy Quilting
Caroll


Friday, June 26, 2009

LESSON FIVE


Why Every Woman Needs a Needle

Lesson 5: My mother was a strong woman, running my childhood home with a stern hand. For some reason I did not grow up to be like her. I had no confidence. I’ll never forget the time when I was a grown woman with children of my own and standing in Mom’s kitchen stirring a pan of gravy. As we were preparing Sunday dinner, she said to me that she didn’t understand women who had no self confidence. She then took the spoon from my hand and told me to stir the gravy “like this.” It was after years of being on my own, and attending quilting classes and socializing with my quilting friends that I realized I had gained confidence.

It’s funny how your mind works sometimes. I put orphan blocks onto my design wall because I was afraid that out of sight out of mind, and my intention is to do something with them someday. When you go into my sewing room the design wall is the first thing you see. One day it dawned on me that two dissimilar blocks on the design wall went together nicely. I started fiddling around and darn if the bright fabrics and the 30’s fabrics didn’t look okay together. So I took the plunge and made a quilt of my own design. What confidence it gave me. What did I learn from this: to paraphrase a cartoon character: “It’s okay to be me!”
Anyone who stops learning is old, whether at twenty or eighty. ~Henry Ford

I hope you’ve liked my Why Every Woman Needs a Needle lessons. I’ve enjoyed sharing with you.
Until next time: Happy Quilting
Caroll

Thursday, June 25, 2009

LESSON FOUR


Why Every Woman Needs a Needle
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Lesson 4: A woman with a needle needs patience.

Like mother like child, they say. I think my mother invented the prayer for God to give her patience RIGHT NOW. Like her, I’ve never been a very patient person. Before I was married I was a reporter for our local daily newspaper. I think that’s when I got the writing bug. After marriage, I wrote short stories while raising my family and managed to sell a couple to national magazines. As the children grew older and I had more free time, I decided I would write the great American novel. After several years of trying to wrap my mind around such a large project (I thought I could just sit at the typewriter and bang out a novel from beginning to end with no effort at all), I finally decided that I just didn’t have the patience for that sort of thing. What I really think the problem was, is that I didn't understand the process. As the saying goes, age gives you wisdom. It was when I started quilting in my later years that I realized how much writing a novel is like making a quilt. Quilts (like novels) are made up of one block (chapter) at a time. Sometimes you throw in a little sashing (secondary plot line), and maybe a color that makes your quilt really pop (could be a secondary quirky character), and then you wrap it all up with the border (the ending). Quilting has given me the understanding and the patience to do that. Now, in this chapter of my life I’ve decided I’d rather be quilting than sitting at the computer typing that great American novel. However, the facts don’t change. Quilting, like life, is made up of one block at a time. Make your life beautiful by adding thought, color, and a little quirkiness, so that in the end it will be wrapped in something beautiful, something you are proud of so you can say it was a beautiful trip.
The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new lands, but in seeing with new eyes. - Marcel Proust, French novelist

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

LESSON THREE


Why Every Woman Needs a Needle

I’ve heard it said (and believe) that tools make a man sexy. I was wondering the aisles of Home Depot with my list from Karen’s Tool Time Tuesday blog. My 90 year old mother was by my side. I like to take her on outings with me. She gets along quite well (no walker, no cane) and she enjoys the outings.

We were in one of the aisles looking for the first item on the list when I noticed a man standing there with an orange bucket in one hand and pawing through some long plastic tubes. He looked like he’d trained with Special Forces. Biceps bulged from beneath his white tee shirt. Strong tanned legs sprung beneath his khaki Bermuda shorts. A tool belt hung from his narrow waist. Even took my breath away there for a minute. My mother, the biggest flirt of all time, sashayed right up to him, placed her hand on his broad shoulder and said, “Could you tell me where you got that bucket? My daughter is looking for one.”
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He flashed my mother a million watt smile and said, “Follow me.” (Smile at me like that and I’ll follow you anywhere.) He turned a corner and then handed me an orange bucket. “Like this? “
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“Where’s the insert?” My mother I asked. “She needs the insert too.”
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He gave me a questioning look. “Insert?”
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“I…uh…” Imagine that, me tongue tied. “Uh..you know; the canvas kind with all those pockets.”
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“Oh, for your cleaning products.”
“Now there, young man,” my mother said as she inched herself closer to him. “Let’s not get
hasty with our thinking. It’s for quilting.”
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“Quilting?” He gave me a questioning look.
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I was on known territory here and said, “Those pockets are great for holding my rotary cutter, scissors, iron, templates, ruler, etc.”
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Amusement danced in big brown eyes. He then reached over my head and grabbed a small cellophane package. “Blue all right?”
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“She needs an eyeball too,” my mother said.
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“Uh, she mans eye bolt,” I explained. “Would you happen to know where they are?”
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“Just one?” he asked.
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I nodded.
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“It’s for holding her bobbins,” my mother announced.
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He rubbed his hand over his mouth as if trying to hide his grin, nodded and lead us down the aisle to a lot of bins holding all kinds of interesting things.
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After he handed me the eye bolt, I scanned the bins. “Are there any washers here?”
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He pointed to a bunch of boxes to the left. “Which size?”
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“One of each,” I said.
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The corners of his mouth twitched. “One of each size?”
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“They are for making circles for appliqué.” I looked around. “And I need a little hookie thing to keep them on. I think it’s called an eye ring…or is it an o ring. I don’t know. It’s like a key ring.“
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He scratched his head and thought for a minute. “How about we get a package of shower curtain pins.” he said, and headed for another aisle with us in tow.
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After scanning a wall holding another bunch of interesting things, he snatched a package and handed it to me. “Anything else?”
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My mother was standing off to one side clearly giving Mr. I-Know-Where-Things-Are the once over. Before she could say anything else, I said, “Thank you so much for all your help. I think we need to go to the paint department now. It’s over that way isn’t it?”
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He shook his head. “I gotta ask. What are you using the paint for?”
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“Oh, I just want to pick up a couple of those free paint sticks,” I said and almost added that they make my quilts lay flatter, but decided to withhold that information. “Thanks again for all your help.”
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His flashed a big grin, as though his perspective of me had changed. Maybe he wasn’t used to being thanked. “No problem,” he said. “I really should be thanking you. You taught me a lot today.”
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My mother stood and stared at him as he walked away. I took her by the arm and turned her toward the paint department. “He has a cute butt,” she said. “He caught me staring.” She giggled. “He has nice legs too.”
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After nearly choking on my surprise I nodded in agreement. I smiled at my mother, thinking about the things I have learned from her and all the things I had learned that day. Most importantly I learned that people are nice and helpful and that I felt empowered. Home Depot isn’t just a man’s world. It’s a great place for women too. (I wonder if a man thinks a woman with a needle is sexy.)
“The art of teaching is the art of assisting discovery”. - Mark Van Doren, poet

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

LESSON TWO


Why Every Woman Needs a Needle

Lesson 2: Quilting is a group sport (we already knew that). Around the world quilters gather to socialize and sew. Books are written about them. Movies are made. The world is full of wonderful quilters who are eager to share their knowledge. If there is something you need to know how to accomplish a quilter will eagerly help you whether it is quilting, child rearing, recipes, etc. They are there in sickness and in health. When my 90 year old mother moved in with me, my quilting friends were emotionally supportive. They helped me to laugh about things I might otherwise cry about. Sometimes my conversation with my mother could be depressing. Like the day I came home from work and our conversation went like this:

Mom: That man said he'd be here for breakfast in the morning.
Me: What man?
Mom: I don't know. The man on the phone.
Me: You answered the phone? (she’s hard of hearing and usually doesn’t even hear the phone ring, much less answer it)
Mom: Yes
Me: Who did you talk to?
Mom: That man.
Me: Who was it?
Mom: I don't know.
Me: I thought you didn't answer the phone.
Mom: Well I did and he said he'd be here for breakfast in the morning.
Me: I wish when you answered the phone you would find out who you are talking to.
Mom: Well, I'll just stay in bed in the morning and you can entertain your men friend on your own.

Later when I shared the experience with my quilting friends they laughed. And I found I could laugh too. Not at her, but at me for being so impatient, so wanting my mother to be the strong, capable woman I remembered her to be when I was a child. They helped me to look at things differently and love my mother for who she is now.

“You cannot control what happens to you, but you can control your attitude to what happens to you.” Brian Tracy
Tomorrow: Men with tools are sexy.

Monday, June 22, 2009

LESSON ONE




The other day when I opened my e-mail from Oprah’s Home and Decorating Newsletter, an article caught my eye. Why Every Woman Needs a Hammer. Well and good. Hammers are nice. But this got me to thinking. What every woman really needs is a needle. So I’ve created my 5 lessons on life as to Why Every Woman Needs a Needle. Each time I post I will add the next lesson. Here is Lesson One.
A needle is the constant that carries the thread through life. I’ve been sewing since I was a young child, so young I don’t remember running the treadle sewing machine needle through my finger but my mother tells me I did. I used to sew doll clothes and as I grew older, graduated into making my own school clothes. When I took Home Ec class I made a blue corduroy dress and wore it for my class picture. I still remember how the collar flared up in a way I thought so sophisticated (I was in the 7th grade). Then when I had children of my own I made their clothes. Mothers didn’t work back then. I even sewed my husband a suit once. Only once. I think that once was probably how many times he wore it too. I sewed later in life when I went into the work world, hurrying home to sew up a seam or two during lunch hour. Then the time finally came when I could afford to buy my clothes, but the need for a needle continued. That’s when I took up quilting and happily sewed small patches together to create works of art. Even after retirement and when my 91 year old mother came to live with me, my needle continues to be my friend. The steady rocking motion of sewing helps me remain calm, maintain my sanity, and see the beauty in the world.

As a wise man (Aristotle) once said, “Happiness belongs to the self sufficient. “ Are you a self sufficient needler?
Tomorrow: Quilting is a Group Sport

Sunday, June 21, 2009

SPOOKTACULAR QUILT

I stopped in at the Attic Window Quilt Shop Saturday and this was what Colleen’s Seasonal Sampler BOM class was working on. Colleen said I should have waited to take the picture until after she’d cut the witches’ bangs. I still think she’s cute. I bet this would be a perfect block for Jane’s Fabrics Swap Spooktacular. Unfortunately, the swap is closed. However, Pam at Mama Spark’s World is trying to get a group together. If you are interested check out her blog and let her know.
With Heart and Hands has a tutorial for a shopping bag that’s made like a “quillow.” Really cute and easy to tote around.
Until next time: Happy Quilting!
Caroll

Thursday, June 18, 2009

FRESH SQUEEZED & POTC

This pattern is called Fresh Squeezed and is from Moda University. Making all those pie slices and circles kept me from eating chocolate, so it was worth the time and effort put into this quilt. I love these fabrics and you can find them at the Attic Window Quilt Shop. Check them out.


Lately when blog hopping I’ve seen so many of the POTC (Patchwork of the Crosses) blocks and I’ve been admiring them. I’ve particularly enjoyed Cathi’s at Quilt Obsession. She’s made 19 of these blocks. They are so inviting that I just had to try one for myself. I made my own template and this is what I came up with. Since I like handwork I’ll probably do more of these blocks. However, next time I think I’m going to use the English Paper Piecing method to make them.
Connecting Threads has a cute sewing caddy pattern.
Until next time: Happy Quilting
Caroll

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

FLIP-FLOP AND PINEAPPLES

Isn’t this cute? I saw it at the Attic Window Quilt Shop last week. Chris was using it for e-mail sign up papers during the Skip, but she said she’s going to put candy in it this week. Yumm. Well, probably not a pleasing thought – candy from a shoe – but the candy is wrapped and the flip-flop is so cute. I think she said she got it at Hobby Lobby but I don’t know what year. You know, I was just thinking, wouldn't it be great if someone made up with a pattern for a flip-flop like this so we could make our own out of fabric. Hint. Hint.


Don’t you just love this Pineapple piece? I’ve heard someone say if you dream it you can achieve it. I’m dreaming of making sharp points like this. I wonder if I’ll ever be able to make something so precise. My piecework is usually askew, which is why I always make everything bigger so I can cut it down. Measure once, cut twice – I think that must be my motto. That explains why I’d rather do appliqué. But I keep trying. I keep taking those classes at the Attic Window and someday I’ll be a better piecer.

The Stitchin Chicken has a nice tutorial for those fabric baskets that you often see today. This one is a little different. Check it out.
Until next time: Happy Quilting
Caroll

Sunday, June 14, 2009

MUST HAVE ITEMS TO ADD TO YOUR LIST

Colleen made this up-to-date table runner as a sample for the Attic Window Quilt Shop. These lovely fabrics are from the Benartex Gotham line. You can find the pattern and the fabrics at the shop, so add "pick up Gotham fabrics and new pattern" to your to-do list.

The Attic Window Quilt Shop now has Aurifil quilting thread and I highly recommend it. I used it yesterday and my temperamental little Pfaff just loved it. There was not one break or snafu and very little lint. This thread may cost a little more than what you are used to, but it’s like buying a Castle instead of a hut. And, remember, you're worth it. These are just some of the lovely colors in the shop. They come in two different spool sizes. Chris said that she hopes to be getting in some variegated colors soon. Add these must-have items to your to-do list. I bet you’ll like it.

Do you like cupcakes? Quick Quilts has some cute fabric cupcakes for you to make (not taste). I'm going to make some. What a great way to stick to your diet! Check out this fun project.
Until Next Time: Happy Quilting!
Caroll

Twilling Club

Twilling Club
This is a sample of a block from Barb's Twilling Club. It is beautiful so be sure and check it out when you go into the shop What a lovely wedding present it would make.

Primitive Garden

Primitive Garden
This is Colleen's Primitive Garden. The class starts in February.

Quilts For Wheels

Quilts For Wheels
Above from left to right are the devoted quilters with one of their quilts to be donated: Mary, Yvonne, LeeAnn, Barb, and Nancy. Thank you special women!!!

Teachers

Teachers
The teachers at the Attic Window were busy Friday night planning the classes they will teach in the upcoming months.