Showing posts sorted by relevance for query quilt. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query quilt. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, October 3, 2017

Making A Quilt for Mara's Birthday - And Zero Waste Wrapping for Her Gifts


   We have had some milestone birthdays around here lately. Mara turned 18 on Friday and Ken turned 40 on Sunday. It was a busy birthday time. When figuring out birthday gifts I thought it would be fun to make Mara a quilt. I made one for her room years ago (before I started blogging) but we have been wanting to make a different one for several years now. This year I decided that she and I probably weren't going to get around to making one together as she is busy with college and work and then plans to head off to a mission program next year but that it still would be nice for her to have a new quilt that she could take with her when she went. 

  So Megan agreed to work with me on her quilt and the Monday before her birthday (we are notorious for last minute plans and procrastinating around here) we started to design and work on her quilt. Her room is blue and she had made a rag rug for it in greens, purples and blues so we decided to use those colors for the quilt. Megan went through the fabric scraps that we had on hand and choose some that she wanted to use. I made patterns and we started cutting pieces out.
 Megan did most of the cutting and I did most of the sewing but we did both do the other some as well. Megan put in many hours of work and I would never have been able to get it done without her.

For the middle of the quilt (that will not be seen) we used an old blanket from my college days that had seen it's better days. It was bigger than we needed so from the extra that we cut off Megan patched the middle where there were holes.

 For the backing of the quilt we used an old sheet of ours that had gotten ripped (and a little worn) at the top of it but still seemed to be quite sturdy fabric for the rest of it. I was able to cut the ripped and worn section completely off and use the part that was left.


   We were hiding out in my bedroom to pin the quilt together, to tie it and pin binding on.

Mara was quite happy with her quilt.

I am thankful that it fits well on her double bed now but should also work on a single bed in the future.

  For the quilt we were able only use things that we already had on hand.  We were able to make something "new" and useful out of what many people would have considered trash. The tiny little cotton scraps that were created from making the quilt we were able to put in our compost to rot. Large scraps will be used for other projects and the rest of the sheet will go into a rag rug and new handkerchiefs. "Waste not, want not" :-)


  We were also able to employ Zero Waste wrapping for the birthdays lately. For large gifts (like the quilt) a table cloth makes a nice piece of "wrapping paper". I secured it with a rubber band instead of tape. Smaller pieces of fabric or a kerchief works nicely for smaller gifts. Reusable gift bags were also used for Mara's birthday and they work great.

  This is part of my series "31 Days of attempting to create Zero Waste" - for a list of others in the series go here.


Tuesday, October 11, 2016

31 Days of Repurposing - Quilts from Clothes

 One of my favorite ways to repurpose has been the making of quilts. I haven't worked on one for quite a while but I am really wanting too! Maybe next month I will find some time to do that. Meanwhile looking through some pictures of ones we have made was rather fun for me. Here are some of the odds and ends of quilts that we have made at our house - primarily from clothes that needed repurposing.

 This quilt included fabric folding which was super fun. It was a gift to Ken's sister and husband when they got married.
A baby quilt with a sailing theme.
 The quilt on our bed.
 I guess this picture is before I hand quilted it.
But I did do it. See....
A quilt for Jonathan.

A "raggy" denim quilt.
With flannel on the other side.
A quilt for Aaron. Super simple but it worked. Quilts don't have to be complicated.
Mara's raggy quilt made from sweatshirts.
A courderoy acorn quilt for a neighbor baby.
Bright and busy.
The kids all made quilts to send to Africa.

 Jonathan figuring out the design.
 Quilting can be messy!


 This quilt is still waiting to be finished. It is in the quilting stage (has been in a box since before we moved) and then it needs to be trimmed around the edges.

Do you make quilts? How do you repurpose old cloths?








Monday, November 3, 2008

A Homemade Christmas ~ Week 1




Thank you for stopping by my blog today and joining me for a Homemade Christmas! I am excited about this series (it is the first time I have ever used a Mr. Linky on my blog) and I am hoping many of you will join me by adding links to my post.
Today I am going to share with you a gift that I have sewn, but if you don't sew, don't worry, over the next 8 weeks I am planning on sharing a wide variety of gifts and many of them will not include sewing. Also I encourage you to share gifts you have either made or someone has made for you and you really like, decorations you have made or anything else homemade that you have for Christmas. Please do keep all your posts family friendly. Anyway, on too my project for today.
This weekend I had a lot of fun sewing up this baby gift. I made a matching Hat and mittens and then also a quilt to go with it. After I had figured out the pattern (which wasn't very hard either) making the hat and mittens went very quickly! The mittens are thumbless as they are for an infant. I also added a string to attach the mittens together so they won't get separated.

I have drawn up the patterns that I used in case any of you would like to try making them. Just click on the image and it will make it larger so you can print it out. To make the hat you cut out to pieces of outer fabric and two pieces of lining (For the lining I used a t-shirt that had gotten a hole in it). Put right sides together and take a 2/8 inch seam on the outer fabric and a 3/8 inch seam on the lining. Then trim 1/8 inch off of the lining. Turn the outer piece right side out and then place the lining inside of it. (At this point there should be no rough seams showing.) Turn the rough edges on the bottom of the hat in to the inside so they are meeting together and sew together using a top stitch. Then cut an acorn out of brown fabric and applique to the lower part of the hat on the lining. Then turn it up so the lining is showing for about 1 inch. You are all done! (If these instructions are terribly confusing, please feel free to ask questions in the comments or e-mail me.) For the mittens check out the tutorial at Write, Mama, Write. Both mittens and hat could be made in much larger sizes as well.
I also had fun making this little quilt. Quilts are tons of fun to make, especially if you do as I do and use fabric from old clothes (make sure that the sections you use are still very sturdy!) and so are giving new life to something that might have otherwise been thrown away. Quilts make great gifts (for all sizes of people) as most everybody likes them. I recommend that you try something simple at first (like just squares) unless you are experienced or have lots of time.
For a quilt first you cut out the pieces. And then you arrange them in a design that you like. (Or you might do that first on graph paper, coloring in the different squares. If my quilt is very complicated at all that is what I like to do.)
After you have it all laid out you are ready to sew the pieces together. (I had decided to applique an acorn on this one so I did that before sewing the pieces together.)


After you have the top done you need to layer it with some batting (or you can use an old blanket or another thick layer of cloth but then your quilt will be heavier and not so fluffy.) and a backing fabric.
Their are a variety of ways to bind a quilt by I most often just fold the backing fabric up and over and then sew it in place. Making sure everything is pulled out flat before you do any sewing! After this you can either do some quilting (by hand or machine) are use some yarn to tie it together. (Again if you have any questions, please feel free to ask!)
Here are some other related posts:

It is your turn now!! Please leave you links for homemade gifts or other homemade Christmas stuff! (It doesn't have to be a gift that you are giving for Christmas this year it can be one from the past or something you are using for some other occasion if you would like.)

When you link I would appreciate if you would link back to a Homemade Christmas at Proverbs 31 Living in your post. Thank you!



Wednesday, March 14, 2018

A Colorful Train Quilt for Buirlen


   We are so blessed to have a bunch of little people in our family right now. In my side of the family (the ones we live near) there had been a break in the arrival of grand-kids for several years but in the last 2 years there are now 5 more. It is wonderful! Just recently we celebrated the 1st birthday of Buirlen. Megan and I decided to make a quilt for his birthday gift. 

   I had been thinking about making it for a month but I was finishing up some other gifts and projects and so I didn't end up getting to it until the day before his party. But with Megan's good help and even a little assistance from Aaron and Mara at the end we got it done.
 I was just going to have a bunch of colorful squares but Megan wanted some pinwheel blocks too. I thought that would be pretty appropriate since pin-wheels had been a big thing and Buirlen's parents wedding (you can see my post about it here). So we made three pin-wheel squares to go in the middle of the quilt. Then we just had a bunch of blocks. After those we sewed together I stiched a railroad track (using thread and ribbon) all around the quilt. Then we put two trains made of jean pockets on the track.
 I had wanted to make finger puppets to go in the trains but I didn't have time but Megan got it done. They turned out pretty cute. Buirlen thought they were fun to play with.

 This is the train on the other side.
 Megan made a really cut engineer to go in one of the engines.
 It ended up being a really fun project. The jean pockets I had been saving as I cut up strips for rugs and wanting to find something to do with them. They were the inspiration for this quilt. I still have a bunch more however so I am going to need to do something else with them too. The blocks all came from scraps of fabric that we had around. For the back of the quilt I used a piece of flannel that I had bought years ago on a sale. The lining was an old mattress cover that my neighbor had given me to make something with. It was amazing how perfectly it fit the quilt without any pre-planning on my part. God certainly blessed as we made it. We only had limited time to work on it and everything went together super smoothly. I was so thankful.

 By the way Buirlen's Mama has a neat blog that you might enjoy checking out.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

The County Fair

 This week we have been rather absorbed with our county fair. We really enjoy this week. It is always very busy but very fun!

   One of the things that we love to do is enter things in the open class in Home Arts and Gardening. We tend to procrastinate around here or at least come up with lots of things we can enter at the last minute so the days before entry day are always crazy busy! We did have fun though- even with our messy house and hurry to get things finished (while trying to spend time with my family who was in town)- many years we have gotten stressed (which I don't like) but this year was for the most part just fun.

One of our last minute projects was a county fair themed quilt. We have all been saving ribbons that we have received throughout the years and had wanted to do something with them and had thought about adding them to a quilt but hadn't done anything yet. When we saw that there was a new category at the fair for a "county fair themed quilt" we decided we had better get busy. It was mostly my project but we all discussed ideas for it and such and Mara helped with cutting out pieces and she did a lot of the embroidery. My niece Margaret, sister Keren and Sister-in-law Molly Bea also each embroidered a little on some squares. Molly Bea also drew some of the embroidery designs. The kids had fun ironing the ribbons and getting them ready to use. We did win 1st prize which came with a special additional prize of $25 so we are pretty excited. What has been the most fun about it in my book is how much some of regular volunteers out at the fair have enjoyed it.

Here are some snapshots of the fair.....
 Jonathan baking cookies late at night. He won 1st with them at the fair.
 I finally am all done with hand quilting the quilt I made for Ken's and my bed. I entered it at the fair.
 When we were making a batch of pickles last week each of the kids wanted to make a jar to enter at the fair. I decided that would work all right. Each child was in charge of choosing and preparing his own cucumbers and putting the spices in. I did mix up the brine. The canner has room for 7 jars so they each did one and then I did 3 jars each one a little different (one whole dill pickles, one chunk and one mixed veggie- cucumbers and little onions) . All of the pickles were dill except for Jonathan's since he prefers sweet pickles. He made his own concoction of sweet and spicy pickles (with whole little onions, cloves and star anise in it). We thought Jonathan's looked cool and that he would probably win but the judges didn't think like we did and the others all got ribbons but Jonathan's just got a participation ribbon. Two of my jars from the batch also got blue ribbons so it was a very productive batch of pickles!

 Mara's cross stitch wall hanging took 3rd place in the adult category. We were happy with that as there was some good competition there and some other very nice ones didn't get any prize at all.
 Megan and Aaron's homemade dolls each got ribbons as did the girls' doll clothes, a bag Mara embroidered, some embroidery that Aaron did and mittens I made. (all in the picture above)
 Aaron entered a wooden spoon that he made for me and Jonathan entered one of the knives he carved. They both got prizes.
 I enjoyed looking at the baskets. The denim one that I entered didn't place but my funky denim vase won 1st plus a supervisor's choice award. I rather like the project about as well where somebody took an old bike wheel, painted it and gave it some western touches and then used it to display pictures on. I love all the ideas we can get when looking at things at the fair.

 Aaron made a quilt (pretty much all by himself so it is far from perfect but he was excited about doing it and it was fun) which got 2nd place.

I love looking at all the quilts there. Some people do a simply beautiful job!
Here are some of the ones I really enjoyed looking at:
An appliqued quilt that depicts farm life very beautifully!
What a cute 3D wall hanging quilt!
There were many more that we beautiful and amazing! It is so much fun to look at them all.

We also entered some things in the gardening section. Here are a couple of them:

 We entered green beans. I picked are very pretty rattlesnake beans. They are green with little purple stripes. I picked a bunch and then Megan sorted through them for me to get 8 of them that were most alike. I think she did a good job sorting because we got 2nd place.
 Mara entered a miniature arrangement category and placed 3rd (hers is the really tiny one on the far left).

  Besides entering things in the fair we also are involved with booths in the business area. Ken has a booth for his business and then we also help with the republican booth. We all spend time helping out at the booths. I enjoy it because I end up seeing a lot of people from the community that I know. The community feeling that there is at a county fair is definitely one of my favorite parts. I can hardly walk anywhere at all without going by someone that I know. It can take a long time to get from one place to another since often we have fun stopping and visiting.

Speaking of people I know...

 Some friends of ours (fellow homeschoolers and former violin students (the three girls) of mine) had a concert this afternoon on the stage at the fair. Ken and Mara were busy at the booth but the other kids and I as well as my parents and another friend had fun listening to their concert. I haven't taught the girls for several years now and I had so much fun seeing how much they have improved in their music! It is inspiring to me as well because the only music lessons the kids have had is the 3 girls taking the violin for a number of years but they have gone was past that! Now the 5 kids (ages 9-18 I think) play a combination of violin, guitar, mandolin, banjo, dobro, harmonica, bass guitar and maybe more. Many of those instruments are played by more than one child. They also do very well on the vocals with a lot of nice harmony. The parents do a great job too - I just am always impressed when I see children performing well. We totally enjoyed their concert which was full of gospel songs presented in a very nice way.  It was inspiring to both my kids and me.
 Tomorrow is the final day of the fair. Tomorrow afternoon we will need to go and pick up our stuff. Meanwhile we are dreaming about next year!

LinkWithin

Blog Widget by LinkWithin