Ever since I learned how to use a sewing machine , the thought or mention of hand-stitching inevitably produced a grimace on my face. Who would want to spend all that time sewing by hand when you can zip through a project on a machine at lightening speed?
As I've come to expand my horizon, an appreciation for a little hand-stitching has developed. I have to admit that it kind of snuck up on me. The first couple quilt bindings I did on the machine looked absolutely dreadful. A few months ago, I finally gave in and hand-stitched a binding on a small wall quilt (Keef's quilt: previously showcased). It wasn't perfect, but I certainly saw potential in that almost invisible stitch. The cosmetic case I made and wrote about a couple weeks ago was another recent "finished by hand" project. When I saw Lindsay Rhodes's instructions to finish the case by hand, I'll admit to putting the project on the back burner. But eventually I gave in, because it's just too cute a thing to ignore. The result made me smile, and I made 2 more cases the following day. I must confess that I did machine-stitch some fold-over-elastic for the binding on one of the 2 extra cases. It didn't look nearly as nice as the two that were hand-stitched with a traditional binding. That's what I get for being impatient.
Hexies were another thing I dreaded. Thanks to my local Modern Quilt Guild Chapter, I was sort of forced into giving those a go as well. The gang at PaperPieces.com were generous enough to donate a whole stack of little hexie templates to our guild a while back. Our Events Officer handed them out at a monthly meeting at the beginning of the summer and challenged us to try them out and make a hand-stitched project to show in September. Those who participate in the challenge will be entered for a prize drawing at our September meeting. I ended up appliquéing a couple of my hexie flowers onto one of my Cinch-It-Up Market Bags. They are just too cute and incredibly addictive. What a great little project to take along on a road trip or to the in-laws for the weekend (where I am sadly deprived of my sewing machines and don't know what to do with myself when I don't have a piece of fabric in my hands - I'm sure they think I'm crazy).
Wow, I really can go on about almost nothing, can't I? I should get to the point of this whole story which is...
This evening I made this:
It makes me so happy that I get a funny little tickle in my tummy. I'll be off to Sewing Summit in a couple weeks, and I was determined to have an incredibly fancy Needle Book to take with me. I stitched up a plain and boring one a few months ago when I got hooked on the hexies, but this one is infinitely better.
I gather that drinking tea is a little trendy almost everywhere nowadays - must be all the antioxidants and the increasing obsession with health food. Growing up in New England, however, means that coffee (the anti-tea) was somewhat foreign to me. When you go to visit friends and relations in Maine, the first thing they offer you when you arrive is a cuppa tea and somethin' sweet to go with it. I get a kick out of watching Downton Abby with all the tea-times, because that is what it was like for me in Maine (except without all the fancy hats and sitting straight as a board with your ankles crossed). And we drink our tea in mugs. I will admit to having a strong affinity for fancy tea cups and pots, though. Frannie ("Queenie") surprised me last summer by letting me have most of her (now 54-year-old) Bone China tea sets that were her wedding gifts. They are (collectively) one of my favorite things. Once in a while when I'm feeling the need for something a little fancy I make an entire pot of tea (in a fancy teapot) and take it down to the shop with a fancy little teacup. It goes great with the Oreos.
Blah blah blah...hence the teacup paper piecing patterns on my new Needle Book. I love teacups. There you have it. They don't have much to do with sewing, but what the heck. They're cute. I drink tea while I sew, so I guess tea and sewing go together in my world.
I found the teacup paper piecing patterns for free at PieceByNumber.com. Click here for the direct link. I used Lindsay's vinyl zipper pocket method from the Cosmetic Case. Instead of the traditional Button & Loop closure you find on most needle books, I used a couple Poly-Resin snaps, because they are fun and I have a ga-jillion of them.
Cheers!
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Sunday, September 1, 2013
Cinch-It-Up Market Bag
I've got a fun & easy new pattern done up for a Market Bag with a handy-dandy elastic & cord lock combo to prevent those annoying grocery spills in the trunk or truck-bed.
Fancy it up with those hexies you've been making on your summer road trips that you don't know where to put. Or you can re-purpose an old fabric shower curtain like the one I used in my pattern. I found this one for $1 at a neighborhood garage sale!
You can get the pattern in my Craftsy Pattern Shop for the low low price of 99 pennies by clicking here.
Or you can leave a sweet comment at the bottom of this blog with your email address and I'll send it to you for free! :) ...just cuz I love ya.
Go Green. Or Pink! (which is so much prettier)
Fancy it up with those hexies you've been making on your summer road trips that you don't know where to put. Or you can re-purpose an old fabric shower curtain like the one I used in my pattern. I found this one for $1 at a neighborhood garage sale!
You can get the pattern in my Craftsy Pattern Shop for the low low price of 99 pennies by clicking here.
Or you can leave a sweet comment at the bottom of this blog with your email address and I'll send it to you for free! :) ...just cuz I love ya.
Go Green. Or Pink! (which is so much prettier)
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