Pattern Preview

Pattern Preview

Finally.... finally,  I am so excited to be able to say that my little online shop will be open very soon and I wanted to give you a little preview of my very first quilting patterns.   It has been quite an experience and I cannot tell you how many hours have been spent learning how to computer graphics.   This is a wholly new adventure for me and I am, of course, a little anxious about it.   All the designs are my own original work and I really hope you like them.   I have quite a few more in the pipeline, including some embroidery patterns, so I hope very much that you will stop by often and see what is new on the site. 

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The power of hand sewing

The power of hand sewing

Just about got over the jet lag and so much to tell you about our travels in the Massachusetts & Rhode Island.  But I need a 'mo' to sort through my photos and my memories of all that we saw and did, so in the meantime, I wanted to show you something that I actually took with me and worked on while we were in the US.   You may remember that I was somewhat enamoured with Venice, when we visited in May and came home inspired to make a quilt to encompass all the elements that make up this amazing city - the  wonderful colours, the architecture, the water, the history and the whole aroma of this romantic place.   I raided my stash for fabrics that I thought met this brief and then set about thinking what exactly might such a quilt even look like.

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The Painting Flowers Bag

The Painting Flowers Bag

So, I am hastily writing this post from a Boston Hotel Room!  A trip came up at quite short notice and I am here with my 'better' half for the 4th of July - amazing!  Anyway, no doubt more about that after the big day.   For now, I wanted to tell you about the 'Painting Flowers' bag.  From the moment I first saw a picture of this, it shot straight to the top of my 'to do' list!  

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Alice in Wonderland

Alice in Wonderland

Did you know that this year is the 150th anniversary of the publication of this all-time classic book by Lewis Carroll?  My mum grew up with Alice, I grew up with Alice and my daughter grew up with Alice.  Liberty have a wonderful range of fabrics to celebrate this landmark and this prompted me to design my own little tribute to such a much loved story.  

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Steamer Trunks, Edgar and a Flag!

Hi everyone,

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Lots to share with you today on the blog and I know I haven't written in a while, but I have been trying to finish off my final submissions for my 'on-line' embroidery and textiles course and it has been the most enormous amount of work.  I hope to be sharing more about this whole experience soon, but for now I am just sitting with my fingers crossed!!!!  Well sort of.... I have been sewing a little too.

First up - the Steamer Trunks Quilt is finished and its my favourite-est ever quilt!  It is just so pretty and cheerful and fills the room with dreams of travelling to far away lands in bygone times.   It was super fun to make all the labels and extra appliqués that make it special.

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When it came to backing the quilt, I had a problem, because the fabric that I had originally bought, somehow didn't really sit well with the finished quilt.  I hunted through my stash and found the same fabric in a lighter colour way which worked perfectly, but I didn't have enough of it for the whole backing.  What to do.... solution.... a bit more patchwork.  I added two side panels of a gorgeous Kaffe Fassett spotted fabric on either side and it worked perfectly.  

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I thought about the quilting alot, but am not entirely sure I made the right choice.  My daughter suggested a paisley design and this was the right choice, but I am not sure that I shouldn't have done something different on the trunks themselves.  I think that the problem was I thought the design of the quilt was so beautiful on its own, that I didn't want the quilting to distract from the picture.  On reflection, it may have enhanced it.  My other quandary was what colour thread to choose as I had the light newspaper prints and then the heavy bold colours of the trunks.  I used a fine 50 weight Aurafil ivory coloured thread, but it was not a brilliant solution against the trunks.   Perhaps a grey shade would have been better.  

On the whole though, it all comes out in the mix OK and the quilt is just lovely.   Our sitting room is starting to take shape now and the new addition will be perfect on our new sofas, if they EVER arrive!  

Now to introduce you to Edgar Owl.

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In between everything else, I couldn't resist having a go at making up this Heather Bailey pattern that just charmed the socks off me.  You can find the pattern on her lovely website, along with delicious fabrics and heaps of inspiration.   It was so fun to do and a quick little project.   I have never really made stuffed animals before and he probably could have done with a little more stuffing in his tummy, but I think he might need a little girlie companion to keep him in line, so perhaps she will be a little rounder, shall we say (figures.. huh?!?!?!).  'Edgar' though,  is just the handsomest dude and sits beside my sewing machine now, inspecting everything I do.   He is supposed to be a pin cushion.... but honestly, I can't bring myself to stick a pin in him - he is much to serious for such a frivolous occupation.  Chief consultant on stitching decisions, seems way more appropriate although, in truth, he has as much to say about it as the rest of the boys in the house...LOL!

Finally, there has been some nice programmes on the TV recently to mark the anniversary of the Victory day celebrations after the second world war and an especially charming one about the Queen, then Princess Elizabeth, sneaking out of the Palace to join in with the crowds in the Streets of London. This prompted me to think about making a Union Jack quilt for the garden and I made a start on this new project.  The pattern I have is called Jumping Jacks from Joanna Figuero of Fig Tree Quilts.   I love her vintage style and it seems perfect for a project that has its roots in the 1940's.  The creams and tiny prints of her fabrics make you think of WI cake stalls, bunting and Land Girls. 

The first block is done and I am thrilled with it.  It is not the easiest block to make though because of the angles of the stripes and this takes a bit of getting to grips with.  I have it sussed now though, so the next blocks should be much quicker.   I'll be writing some tips about this as I go along in the next few weeks, so if you are interested check back, because making those points work is not as easy as it might look.

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I hope the Bank Holiday weekend brings you all lots of sunshine and time for pondering all the wonderful sewing projects that are out there.   A little Alice in Wonderland coming up next time.  Meanwhile, Happy Stitching.... Love Ruby x

'Dwell'

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Hope you all enjoyed the glorious, and somewhat unexpected, sunshine over the Easter holidays.  For us, the  long weekend was full of family and food and the garden.  I finally got started on a vegetable patch, which a totally new concept to me and quite exciting too.  The ground work is all done - the space was there and even a few fruit plants were there too, but it was overgrown and neglected after two summers of changing hands.  I have absolutely no idea what I am doing really, but the idea of being able to stroll over to the patch and pick something fresh for supper seems simply divine.   I have a book, I have some packets of seeds, so we shall see if I actually manage to grow anything at all.  I'll post some photos soon.

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I haven't had nearly as much time for sewing as I would like, but one project is finished and just in the nick of time too.  For ages I have been wanting to make a baby quilt....or rather this specific baby quilt.....it was just that we are at that age where there are not many baby's around, if you know what I mean.  Anyhow, the chance came along, and I decided to have a go.   This pattern, called 'Dwell' is from my favourite book 'Simply Retro' by Camille Roskelley.  I have made quite a lot of the quilts in this book now, and I do love the fresh modern approach of her design.  I used her fabrics too and jumbled up the colours and it was a quick quilt to assemble.   It would be an ideal project for a beginner as it is not too big either.

It was really fun mixing and matching the fabrics to construct the little houses.

The quilting was fun too, allowing for a touch of whimsicality!  I think it is just charming and it will be on its way to a little girl who was born on Thursday.  I hope it is loved and snuggled in and played on and brings cheerfulness every day.   For my part, there is something magical in creating a gift for a whole new life.... a new little person and a whole new beginning.

Next time: The Steamer Trunk Quilt Part 2 - it's turning out to be really cool project, so hope you'll pop back and check it out.  Bye for now... Ruby x

 

The Steamer Trunk Quilt

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Where does the time go?.... I was planning to write up this piece on the blog last week and here we are...it's the beginning of another week already!!!!  I have been working on a few things... a baby quilt (more about that soon)..... Putting borders on Will's quilt too...(more about that soon too) but, events outside the sewing room have taken over the last week or so.   A spot of decorating has been going on here and finally, I am so happy to have got our sitting room sorted out.  We moved into our house in June last year and although most of the house didn't really need decorating, the main Sitting Room, certainly did.  I had planned to have it all done by Christmas, but some water leekage problems caused delays and with hindsight, this was maybe not a bad thing.  We have weathered a Yorkshire winter in the house and seen the room in different lights and had more than enough time to decide what to do.  I am so excited by the results that I just had to make a quilt to go in there.   It is a lovely big room, with a beautiful wooden floor and a large stone fireplace.  It needed brightening up and I think I have certainly done that.  I had a vision of what I was trying to achieve, taken from a tiny cutting out of a magazine and the memory of a couple of houses that I have glimpsed over many years of moving around, one of them from over 20 years ago, but still indelibly etched on my mind.   Do you ever do that? Carry an image around with you that you know one day will suddenly be what you are looking for?  Anyway, we have gone from this - to this.  We are still waiting for the new sofas to be delivered, but I just love it's cheerful feel.  Yellow makes a room sunny all year around!

My Kaffe Fassett diamonds quilt will live in here... but, let's be realistic..... one quilt is simply not enough.  This time though it was a new idea, not an old one that sent me into a heady spin in the sewing room.   Perhaps it was the fact that our room has treasures from our travels....pictures from our travels are at the framers too.... or perhaps it was just that I picked up this pattern at the last quilt shop stop in Houston, before I left for the airport last month, because I am a sucker for anything to do with Steamer Trunks and that glamourous image of travelling in days gone by.  

The pattern is called 'Bon Voyage' by Coach House designs and in the cover picture, it is a collection of pretty pastel trunks, stacked on top of one another, as if waiting to be loaded up aboard a steamer bound for Suez or the midnight train to St. Petersburg.

Being more of a strong colour girl myself, I started rummaging in my stash for prints that reminded me of old Steamer Trunks.  It was easy.... the blocks started coming together rapidly - it is a fast and easy project.  A little bit of Anna Maria Horner fabric, a touch of Amy Butler and a dash of Kaffe Fassett and suddenly you have an explosion of colour.

Using these bold prints also allows some fussy cutting to use the design.  For example, I think this lovely circular motif will make a fab lock for one of the trunks.  

I used a new idea that I had recently seen on the internet to do this.  First of all cut out the motif with plenty of fabric to spare around the edge.  Lay it, face down on to similar size piece of muslin or any other old piece of fabric.  Stitch all the way around the edges, using your motif as your stitch line guide.

Then once it is turned out, give it a good press to be sure it is nice and flat.

I altered some of the fastening details - there is an assortment of templates for the locks and straps and you can fussy cut some fabrics to create the desired effect.  The appliqué bits and bobs are done using the freezer paper technique and I like to do this. 

I machined the pieces down though, rather than hand sewing them, partly because this is just going to be a fun quilt that will laze on our Chesterfield.

It was just a days work to get to this point.... and is a great project for a beginner.   I love how it looks and how the jumble of patterns and colours go together.  I still have alot of stitch detail to work, but I think that my Janome is going to help with this.   My luggage seems pretty exotic to me.... definitely headed to far away lands.   Now that I basically have my stack, I have to think about the accompanying background and I rather like the idea of newsprint and text fabric.  I am going to experiment with this idea, so hope you will come back next week and see how it is shaping up.   Oh and I think maybe a few luggage labels could be fun too... don't you?

See you soon, Ruby x 

Tessellation-ing!

How time flies when you're holed up in the sewing room on rainy yorkshire days.  Hot on the heels of ...and a little flushed with enthusiasm for.... finishing my last quilt - I am racing ahead towards another finish.  This time it is a special one.  This quilt is for my boy William, who started University in London last Autumn and yes, of course it was supposed to  be ready for that and yes, of course, as usual, I totally underestimated how long it would take to make - BUT (pause for a breath) this is a project that is just so perfect for a thoroughly modern, busy, sporty, techy, always connected - guy about town.  But before I show you some photos - a little recap.  When my first boy went off to Uni, a little way back, I was quite new to quilting.  I made him a 'New York' quilt with some fabrics that I had bought on a family trip to the US not long before and because he was totally enamoured with NYC (who isn't).  At this point, I didn't really know what a 'guy' quilt might be and used a pattern from my very first quilt book by Fons &  Porter.    I just wanted him to have something to take away to college, to brighten up those student nights when you need a little bit of home with you.   It turned out to be quite a success and just the right sort of thing.  Despite 3 years of university life, it is still in his room and very much Joe's quilt.

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When our daughter went away to college, I embarked on the epic - Gone with the Wind quilt, which lives with her at Warwick University and is much loved and snuggled under.  (There is a whole album on the sidebar about this 'production' called 'A Patch of Scarlett')

So now our youngest is off the launchpad, it was time for the last 'University' Quilt.  I thought that this boy, though, was the least interested in my quilting and fabric obsession and perhaps wasn't all that bothered - until I mentioned it.  The instructions were - something modern - grey and green and blue and absolutely NO flowers.   By now though - I was much more up to the moment with all things quilty and I knew exactly where to go for the pattern.

'Tessellation' by Alison Glass is just a wonderful quilt pattern.  I have seen alot of totally AMAZING versions of it on Instagram and it is just completely perfect for a modern student.   While of course, I struggled initially with the 'NO RED' idea (a few minor palpitations there), in fact the fabric choices came together rather easily.  I had thought to do all solid colours, with no prints at all, but as it happened, my daughter had brought back a couple of very modern bits of fabric from Citiquilter in NYC last summer and these text print fabrics just lifted the solid colours a tad.

The pieced blocks are done using foundation papers and this is a good project if you are new to that technique as you can put in as many or as few as you like.   There are loads of tutorials about how to do this online, so I won't explain here - except to say that I have tried alot of different types of paper for this and my absolute favourite is 'SIMPLE FOUNDATIONS" by C&T publishing.  These translucent vellum papers are strong and easy to use and are easily available from www.cottonpatch.co.uk.  Arranging the pieces is so much fun and using the stars as my starting point, made it easy to decide on the rest of the triangle.  

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In fact the rest of it is just a sort of higgledy-piggledy modern art mishmash, spacing your colours out so that it is fairly evenly distributed without looking like it was conscious placement.

Even though I have made quite a lot of quilts now, I always learn something new each time and this time, it was the importance of 'PRESSING'.  In a quilt like this with lots of triangles and biased edges that can stretch - spray starching and pressing is essential, absolutely all the way down the line.  Keep each row immaculately pressed with all the seams lying flat and it will help enormously to line the triangles up with the next row and to help the quilt to lie flat.

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I think it is perfectly fine to clip your seams too, if you find it sits better one way at one end and one way at the other end -after all we clip seams in dressmaking, so why not.  Use steam, lots and lots of it and just keep pressing everytime you join a piece in.  I am lucky enough to have a sewing table that gives me the chance to have a pressing board and iron alongside me when I sew and this is enormously helpful.  One other thing that was just SO useful when working on this project was a sturdy 15" rotating cutting mat makes trimming shapes super fast and efficient.   I first saw it about 6 months ago on the internet, when Kimberly at www.fatquartershop.com featured it as one of the best bits of quilting equipment around and I have to agree that it is a 'must have' in my sewing book.

So it is all together now and I think it is going to be a great quilt to actually quilt.  I plan to put a navy border around the edge - quite  a deep one, which will give me the opportunity to do some modern filler stitches in what now seems to be called 'negative space'.  I also have alot of scraps left and I don't like to waste fabric, so I might try and put together a scrappy binding for the quilt.  I'll let you know how I get on with that soon.   Meanwhile, for today at least....I shall just sit back and enjoy looking at it.    I hope he likes it...... think he will........

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Oh.... and what's more.....a new blank design space is now staring at me from my wall.....mmmm  have to do something about that I think..... maybe it is time to try little designing of my own........

Such a tidy sewing space ! Don't suppose it will stay like that for long LOL!  Love Ruby x

Oh my goodness....IT'S FINISHED!!!!!!

Happy Friday fellow stitchers!  Over here in Ruby's sewing room it is not just the end of the week, but the end of a long... long project.  My Winter Solstice quilt is finally finished and I love it so much, I am quite overwhelmed.....

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I began this quilt way back last year in readiness for our new home.  It is a pattern called 'Fresh' from Camille Roskelley's book 'Simply Retro' which is one of my all time favourite books.  The piecing was done before we moved back to England, but I delayed quilting, what is actually a King Sized Quilt, until I got my new Janome Horizon sewing machine with the bigger arm space.  I can honestly say that this made a huge, huge difference.  I was able to quilt quite an intricate pattern with ease on the machine and although it was a big undertaking - I am just delighted with the results and I do have some tips for quilting such a large project.

* This was the first quilt that I began the quilting at one edge and worked across in rows, rather than starting in the centre and working out.   It was so difficult to get the backing flat on such a huge quilt, that I think this system worked well, as I was able to smooth it out as I went along.

 * I actually had my iron alongside me and pressed each segment before stitching, as I went along each row of stars.  This ensured that everything was smooth, a little at a time.

*Changing the tension on my sewing machine made a difference to the stitching - I actually had it set quite high, because with free motion quilting, I think this helps the underneath stitching to be more even.

* Draw your shapes on with an erasable pencil, if you don't feel comfortable free handing it.  I got quite into the feathers at the end, but in the beginning, I drew the shape on to help guide my stitching line.

*and finally - BE BRAVE and GO FOR IT!

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Oh and don't forget to label your quilt.   It is SO important to do this.  I always give my quilts names, not necessarily after the pattern I used or the fabric line I used, but something that suits the mood of the quilt I am making.  I called this one 'Winter Solstice' because the fabrics have a snowy theme (the Winter's Lane fabric line) and because it reminded me of our time in Stockholm, where the Solstice is an important point on the calendar, because it is signifies 'a tipping point' in the long long winter months.  This quilt is somewhat of a 'tipping point for me in my sewing adventures too - a little less amateurish and a quilt to give me confidence to try something even harder next time.  But most of all, I label my quilts for posterity.  In the few years since I have been quilting, I have seen how our quilts melt into our family life, symbols of home and comfort and wrapping something around you that speaks the words 'safe n warm'.  I hope they go on to mean this to future generations of my family and that just a little of me goes with them.

There are many ways to label your quilt and I have tried a few, but generally, I like to make my quilt labels out of simple cross stitch fabric and thread.  This give you the freedom to write what you want and make it as big or small as you like.  You can choose matching threads to coordinate with your quilt and there is something 'old school' about  it - very appropriate for an 'Old School house'.

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Once it is stitched, simply iron the sides under and attach it to your quilt and I think it's perfect and no worries that ink will wash away with years of laundering.  It should stay as a permanent record of your work.

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There is just one final problem though - it's way too big for our old bed - LOL!  time to get a new one, I think....... Happy weekend, Ruby x

P.S.  Just in case you are a bit confused by the 'initials' - well, yes, I have to confess that my real name is not Ruby Seppings - but one day soon, I will tell you all about who she is, and you will understand.