Saturday, August 13, 2016

Ongoing Saga of GORF

After ten days of little girl grand children, sleepovers and surprise treats of ice cream, tractor driving and rain,  GORF is back on the docket. So, lets get started:
  • Clip on the long sashing strips
  • Make sure they are long enough 
  • Change the presser foot back to the one with the seam guide
  • Remember to put it in needle down position
  • Find reading glasses b/c the computer glasses aren't strong enough
  • Put on music 
  • Fan in hall to draw the cool air from the kitchen air conditioner
  • Fresh stash of chocolate
  • Put away the Morrell blocks off the design wall to show my Sweetie what that beige circle thingy is
  • Glass of water
  • Clear work space of Ava's crafts 
  •  Turn on iron - no steam
Okay. No children today and I feel the cool air on my feet now. I can do this.



I have to remember that I have completed a Dear Jane quilt top so I am no stranger to 1/2 inch sashing strips. Except that these have ended up being almost 3/4 inch wide.

Sashing strips sewn onto one half.  Now to measure then against the other half. Looks pretty good, but what you cannot see is that I have tweaked them a bit to line up with the other intersections as I pinned them to the design wall. Dear Jane also taught me to be more relaxed with errors. But these intersections glare at  me! Why did I decide to do this the first time with red and off white???



  •  Make sure I have the correct sides together
  • Line up those ends first


  •  Line up the intersection


  •  Check to make sure they really line up


  •  Off just a tad
  •  Do it again


Not enough clips to go the whole length, so stopped just past the middle.
So even though I had worked so hard to line them up,  when I got there, it had all shifted ever so slightly. Looks bad here.



 But looks good here. All my sashing strips were cut on the straight of grain to avoid stretching. But the back strip stretched ever so slightly when I got there. Got to be relaxed. There is such a small margin for error. After all, this is the center intersection in red and white. Would Jane Stickle care?



 I care, so out comes the seam ripper. I bought a couple of new ones recently and they were as dull as high school math class, so found one of the old sharp ones.



 A million loose threads later, they are straight now ready to be top stitched
  • Change presser foot back to regular 1/4 inch foot


 But what is this??? A ripple!!



 Out it comes.
  • Pause for more chocolate


Until this . . .



To be continued   . . .

Blessings,
Chris

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Product vs Process

I have always loved process. Now a completed product is a wonderful thing, but I love to see how things are put together and use my words to explain it to others. I love figuring out the pattern and can spend far more time thinking about and planning a project then actually doing it. I originally started my first GORF quilt with the dream of making a Baltimore style quilt in a weekend. Well, I was wrong. First of all, this quilt is more in keeping with the Red and Green style of quilts of the 1850 than Baltimore quilts. Second, creativity cannot be forced.  If I am just copying patterns, it is easy to make up blocks quicky. But I had to make the first ones first. Not that most of my blocks are that original, but I had to make them. I had to choose colours and fiddle with placement. I thought the top border should be an original using left over flowers and leaves. hardest thing ever for me.  



Then they had to be stitched in place. So, with my first GORF (GO Real Fast) quilt, I got a bit ahead of myself. As I was connecting the machine quilted blocks together, I realized that I had missed machine appliqueing some of the pieces. Turns out that with using matching thread, I could not see which ones were done and which ones got missed so I pulled out a big magnifying glass. And marked the 8 leaves I  missed.



And the 4 flowers. These then had to be appliqued through all the layers using a straight stitch.



Now this gives me an idea for future GORF quilts. I had not enjoyed the process of machine quilting all those cross hatch lines and around all those leaves and flowers. Maybe I could quilt the blocks first, then fuse on the designs and machine applique and machine quilt at the same time. 



My task this week is to get all the blocks connected together. I googled this and found several tutorials online. None of them had the same measurements but most had the same process.As it turns out, I chose the measurement that was almost 1/4 inch too big. Guess I should have made a sample block first before cutting out all the red fabric I had. And I cut some of the print strips a half inch too short.



 I use these wonder clips for attaching bindings and now these connecting strips. It is much easier and neater than trying to pin through all those layers and there are too many layers to try to do with out.




Now, I started quilting 40 years ago. I started sewing at age 12. I have several sewing machines. And countless presser feet. But I did not know until recently that there are quarter inch feet with a seam guide!!!!
So I paid the $69 plus tax plus 2 trips to the Oakville Sewing Center to purchase one and I absolutely LOVE it!. I sewed on those strips through the quilted blocks very very nicely. Who knew? These things are now standard gadgets that come with new modern machines, but I had bought mine a few years back.




 I had to switch feet to do the top stitching. Good thing that is simple with my Bernina since I had to do this several times.




 Now to get back to work and complete the task. I still have to quilt the borders. I have not yet figured out how to do the ends of the swags but will see how they line up when the center is all put together. Stay tuned.

Blessings,
Chris






Monday, August 1, 2016

OMG August Quilting Goal

Only one quilting goal this month. To finally complete GORF since we decided to gift it for a wedding this month. So, I guess I need to get busy. The appliques are all fused and cut out with GO dies and machine appliqued. I machine quilted the 16 squares and have yet to connect them. Wish me luck. Never done it this way before. I still have to machine quilt the borders. But I want to connect all the blocks together before completing the ends of the swags on the borders because I want those flowers to land in the right place.


I started this project more than 3 years ago as I was experimenting with applique GO cutters and this crazy idea that I could make one of these in a weekend. Huh! I have taught the class twice and then I made GORF 2 back in May.



It probably took the better part of a week when I add up all the hours I did work on it. I assembled the whole thing than rented time on a longarm at a local quilt shop and did an simple edge to edge design. That was a bit pricey, but it was done 2 weeks before the wedding so I was happy.

Blessings,
Chris