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Wednesday, November 24, 2021

November 2021 OMG Completion

 An old friend called up early in October to invite us to his wedding. The next day my Sweet Farmer announced he was going to sell all the cows. My 90 Day Writing Goal was to have a first draft of my newest book by Dec 1. The pressure was on. I decided to choose one of the ufos from the endless project boxes that was nearest completion and make it my November OMG. This is Biblical Blocks by Rosemary Makhan that I started in 2005. The book writing was put on hold and Nov 11 the cattle were sold.




I had taken a class years ago the first time I made this pattern but I loaned the book and all the instructions to a friend who has moved 2-3 times since. Good thing that the first thing we did was cut out and label all the borders and setting triangles. 



But I still had to figure out how to put them together.This was a bit of a challenge. But I had a picture of the finished quilt so had a reference point. I only had to redo one. 




My machine was a bit sluggish so I thought I should check inside. Good plan. I cannot believe how much lint had collected in here. 






As a rule, I sew with bare feet. I want to be able to feel what is going on and have better control. But, what are the chances of dropping the scissors inches from my foot? 




I took me 2 days to make up the 6 remaining blocks. I had fussy cut many of the others, but chose to do foundation piecing for these. Another 2 days to assemble all the blocks and borders.



I had been helping my Sweetie with preparations for the cow sale so he rewarded me with his time and removed the foundation papers. He has decided that quilting will not be his new retirement hobby.



 I mitered both the Rose of Sharon applique borders and the fancy dancy Jinny Beyer border print. This technique is not for the faint of heart. Matching up all those stripes and designs. I sent the thing out to be longarm quilted. She had it back in 2 days.


The last thing to do was trim and sew on the binding. I chose to use a mottled blue fabric from the collection because I had enough and it matched perfectly. This is where the pain in my right hand really started screaming for relief. It took me the whole day to do a 2 hour job. So in all, it took 7 days to finish this quilt. 

 

Our friend told me that when he was living with us, he often noticed me working on quilts and asked what it would take to get one of them. Get married I told him apparently. Well, he remembered and now he has his own quilt.

You'd of thought we knew the bedroom colours before choosing this quilt. But I chose one from the archives of ufos nearest to completion. 

Blessings,

Chris

linking with: midweek-makers 

wednesday-wait-loss-251

wendysquiltsandmore.

party-patchwork-quilts-

.tishnwonderland.ufo-busting-

rombolttobeauty.



44 comments:

  1. So lovely and you DID it! November has been quite the month for you and the farm.

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    1. Thank you. November is not yet over. There are still a hundred pedigrees to sign and write in the name and address of each of the new owners.

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  2. The wedding quilt is beautiful! I'm sure the couple is well pleased. Hope life is a little less stressful now, happy stitching and everything else!

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    1. They loved it! I have another just like it in red and gold I am tempted to pull out while the process is still fresh.

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  3. Stunning! Congrats on the finish

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    1. Thank you. I am very happy with how it turned out considering I left out one of the border print borders and some of the flowers and leaves in the applique border.

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  4. Wow, that was a quick finish-up! It turned out beautiful!!! It caught my eye because I made the same quilt back around 1998, with a group of new quilters. That quilt hangs in a small church in Sendai, Japan.

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    1. How lovely for them. I have another not quite as far along as this one. I may pull it out and consider it for my 2022 ufo projects.

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  5. Congratulations, it's a beauty! If hand-sewing is painful, you should look into sewing on bindings on machine. I've been very happy with my attempts.

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    1. I did sew it on by machine. It is the pressure of opening and putting on the wonder clips and guiding the quilt through the machine. It was very tiring and O had to stop often. It was a 2 extra strength Advil day.

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    2. Ow, sorry. Sounds like you need a buddy who can put on bindings for you. =)

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    3. My longarm quilter offered to sew it onto the top but my pride and time pressure got in the way. I made up the binding while she was quilting. Also, I did not trust her to do sew it along those black stripes. Next time, I will let her. It was only a half hour extra for her while on the frame. She might have done a neater job than I did.

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  6. What an amazing finish! Congrats.

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    1. Thank you. I was tempted to pull out the other unfinished Biblical Blocks quilt. It still has about 10 blocks to make and assemble all the borders which are already hand appliqued.

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  7. Great job, Chris! (is this the one you left some of the papers in?) I'm sure it will be well loved for many years.

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    1. Yes this is the one. The longarm girl said she could hear them crinle as she stitched over them.

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  8. So well worth all the work to finish the UFO for the wedding gift…
    Looks stunning on their bed…
    What a good hubby to help with the papers….
    Hmm that’s close , I tie my scissors onto to table . Can’t reach my feet and I’m not forever losing them….

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    1. I am forever losing my scissors also. That must be why I have a dozen pair that size.

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  9. The wedding gift quilt is gorgeous...& will be loved I'm sure. Lucky having a helper with all those papers too. Thanks for joining in Woofa again...xox

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    1. Thank you. He was a willing helper this time. This was 3 days before the sale and he knew I was under time pressure and he was hovering around the computer waiting for messages.

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  10. Oh my goodness, your quilt is stunning. A most beautiful wedding present to be enjoyed forevermore.

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    1. thank you Kim. It has always been one of my all-time favourite patterns.

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  11. Massive change selling the cows..... That's a beautiful quilt that you gave as a wedding present......

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    1. That is an understatement. But he is looking forward to staying in the house now that winter has arrived with the snow and cold.

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  12. Congratulations! Its a beautiful quilt. Yours caught my eye because my Mom and I made the same one for my sister's ordination.

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    1. What a lovely gift for your sister. I love how each of the blocks has a biblical name.

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  13. A great finish and fantastic wedding gift. So, if your sweetie is not going to help remove papers as part of his retirement, does he have any plans. Big adjustment after milking cows everyday for a lifetime!!

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    1. He has some ideas how he wants to spend his time. But for now he is busy booking appointments moving toward surgery on both wrists. He is told it may be 6-8 weeks per wrist recovery time.

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  14. Wow! What a beautiful quilt. There’s nothing like a deadline to get a finish across the line. It will be well loved.

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    1. Thank you. I have a love hate relationship with deadlines. I need them to get the project done. I hate them because I always push the limit and wait until the last minute.

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  15. Blue goes with everything so I wouldn't worry that he'll love it! What a gorgeous quilt. Lucky you to have one so close to being done. Your hubby looks so cute trying to get those foundation papers loose. No wonder he's decided it's not his hobby! Congratulations on navigating a busy week and getting so much done. Thanks for sharing on Wednesday Wait Loss.

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    1. Thank you and thank you for giving us a place to share our victories and our progress.

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  16. Thanks for this very interesting post, Chris. I really like the man help you got there...mine has never volunteered to help. Meanwhile that quilt with the striking designs and blues is just gorgeous. What a wonderful quilter you are!

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    1. Thank you so much. he did not volunteer. He was voluntold. Well, sort of. He was sitting there anyway reading comments on our farm facebook page. I love how the border prints give you so much "scope for the imagination" as Anne Sherley would say.

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  17. Lovely project and awesome finish! Oh my goodness.....isn't it amazing how that lint collects? When my bobbin case starts mysteriously "rising".....I sort of know what will greet me when I pull it up!

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    1. I cannot remember when I last had changed the bobbin thread to have let it get that bad. I have now switched to the Aurifil thread I won back in the summer from One Monthly Goal.

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  18. Congratulations on getting the quilt finished, and not stabbing your foot with those scissors!

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  19. What a beautiful, beautiful quilt. So glad the scissors didn't hit your foot and sorry for the pain in your right hand! Thank goodness for your husband's help with the papers. Were you sad to sell the cows?

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    1. Interesting about the pain in my right hand. It was so intense that week. I know it was aggravated by squeezing all those wonder clips.

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  20. Gorgeous! Thanks for linking up with Elm Street Quilts One Monthly Goal and congrats on your finish.

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  21. Fantastic finish to a welcoming home. Glad he got married too! The border print was perfect!

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  22. What a beautiful finish. And what good timing with needing a wedding quilt!

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  23. Oh boy, the photo of the scissors is quite scary, hopeful your foot wasn't under. Gorgeous quilt!

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