Wednesday, December 05, 2007

baby sleep sack


I decided to quilt a sleep sack for my boy. I have the Halo Sleep Sack and it does the job, but I just don't like looking at it. I made a pattern from my existing blanket sleeper, but the end result turned out a little smaller than I planned. He just won't have much wiggle room. I pieced together the top from scraps. As an experiment, I handquilted the top and machine quilted the back. I was lazy and didn't baste or pin, so it's a little kittywampus. But I like it and it wasn't very hard to make.


hand quilting on right, machine quilting on left


here's the front


here's the back


test run

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

winter hat


see the cable flowing into the earflap - that ain't easy!

Ever since I moved to Switzerland, I've wanted this hat. I see people wearing similiar hats all the time, but I could never find the exact right one to buy. So of course, I decided to make it. I wanted this cable pattern with this shape with earflaps. This is such a basic design, but I couldn't find any usable pattern. So I made up a pattern, using my head size and gauge to graph out where to put the cables and earflaps. The hardest part was figuring out the decreases so 1) the hat shape looked right (still not completely happy with it - I wanted more pointy) and 2) the cables still looked right over the decreases. I undid several rows of the decrease at least six times to get it right and I was pretty satisfied with the result. The cables don't abruptly end but flow nicely in the top of the hat.

My favorite part is the earflap (see above). I wanted the cable to continue down the earflap, instead of having ribbing at the bottom of the hat and doing the earflap in stockinette like every other pattern I've seen. So this meant I had to reverse the cable (since you knit on the earflap after knitting the hat, knitting "upside down") and figure out where I was in the cable pattern so it twisted properly. This took four tries to get right. I was very proud of myself. It's kinda pathetic what makes me feel accomplished these days. Small victories.


yes, I look ridiculous posing here,
but I had to show off the tassels

I might still add some decorative edging and a tassel on top. But it's cold here, so I had to stop knitting and wear this thing.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

my baby, my knits


is there anything better than your baby in your knits?

My baby boy is finally here and almost 3 months old already. He needed a sweater and I couldn't find anything I liked. So I frantically rush knit this Baby Yoda Sweater in sporadic 10 minute increments spread over three weeks (even a bit while he nursed on my lap - that was complicated). I love it and I love him in it. I wish I had knit more for him during my pregnancy. Time is fleeting.





Wednesday, July 04, 2007

pink, baby

I'm not having a girl, but lots of my friends are. So I can throw my pink passion into some baby quilts. Here's the first in the series (for Astrid, who inspired me to start blogging):


Jacob's Ladder pattern in pink and green

Per usual, I accidently cut two solid green squares too small and didn't have any extra (I tried piecing tiny bits together, but it was hopeless). So I couldn't complete one of the patches. But this turned into a happy accident. I simply appliqued a four-clover (see below) in the substitue patch, giving a break to the symmetry of the piece and a little extra personal touch.


lucky four-leaf clover saves the day

I'm also using these small projects to practice my machine quilting skills. I was hoping that machine quilting would be so easy and quick that it would lure me away from the ridiculously time-consuming, but irresistably lovely hand quilting. Well, it certainly is quicker but so much harder than I expected. I'm a sloppy sewer and I have a bad habit of pulling the fabric where I want it to go, rather than letting the machine do most of the work. This is diasterous with machine quilting, which requires that all layers be fed at the same rate. So after a couple rows I realized that the top was bunching up in places. It wasn't so bad that I needed to rip it out and the errant fluffiness decreased significantly after washing. But I realized I have a lot to learn before I attempt a full-size quilt or quilt any design besides straight rows.

all pinned and quilted

Tuesday, April 24, 2007

one quilt down...


color, color everywhere

Hooray! I've finally finished hand-quilting my mother's quilt (the back story is here). It didn't take 100 years, only 100 hours or so. I started last August and last week I finished the last square. I am so elated! After the final stitch, I jumped up and did a victory dance. Of course, my fingers may never be the same, permanently calloused it seems.


I'm not using this quilt on the bed,
but how else can you take a quilt pic?

I love the look of hand-quilting and I get giddy just admiring my work, as amateur as it is. It's partially the look, but the stitches are also a physical representation of the time and hard work that went into it.


the lovely bumps creating by hand quilting


1 of 24 log cabin squares, shadow quilted


a little wobbly, but at least at semi-regular intervals

I've got two quilt tops waiting in the wings, but I don't know if I can do it again. My friend is having her queen size quilt handquilted in only a month by some lady in Utah for $80, apparently the going rate. As disturbed as I am about the sweatshop level hourly rate this lady is charging, I am tempted. Perhaps she's a speed quilter (but even at 5x my speed, she's still sorely underpaid). Perhaps she pays undocumented workers half her rate to do the job. Perhaps little elves come in at night and do all the work while she sleeps. Perhaps I should just quilt my quilts and let the mystery be.

On a final, slightly melancholy note... per the cliche, working on my mother's quilt has made me feel connected, connected to her, connected to the quilting community, connected to a quilting tradition. The only thing that makes me sad is that I don't yet have anyone to which I can pass on my quilting (or any of my other domestic skills). I'm saying this with shameless gender bias, assuming that neither of my boys will be interested or at least too busy playing sports or climbing mountains. Even if I had a girl, there's no guarantee she'd be interested either. Perhaps quilting makes its own connection, in its own time. I'll hope for that.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

baby on the way

I'm 5 months pregnant and baby knitting is in full swing. Last year I bought one precious skein of this Rowan big wool for 25 francs. This year I realized that I couldn't even make a baby sweater with this amount so I forked out another 25 francs so I could make this little number. It's sweet and cosy. I can't wait to snuggle my baby in it next winter.

Monday, February 12, 2007

discontinued


What happens when you impulsively buy yarn on sale then wait a year to use it? You realize that you don't have enough yarn to knit anything but a doll hat and you can't buy more because the stores don't carry it anymore.

Thus was my predicament this with yarn (and will be with many more yarn balls waiting patiently in my craft room). This is the third sweater I tried with this yarn, prematurely running out of yarn on two previous projects. On this project, I realized after knitting the front, back, and half of the first sleeve that the yarn was running precariously low. After a few hours of lamenting the prospects of frogging yet another failed project, I had an idea - short sleeves! Not quite brillant but pretty useful in this case. It worked like a charm, leaving only the tiniest bit of yarn left over (see above pic). However, this design choice turned this unisex sweater into decidedly feminine attire. Perhaps this is a sign? I think I'll add some embroidered embellishments to girl it up even more.

This sweater has an even longer story, which I'll elaborate on in an another post...

sugar, spice & everything nice

I finally finished my sweater interrupted and I couldn't be happier with it. Yea!

Friday, February 02, 2007

I love America

So my little case of homesickness has produced this patriotic number in just one month's time. The applique wasn't nearly as bad as I expected; I could get about 3 stars done in one TV show. Of course, I still have to quilt it.

A little happy accident caused the stripes to go horizontal, just like the flag. I hadn't designed this on purpose and only noticed it once it was all sown together. This only happened because I drafted my pattern horizontally instead of vertically (not realizing the consequences). This meant that the blocks would all be turned 90 degrees to the right, thus causing the stripes to go horizontal. Yea!

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

patch-tastic

The miracle of speed-piecing and lots of midnight quilting has surprisingly yielded a whole quilt's worth of squares in just 2 weeks! (OK, I admit that I still have many hours of applique left to lose my mind over.) The moral of the story is... pick the right pattern. My last quilt top took over 3 very long months to piece together and almost made me give up quilting before I'd even really started. But now I'm encouraged.

Per usual, the fun part was the endless planning in Powerpoint and Excel, creating all sorts of numbered diagrams to make speed-piecing possible for my "random" pattern. Here are a couple samples:

I don't recommend trying to figure out my system. I barely understand it myself and have to decipher it every time I reference the diagram.