Sunday, April 14, 2024

Scrappy knit placemats, third Make Nine 2024 finish

Who loves a good stash-buster project? Me, me, me!

I like using up scraps and leftovers—fabric, yarn, orphan socks, old linens, whatever—to make something useful out of materials that would be otherwise disposed. I like the creative problem-solving challenge of taking random pieces, and combining them to create a cohesive whole. These colorful, scrappy placemats fulfill my Make Nine 2024 yarn project prompt.

Scrappy yarn placemats. 14" x 18"

A yarn stash buster

I've included a yarn project in my Make Nine challenge now and again. I get a hankering for knitting or crochet when the weather gets cold at the end of the year... which coincides with setting goals for a new Make Nine. A yarn prompt made it into Make Nine 2024 after being absent in 2023. 

For this prompt, I prefer a simple pattern that is easy to pick up and lay down without the stress of remembering where in a pattern I left off. This project also turned out to be another stash buster.

Using leftover cotton yarn balls. Mixing the colors.

Leftover balls of cotton yarn and a few small balls of unidentifiable, abandoned yarns that were a worsted weight were gathered. Even a couple of knit swatches were frogged so the yarn could be recycled for this project.

Yarn swatches were unravelled and up-cycled for this stash buster. 

The linen stitch, a perfect stitch for colorwork knitting

The linen stitch is my go-to colorwork pattern. It's an easy two-row repeat. It makes a nice, firm fabric with an interesting texture. And it offers lots of opportunity for playing with color as it employs an alternating slip stitch (which causes the color of the previous row to interact with the color of the working row). I use the linen stitch for the majority of my knitted dishcloths, too.

Colorwork with the linen stitch.

The new placements were put to use this past weekend.

Breakfast in th camper on knitted placemats.

Third Make Nine 2024 finish

This is my third finish for Make Nine 2024. This is the 4th month of the year and 6 more makes to go. Making good progress!

Make Nine 2024 tracker. Yarn Project prompt.


Sunday, April 7, 2024

A week of Improvisatioinal Quiltmaking at the Folk School

Wow! What a invigorating, extremely productive, and whirlwind of a week I had at John C. Campbell Folk School with 8 talented quilters and a fabulous studio assistant! Our final exhibit for the closing ceremony was most impressive!

Intro to Improvisational Quiltmaking: class exhibit.
John C. Campbell Folk School, March 2024.

Cutting fabric without a ruler

The week began with improvisational, freehand cutting of fabrics. Simple units and shapes were cut and then pieced together: strips, stripes, and rectangles. With no roadmap or pattern to follow, each maker’s composition was improvisational, unique, and personal.

Reese's strip set made by cutting fabric strips without a ruler.

By cutting the fabric freehand—with no quilting ruler involved—each cut line and sewn seam reflected the “hand of the artist.”

Amy's composition using strips and strip sets.

By the end of the first day, the design walls were flooded with patterns and patchwork samples…

Delores' design wall.

Elaine's design wall.

… that became the seeds for larger compositions. 

Jessie's design wall.

Karen's design wall.

Marsha's design wall.

As the week progressed, students were introduced to ruler-free cutting and piecing of other patchwork units—isosceles triangles and flying geese. 

Triangle units on Nina's design wall.

Then we moved into cutting and piecing curves...

Demonstration on curved piecing with Amy (left), me, and Delores (right).

... and more pieces were added to the design walls.

Delores' freehand curves and 1/4 circle units along with triangle units.

Profuse patchwork productivity

Throughout the week at the Folk School, the sewing machines steadily hummed from morning to afternoon, and often into the evening after dinner.

Reese working on an improv pinwheel block.

Our spacious classroom brimmed with fabric, color and creative patchwork pieces. 

Jessie (left) and Amy at their work tables.

Marsha (left) and our studio assistant, Geri (center), and Nina (right).

Our Improv Group Project

One of my favorite exercises came on the third day—the group project. Students did a blind drawing from a selection of basic patchwork units. The randomly chosen color palette, "neurtrals," was determined by the roll of a dice.

The fabrics we used (shown below) are from the Painter's Palette collection from Paintbrush Studio. Colors are: wheat, mist, white, dust, silver, fog, golden brown, sand dollar, willow, grey, and ebony.

The neutral color palette for our Group Improv Project.
Fabrics are Painter's Palette solids from Paintbrush Studio.

With the clock ticking, students made their neutral color fabric choices, cut the pieces they needed, and began piecing their blocks.

Making fabric selections for the group project.

Karen drew the "Drunkard's Path" block.

Free-hand cutting fabric for the group project.

When time was up, the final blocks were displayed on the design wall. 

Student improv blocks for the group project.

My task is to assemble the blocks into a quilt top with the hope of contributing the final improv quilt to the Folk School for its fundraiser.

Auditioning and arranging the improv units of the group project.
[Photo courtesy of G. Forkner]

Show and Tell

To keep ideas flowing and provide inspiration for the students' larger compositions, I brought several of my own improvisational quilts for a Show and Tell. The lessons were also accompanied with slide presentations of improvisational quilts made by other quiltmakers. We all use many of the same basic patchwork units, but in the end, each quiltmaker creates their own unique composition. (That's one of the many beauties of quiltmaking!)

"Blue Rhino Moon" was in response to a guild challenge.
[Photo courtesy of G. Forkner]

One of the pieces for my Show and Tell was an improvisational work-in-progress—a quilt top that had not yet been quilted. Looking at the back side of a quilt top can provide insight into how the patchwork units are put together. Quite often, problem-solving skills are needed in the construction process to make sure everything fits together.

Examining the back of the quilt top provides insight into the construction.
[Photo courtesy of G. Forkner]

Success!

By week's end, my students had accomplished a lot! There were a plethora of patchwork units to be used in future pieces, several finished tops ready for quilting, and two students had quilted and bound or faced their compositions. 

Reese learned how to sandwich, machine quilt with the walking foot, and bind her quilt.
It's a gift for a friend.

I commend them for all for their hard work and diligent experimentation. It's not easy to deviate from familiar processes (like abandoning the cutting rulers), push oneself on a journey without a road map, and try improvisational patchwork.

Marsha finished this beautiful top! She graduated the values in her strip sets
in warm and cool color palettes.

Take-aways and favorite tehniques

I like to ask students what their take-aways are from my classes. It helps me know where the lightbulbs came on and how to fine tune my syllabus for future classes. Here are their comments:

  • students said they appreciated the freedom of the improv process; they could create their own story and create the character for their own piece.
  • suggestions were offered but we could still go our own direction if we wanted.
  • [we] liked the variations on a theme and seeing the different interpretations from each person.
  • "I have a vision for the future. I have ideas on what I can do with the pieces I made in class."
  • "I want to try combining improv with the other [patchwork] techniques I do."
  • "Passing skills to the next generation!"
Favorite techniques included: skinny strip inserts; troubleshooting and how fix a seam to make the piece lie flat; faux piped binding.

"Necessity is the mother of invention." —Plato
"Necessity may be the mother of invention, but play is certainly the father." —Roger von Oech

Thank you!

A big Thank You to everyone for a wonderful week at the Folk School!

Intro to Improvisational Quilting class, March 2024.
[Photo courtesy of G. Forkner]

To my generous and hard-working students for spending the week in the quilting studio with me learning about Improvisational Quiltmaking. It is my hope that you found something interesting or helpful that you can use in your future quiltmaking endeavors. And I would love to see where you take the pieces you started in our class—so keep me posted. I also appreciate your generosity in sharing your skills, expertise, ideas, and supplies with your classmates and with me. 

To our fabulous studio assistant, Geri, thank you for anticipating my needs as an instructor, filling in the gaps, keeping us all on schedule, and for creating the wonderful slide presentation that was the "icing on the cake" for our closing ceremony exhibit. 

And to all the behind-the-scenes staff at the Folk School for making this a welcoming and nurturing experience for everyone.

The Log House dorm at John C. Campbell Folk School
Brasstown, NC

That's a wrap!

And, that's a wrap!


Sunday, March 24, 2024

Packing my quilts for Improv at the Folk School

 This is the pile of quilts I’m packing for the Improv Quilting class at the Folk School next week. 

Improv quilts, tops and samples for a trunk show at the John C. Campbell Folk School.

I have copious notes, improv patchwork samples, and lots of inspiration and ideas to share with the students. It’s a full class and I have a fabulous assistant once again. I hope the weather is mild and I can squeeze all the improv paraphernalia into my car.


Sunday, March 17, 2024

Winter of Care and Repair Challenge results, a Make Nine finish

The Winter of Care and Repair Challenge is coming to a close on March 19, the Spring Equinox. In recapping my mends and recycling efforts, I was very pleased with the number of accomplishments.

Winter of Care and Repair Challenge. December 21, 2023 - March 19, 2024.

Care and Repair Pledge

My Winter of Care and Repair pledge was focused on textiles. It included these categories:

  • mending and repairs, 
  • upcycling/repurposing, 
  • organizing my fabric stash, and 
  • finding ways to minimize scraps.

Mending and Repair

When you sign up to participate in a Challenge, and decide upon your pledge, there’s an on-going awareness of your goals. This definitely made me more involved. One of my successful categories from the pledge was Mending and Repair.

Replacing missing buttons on two shirts.

Finishes include:

  • abundant button replacementsshirt fronts, shirt cuffs, a jacket—on 5 different garments. (When you ask family members if they have anything that needs mending, the items come out of the woodwork!) One garment was mine and the rest were my husband’s. 
  • mending a collar on a jacket,
  • mending a burn hole in a dish towel
  • mending the patch pocket on a pair of pants, and
  • mending a seam in the armscye of a me-made Collins Top.

Mending the inside collar of a jacket.

Upcycling and Repurposing

This was another successful category. I've recycled orphan and worn out socks into 7 Loopy Loom woven hot pads.  

Upcycling old socks using the Loopy Loom.

Upon discovering several old knitting swatches, I decided to frog (un-knit) a few of them and repurposed the yarn in another knitting project. I've completed 3 knitted dish cloths and am working on a pair of placemats with the frogged yarn and leftovers.

Recycling the yarn from knitted gauge swatches.

Minimizing Fabric and Yarn Scraps

I continuously work through leftover yarns and fabric scraps in my stash. Completed projects during Winter Care and Repair include four quilt tops for kitty (charity) quilts—made with fabric scraps.

Scrappy kitty quilt top.

A pile of discontinued fabric samples was donated to the Friends Life Community, an organization at which my buddy, Jim Sherraden, volunteers as an art teacher.

Discontinued fabric scrap donation to Friends Life Community.

Yarn scraps are being knit into a pair of placemats. One placemat is complete and the other nearly finished.

Scrap yarn knitted placemat.

Organizing the stash

Even though I was unable to attack a big organization project, small dents were made in the yarn and fabric stashes through this online Challenge. I found and repurposed the knit gauge swatches and used up scraps for the charity quilts. 

On a positive note, I will say that various articles of clothing got mended much quicker and thus back into circulation because of the Challenge. The Challenge created more focus on the idea of valuing what we already own instead of discarding and buying new. I'm happy about that.

The second Make Nine finish for 2024

This online Challenge is fulfilling my Make Nine 2024 Online Challenge prompt. I continue the search for creative scrap projects for fabrics and yarn. And I've also set aside other items for mending and repairing.

Make Nine 2024 tracker.

Winter of Care and Repair was a worthwhile Challenge! Thank you to Jeanna Wigger at @thepeoplesmending for hosting this Challenge.


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