Saturday, December 19, 2020

2020 Quilts

 Since I am retired and live alone the Pandemic has not bothered me that much.  The restrictions of sheltering in have been disconformable at times but it has not really bothered me that much.  I order groceries from Krogers and drive over and pick them up.  I have been very, very careful about not gathering with large groups of people.  Eating out has been making the right choices of where I go and what time I go.  Very few people eat out around 2:00 in our small town and that is the best time for me to go inside to eat.

I live in a 55+ community and we have not gathered for community activities since March.  I see friends out walking or sitting on their porches and we chat staying six feet apart.  I have my hobby of quilting and I also love, love to read.   So for me life has just gone on with few complaints.  

I attend a small church close to my home and have not attended any church functions since July.  Church services are on Facebook and there is something nice about watching in your pj's drinking a cup of hot tea.

Here are a few quilts that I have finished or projects in progress that have been done during 2020



This is a work in progress using the accuquilt system for cutting.  It is Hannah's Choice.  



Both of these quilts were also cut out using Accuquilt system.


This is a red, black and gray quilt also known as a UGA quilt for our Georgia Bulldogs in Athens, GA





I hand quilted this quilt.  The center 9 patch blocks I found in a bin in my very packed sewing room.  I vaguely remember making the blocks when my husband was ill.  After he had gone to bed at night I would go into my sewing room, where I previously lived, and sew on them just to relax.  After he died I guess I just forgot about them.  Three years later I moved into the 55+ apartment and four years later found them when I was looking for whatever.  It turned out to be a really cute quilt. 

I am determined to survive this Covid 19 pandemic.  I know things will get better but I do not know when they will be better.  I believe that this is within God's plan and he has a reason.  I do not know the reason and will probably never know.  But I do trust him and his reasoning.


Wednesday, July 8, 2020

Michael Miller BOM 2020




Michael Miller BOM 2020

I stumbled onto a BOM from Michael Miller using the Accuquilt cutter and dies.  Delighted to fine this since I was a new beginner using the Accuquilt system of cutting fabric.  Teresa Down Under is also making videos using these instructions and I have found her information to be very helpful. 

Whenever I purchase a new device it takes me a few projects to begin feeling confident in making it a success.  This has been very true using the Accuquilt system.  I had to rethink everything I did in cutting and laying out fabric on the cutter.  Then I wanted to be as conservative as possible with my fabrics as we all know how expensive fabric is today.  There has been a learning curve. 

After I cut out my last project, I put all the scrapes aside.  Gradually I have gone through the scrapes and keeping every piece that can be used for other projects.  I find that I am looking at every scrape and contemplating how it can be used.  Circles are being considered for future projects.  Half square triangles will be used in a scrappy quilt, maybe.  Crumb quilts, my version, will definitely be considered.

https://blog.michaelmillerfabrics.com/ will have information regarding their BOM.

Pictures are not the best.

Friday, June 12, 2020

Apartment Living


Almost five years ago I made the decision to sell my house and move into a 55Plus apartment complex in the small town that I live in.  It was a difficult decision as my late husband and I had built our "forever retirement home" with the intentions that we would live there until the end of our lives. Unfortunately, life did not work out as we had planned and he died in 2012 from Alzheimer’s disease.

I stayed in our home for three years after his death and spent those three years trying to maintain a house and yard.  It was hard.  It was very, very hard.  I was not getting any younger and it just became more than I felt like I could physically or mentally continue with the upkeep of all that was involved with maintenance of house and yard.

I knew that I wanted to remain in our small town and the selection of apartments were minimal.  I did not want another house to maintain and certainly no yard.  Fortunately, I was able to get into a fairly new 55Plus apartment complex and I made the move almost five years ago.

It has been an adjustment but I know it was the best decision for me at this time of my life.  No yard work and no maintenance.  Is it perfect?  No, it is not.  There are problems.  Space is one of them.  In my house I had a very large sewing room upstairs in the bonus room.  I was spread out all over that room with more fabrics and sewing machines than any person deserved.  But I did enjoy it while I had it.  Also, I had a beautiful sunroom that was probably my favorite room in the house.  It looked out to my neighbor’s small farm with his cows, goats and horses.  I loved it.  And I had a nice sized garage.

Now I have two bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and bathroom.  My apartment is larger than many two-bedroom apartments and I appreciate every inch I have.  The second bedroom I am using as my sewing room, but it is small.  During this pandemic I have overflowed into the dining room.  My ironing board and iron have been in use so much until I have left it up in the dining room area and the dining room table has been converted to a cutting table and any other use, I needed it for. 

I cut my fabrics on the dining room table.  I start out sewing the quilt blocks in my sewing room.  At some point the blocks are sewn together and the quilt construction outgrows the sewing room and I move to the dining room table.

So, if you ask me about my apartment today, I would tell you I have an apartment for creating and sewing quilts and it has a bed and bath for my personal use.  The apartment has become a quilt haven.


Apartment Living


Almost five years ago I made the decision to sell my house and move into a 55Plus apartment complex in the small town that I live in.  It was a difficult decision as my late husband and I had built our "forever retirement home" with the intentions that we would live there until the end of our lives. Unfortunately, life did not work out as we had planned and he died in 2012 from Alzheimer’s disease.

I stayed in our home for three years after his death and spent those three years trying to maintain a house and yard.  It was hard.  It was very, very hard.  I was not getting any younger and it just became more than I felt like I could physically or mentally continue with the upkeep of all that was involved with maintenance of house and yard.

I knew that I wanted to remain in our small town and the selection of apartments were minimal.  I did not want another house to maintain and certainly no yard.  Fortunately, I was able to get into a fairly new 55Plus apartment complex and I made the move almost five years ago.

It has been an adjustment but I know it was the best decision for me at this time of my life.  No yard work and no maintenance.  Is it perfect?  No, it is not.  There are problems.  Space is one of them.  In my house I had a very large sewing room upstairs in the bonus room.  I was spread out all over that room with more fabrics and sewing machines than any person deserved.  But I did enjoy it while I had it.  Also, I had a beautiful sunroom that was probably my favorite room in the house.  It looked out to my neighbor’s small farm with his cows, goats and horses.  I loved it.  And I had a nice sized garage.

Now I have two bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen and bathroom.  My apartment is larger than many two-bedroom apartments and I appreciate every inch I have.  The second bedroom I am using as my sewing room, but it is small.  During this pandemic I have overflowed into the dining room.  My ironing board and iron have been in use so much until I have left it up in the dining room area and the dining room table has been converted to a cutting table and any other use, I needed it for. 

I cut my fabrics on the dining room table.  I start out sewing the quilt blocks in my sewing room.  At some point the blocks are sewn together and the quilt construction outgrows the sewing room and I move to the dining room table.

So, if you ask me about my apartment today, I would tell you I have an apartment for creating and sewing quilts and it has a bed and bath for my personal use.  The apartment has become a quilt haven.