quiltreport 4: science quilt
I will be reporting weekly sporadically on a new quilt on which I am working. I am in the quilt top stage, and hope I will follow this through to a completed project.
If you haven’t already, check out the previous posts:
July 27 — I have finished laying out the quilt top — just setting the cut pieces where they should go. I didn’t have enough material for a couple of the colors (as I am a math whiz), so off to Joanne’s Fabrics I must go, which I found out is just “Jo-Ann”, spelt like that, with no possessive. It’s a hybrid of the company’s co-owners’ daughters names. The original owners were refugees from Nazi Germany. Now I’m starting to feel a little bad about bashing the store in the previous quiltreport. Anyway, off to Jo-Ann I go. And I’m wondering how much like the chart it’s gonna look. Ugh.
Warning: Oh! And! I use a rotary cutter to cut my pieces — a pizza-cutter looking thing that many crafters use to precision-cut fabric. Earlier, I was using a thin metal ruler as a cutting guide (as it’s longer than my thicker, safer lucite ruler). The blade jumped the ruler and nicked my finger. A super close call, as the rotary blade is basically a round razor, and one must bear down pretty firmly when cutting. I only zapped the skin, no blood but I remember thinking “oh shit, where’s an emergency room around here?” Notes to self: the rotary cutter is my master; and find out where my damn emergency room is. And make sure I never have to go.
Update: I worked all day. It’s hard to stop, once in the zone. All rows are sewn except for the two that need extra material (I didn’t make it to Jo-Ann — my sister called and I had to talk her through her trauma of running over a bird today). I started sewing the black sashing on the completed rows and holy mama, it’s starting to look just like the chart. It looks really, really good. I grinned and grinned, seeing this meshuga idea come to life.
Fun fact: I quilted all day in nothing but my underwears!!
July 29 — Quilt top, complete! Oh, quilt top, you’re so fine. I’m trying not to dwell on the less-than-precise alignment and dumb little mistakes. The chalk was surprisingly hard to get off — I dabbed and dabbed with a wet cloth and now must re-iron the whole thing. But it really looks like the chart! Hey!
I’m really glad I used the chalk to mark each piece, though. It helped me to keep everything in order. Each piece was marked with the letter I assigned to each color, and with the row number. I still managed to screw up and employ my seam ripper a couple times. You can see the chalky goodness here:
I have to psych myself up for the next phase – the pinning. One must have to make a precise “sandwich” of quilt top + batting + quilt back. Smooth, pin, align, pin, undo, pin. Pin, pin, pin. I may use a brand new tool in my arsenal. We’ll see if it helps. I also am searching for someone with an open floor plan and some hard-surface floors, upon which I can built the sandwich. Easily, this is my least favorite stage. Wish me luck!
Go to Quiltreport 4.B: random craft cruft
Related hamblinks:
kick ass.
It REALLY IS looking like the chart! woohoo! 🙂
Okay, I love the close up of the chalk information — it reminds me of a fabric periodic chart. The finished top with the black sashing is f*cking awesome!
You are making me want to pick up my rotary cutter again.
Lastly, remind me again, what the scientific chart actually was. I know, I could go back into the archives to learn this is a chart of the bacteria E. coli, but I don’t remember where it was.
So much fun — well done!
It looks AWE-some! AWEsome I tell you! If I were there, I’d do the pinning for you. I love pinning. 🙂
Hi!
I am going to wordcamp on Saturday, and during Wordcamp, I am going to be leading online wordgames on different people’s blogs.
They will be silly, fun, low tech games using wordpress blogs.
Would you like to host a game on your blog?
Each game takes 15 minutes, and you would need to be able to post the game, and keep track of comments that 15 minutes while you are at wordcamp.
Go to http://www.bodyabcs.com/bwp/word-games/ to read more about it.
Much Love,
dk