Well, here it is 13 July 2014………..The time flies when one is having so much fun. Â The weather is definitely Summer Time in the South! Â We reached 99 degrees and 50% humidity yesterday – Lovely. Â This is a good time to stay indoors and work on quilt projects – just like the Cold Winters in the North!
If you follow my Blog you know that I had been working on a Quilt called Enduring Love #270 using Judi Rothermel fabrics from Old Sturbridge Collection called Enduring Legacy. Â Being a Type A Perfectionist and OK – Compulsive Obsessive Quilter, this project was doomed from the beginning – I just did not realize it! Â After working on it on and off since late April, stopping at one point and redoing the entire quilt, I arrived at the border of 6″ Stars.
I will not bore all with my lovely trip through the vicissitudes of the life of a perfectionist quilter, so here is the bottom line. Â Because I am chemically sensitive, all fabric is washed before bring it to the Studio. Â I NEVER once thought that by washing this fabric some of the dyed pieces would have faded and that the fabric would have stretching issues.
All I will say is that the left over fabric (and there is a lot) is put up so high on my shelves that I doubt I will ever see it again – maybe the dust will cause it to disintegrate someday and I will never have to “make myself use it”.  Maybe I will give it to a quilter who needs some frustration in their lives!  (LOL) Once the fabric is washed it turned into a thinner more stretchy fabric that I did not realize UNTIL I had made 36 – 6 inch stars for the next to the last border…….So here is what I came up with and I am not pleased with it at all.  Without the Stars, the quilt does nothing for me and I am sure a Judge would run past it, therefore it is going to be a utility quilt.  I think that if anyone has purchased this line of fabric and pre-washes  they will have a mess on their hands.  The fabric fades and becomes very thin and stretchy – a lot of work that will be in vain because the quilt will not last.  Now needless to say, there were some errors I had made when making the quilt, but when I say it was doomed from the beginning it was and it was due to the pre-washing.  Learned a BIG lesson on this one.  (I wonder if I will ever get over the time I have lost in devoting to this quilt?)

Now on to more positive things. Â I have completed my Stars Across Texas embroidery project – I have decided to wait awhile before I design a setting. Â There is something to say about hand work and that is, Â “one can control the outcome”!


Last year I became interested in Reproduction fabric and Australian quilts.  The Australian quilters love English Paper Piecing (EPP) and their quilts really pop and look great.  There is a lot of intense hand work in  their patterns and sooooo challenging!  I cancelled all of my US magazines and only subscribe to Quiltmania.  LuAnn of luannsloosethreads.blogspot.com blogged about a quilt that she was starting that is in Quiltmania Magazine Number 107.  Be sure to go to her Blog – she does some great work.  Here is a picture of the quilt called Brinton Hall by Leigh Latimore (http://leighquilts.blogspot.com)  Check out her Blog also.

I immediately knew that this would be my next project. Â So off to the Stash to pull fabrics. Â I am working on the Center Medallion now doing the EPP rings around a “fussy” cut Center. Â I have missed working with my batiks this last year so I will be using them in this quilt. Â Hopefully it will not be a disaster.
LuAnn also blogged about a book that is absolutely great when developing an in-depth understanding of EPP. Â The book is called “all points patchwork” – English Paper Piecing Beyond the Hexagon for Quilts and Small Projects by Diane Gilleland. Â Amazon has it on their website for about $12.00. Â There are 220 pages of illustrations of “the many ways to use EPP as possible”. Â (a direct quote from her Idea Book versus Project Book). Â It is a great book!
I love the Blogging world – quilters share so many ideas and projects and they are all inspiring. Â So with that, I am now going to go and work on EPP Hexagons. Â I have covered up the sewing machine for at least 2 weeks and will be sitting here working on EPP watching some movies and resting my weary mind from the last quilt project that I want to forget. Â Doesn’t this look inviting?

Have a wonderful week, enjoy life, and always take time to take in some Sun (good Vitamin D).