I'm sure most quilters could knock out a tote bag in a few hours but not me. Apparently I'm on a quest for the perfect knitting tote bag. I've spent days and days and days thinking about how to put together one using those two blue and muslin orphan blocks. It occurred to me that a nearly worn out reusable grocery tote was about the size I was thinking of, and I spent some time studying its construction to come up with a game plan.
Then I spent more time mentally going through fabric on hand that would be suitable for a tote. On one of those many nights when my mind was too busy to fall asleep, I suddenly remembered some fabric I'd gotten from my late friend's stash, a heavier cotton fabric she had dyed up to make into table drop covers when vending at quilt shows. I'd not even folded them up after washing when I got the big pieces home but hung them over a hanger. Perfect!
Ok, I sort of had a plan, and I had the fabric. Time to do some figuring and get to cutting.
I'd also been thinking about how to handle the blocks, remembering times when I was sorry that I hadn't quilted a block before adding to a pillow top. I flipped each over to remover stray threads (boy were there stray threads from the muslin!) and discovered that each had a piece of paper with my name pinned to it. Ahhh - now I vaguely remembered why I made these blocks: they were for a block contest held for the Sun Prairie quilt show one year. I don't remember the contest parameters but I think it had something to do with the Temperance Movement - I'm sure I've got that info somewhere in my documentation files. I also realized that the center of one block had been paper pieced and the center paper not removed - oops!
After trimming and a good press, I decided to layer the blocks with Thermore batting and the same fabric for backing as for the tote itself. Ready to lightly quilt these with some stitching in the ditch.
Still going over sequence of sewing all the pieces together in my head, hoping my figures are correct but knowing that if they are off a bit, I can fudge things.