Wednesday, December 03, 2025

New Project

 

On the left you can just see a picture of the banner 17" x 32"

I must be daft . . .

It might have been the after effects of the turkey dinner, that full and contented feeling letting one's mind wander. And it was wandering as I sat on the sofa contemplating how I would decorate the livingroom this year for Christmas. I have a Christmas topper I throw over the big trunk, but as I did a mental inventory of quilts for the wall, I could think of nothing with a holiday theme to replace what now hangs in the space where I rotate my art quilts. For no reason I can fathom, the idea suddenly popped into my head that I could make something to hang there. I knew just the thing, a "JOY" quilt pattern I'd been saving for years - the pattern torn from a 1991 issue of Quiltworks magazine. Sure, I could probably finish it this week, if I put my mind to it. And my mind was definitely on board. By Sunday I'd found the pattern and dug out fabric - I have quite a bit of Christmas fabric I rarely find reasons to use - and started cutting strips. Monday I cut more strips and worked out how to copy an odd shape in the pattern. 

Yesterday it was sewing time, getting those strips sewn together and subcut into pieces for the checkerboard inner border. As long as I've been away from traditional piecing like this, I hadn't forgotten a few tricks of the trade. The strips were cut 1-1/2 inches wide and those subcuts would also be that wide, 53 of them. To keep from making errors lining up my ruler, I placed a stickie note on the underside along the 1-1/2 inch mark. Oh, that really helps to speed things up.

Forty of the subcuts then got sewn together to make checkerboard strips - twenty for each side. The remaining thirteen subcuts were sewn together to run across the bottom connecting the two sides. 

Then today, I ground to a halt. You see, the pattern called for muslin for the light areas and I definitely was not going to do that. Instead, I was seduced by the tan fabric on the left, rich and mottled and looking so good with the red and green fabrics I'd chosen. But as I looked at the picture in the pattern, I wondered if it was too dark rather than just rich and warm. I revisited the stack of Christmas fabrics and pulled the one on the right with its off-white background with its own sightly mottled surface and those sprigs with red berries. It's one that came from my mother-in-law when she gave up on quilting and sent everything she had to me. She'd wanted to make a Christmas wallhanging with that one, had a pattern from a book picked out but eventually lost interest. So I made it for her with the fabric she'd sent. It's closer to what the pattern calls for and I know that is clouding my judgment on which to pick. Once made up, will I be disappointed with the rich tan because it reads too dark, or disappointed in the lighter sprigged one because it reads too bright? My auditioning isn't getting me anywhere.

As if that weren't enough to put the skids on, the next step is actually making the letter blocks. I can get to cutting some of the pieces that are from the red fabric, but can go no further until I make that background fabric choice. But boy, is that going to be a lot of fuss, all those piece with angled ends. I do know a method to make it easier, but I'm not looking forward to it. Instead, in my weaker moments, I've been wondering about just cutting out the letters whole and fusing them to the squares of fabric. Well, I have to do something today . . . What do you think about all this? 

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

You've come this far so go with the sprigs & don't look back!! I'm looking forward to seeing the finished product! Merry, merry! Jan in WY

The Idaho Beauty said...

Oh Jan, you are the best coach! It helped to look at the other quilt I made from that sprig fabric to see how it played with the rest of the fabrics. I'll cut a few of the red letter pieces and lay them out for one last audition (because that's just the sort of procrastinator I am with decision making - lol), but I think you are right about going with the lighter sprig fabric. Merry merry to you too and do you have snow? We got about an inch and it's brrr cold enough that except on the pavement, it's sticking around. Can't get out of the 30's! Break out the hot buttered rum!!!

Weir Sew Fine Studio Notebook said...

I think the answer to 'what next' will be--what will you think next year when you get the banner out to hang it? Wil you have regrests or will you be pleased? I would contemplate some glitzy thread around those letters or maybe pearl buttons...go big or go home! Please don't put it in a box until next year--we are all on out tipptoes to see what you do!

Sherrie Spangler said...

Forge on! Fuel yourself with Christmas cookies!

The Idaho Beauty said...

Yeah, another coach! Thanks Sylvia for the encouragement, especially that bit about regrets or pleasure when it comes out again next holiday. That actually has been on my mind a bit! I've been thinking about gold thread as some of the fabrics do have gold highlights and I have one that runs through my machine fairly faultlessly. I've even been wondering about buttons too - we'll have to see when it is all done.

The Idaho Beauty said...

Am doing Sherrie, at least the forging on part! No Christmas cookies yet - still working on Halloween chocolates. ;-)