Search This Blog

Friday, January 19, 2018

Memory Quilt

This project is a long time in the making.  In May of 2016, a coworker lost her husband suddenly.  I had occasion to speak to him fairly often, as he was semi-retired and working as a security guard at the courthouse I work at.  From time to time, he would come into our office to visit with his wife, and would always say hello.  I distinctly remember him joking about how he was available to deliver my baby in a pinch, because he ended up delivering their youngest child twenty-something years earlier when the medical staff left his wife unattended in the hospital! 


Well, fast forward several months, and my coworker brought me a bag of her husband's shirts she wanted me to make into a quilt.  I was honored, but terrified--I'd never made a quilt out of shirts before!  So it was with great trepidation that I jumped in and started cutting:



Thankfully, most of the shirts were woven dress shirts that he wore to church.  It still felt wrong taking the scissors to them.  In the end, I found myself with a neat stack of squares.



I had read somewhere that you should back knit fabrics with woven interfacing to reduce warping while piecing and quilting, so I backed the knits with Pellon Shape Flex.  I ended up with seventeen 13.5" x 13.5" squares.  I picked out a neutral beige solid to sash the squares, and started putting them up on the design wall.   I ended up hating how it looked, so I left the squares up on the wall (in the hallway to our bedroom) so I'd be forced to look at it several times a day.  My sweet hubby is the one who suggested cutting the more plain squares into smaller pieces to add interest to the quilt.  Well, duh! 


In the end, this is the layout we decided on.  We settled on this basic layout because I really, really did not want to mess this up.  It's not like yardage, where if you mess up cutting, you can just cut more off of the bolt!  I rapidly sashed all of the pieces and ended up with a not-too-shabby top:





Anyone else love making binding?


I quilted it with a simple cross hatch.  Once again, I was terrified of messing this up, and wanted something foolproof. 





Some more photos:

 
 
 
 
In the interest of privacy, I'm opting not to share photos of the back of the quilt, which was a simple wide back fabric that I personalized.  This was a long and rewarding journey.  I now know that I will probably never make a commissioned T-shirt quilt, though I might end up making a few for my children when they're older. A bittersweet finish.  Until next time, God Bless. 




Friday, January 5, 2018

Lil' Schep's Dino Quilt

Lil' Schep is two.  Two! 






I guess that's how parenting goes.  You just look up, and years have gone by.  We did a dinosaur theme for his 2nd birthday party, so of course, I had to make a dinosaur quilt to go with it.


I've been pressed for time lately, so I ordered a toddler-sized quilt kit from an Etsy shop with some really fab dino prints. 


The following is basically a primer on how not to take photos, ha!

The simple layout = quick finish!


Obviously not big enough for a bed, but it's still much bigger than his little body, so he sleeps with this quilt. 

Found a free "Jurassic" font online, and cut the letters out on my Cricut. 

I managed to find some dinosaurs to pose with the quilt. 

If you're one of the lucky few that got to attend this little guy's birthday party, your thank you cards are going to be mailed soon--I hope!

Linking up to Finished or Not Friday, Finish it Up Friday, and TGIFF.  I hope to make more time for sewing this year, so until then, God Bless.