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GAAQG quilt day January 17, 2015

The Greater Ann Arbor Quilt Guild had their first bi-monthly meeting of 2015 on Saturday, January 17. Before the meeting, I purchased a pretty panel of 12 bird-drawings from the featured vendor, Creative Quilt Kits , of Brighton, Michigan. The panel was designed by Tracy Lizotte for Elizabeth's Studio.  That vendor, Creative Quilt Kits, is hosting a bus trip to the International Quilt Festival Chicago 2015 at the Stephens Convention Center in Rosemont, IL on March 26, 2015. The cost is $67.50 and includes the bus fare, admission and program. The bus departs the shop at   10489 Grand River, Brighton, MI 48116  at 6:30 a.m. The reser vations deadline is February 24. Call  810-225-2849 or email contact@creativequiltkits.com for information. I also picked up a flier for the Spinner's Flock Fleece Fair to be held Feb. 21 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Beach Middle School, 445 Mayer Drive in Chelsea Michigan. The sale will feature Michigan wool, handspun...

Zippered, padded pouch

Linda Theil's 8 x 9.5-inch zippered pouch made following "The Zippered Pouch" YouTube video by Jenny Doan of the   Missouri Star Quilt Co. I am a fan of the how-to videos posted free on YouTube by Jenny Doan of the Missouri Star Quilt Co. They are clear, cheerful, and interesting. Her new "The Zipper Pouch" video caught my eye so I decided to make one. In this post I have included measurements for several different sized pouches and have included my pouch-making experience to add to the information provided in the Missouri Star Quilt Co. video, below. Watch"The Zipper Pouch" video by Jenny Doan of The Missouri Star Quilt Co. "The Zipper Pouch" project video includes: information on a basic quilt-as-you-go technique for creating the pouch body, the best way to add bag/tote/purse/pouch zipper by adding tabs to both ends of the zipper before installation and a clear visual on how to sew across the bottom seam of a bag to mak...

Handmade holiday presents 2014: shopping totes and more

Alisa's shopping tote Here are the rest of my handmade holiday gifts for 2014. I started out with the aprons featured in my Dec. 2 post  "Handmade holiday presents 2014: Hot Cider apron panel"  . For one of my favorite gifts, I used that same apron panel to make a shopping tote for Alisa using the  Metro Shopping Bag pattern from Bags: the Modern Classics by Sue Kim (Stash Books, 2011) p. 81. I used a coordinating fabric from Wilmington Fabrics  "Hot Cider" line, and for a touch that I really love,  I added piping to the seams of the front and back panels. If you add piping to your project, don't forget to strip the cording out of the last one inch of both ends of the piping to make the top seams easier to stitch. The tote handles are made of webbed belting available at JoAnne Fabrics. Tote in cotton twill by Project by Cotton, made in Japan I also made this tote in a c otton twill with a multi-colored, stylized cat design by  Project b...

Handmade holiday presents 2014: Photo book of Zoar Ohio

Baumeler/Bimeler cabin built 1817, oldest building in Zoar, Ohio. Photo copyright Linda Theil This handmade holiday present is a gift to you. If you like, you may download a free iBook version of my architectural photo study titled Zoar Ohio  from my Blurb bookstore at http://www.blurb.com/b/5792171-zoar-ohio   .  I love making personal books using the Blurb software and website to create unique publications that I can print on demand. Since Blurb announced their iBook option a few years ago, every book I publish can be digitally shared using Apple's iBook application. All my books can be downloaded as iBooks at no cost and viewed on any computer or mobile device equipped with the free iBook app. This year, a chance conversation reminded me of a series of architectural photographs that I took in Zoar, Ohio in the spring of 2007. I had printed the photos and put them in an album, but thought it would be great to use those photos to create a coffee-table book for...

Handmade holiday presents 2014: Hot Cider apron panel

"Hot Cider" apron panel by Nancy Mink for Wilmington Fabrics I bought the  "Hot Cider" apron panel by Nancy Mink for  Wilmington Fabrics  at the American Quilter's Society expo in Grand Rapids this summer. I thought it was pretty so I bought a coordinating stripe and a "Hot Cider" panel in the same line. When I pulled all my Christmas panels and fabric out of my stash in preparation for making some handmade holiday gifts, I thought the apron would make a great Thanksgiving gift to send to my faraway friends Virginia and Janet and Cindy to use during their holiday preparations. I ordered more apron panels and some other coordinating fabrics from Hancocks of Paducah   and got busy when they arrived in mid-November.  Instead of using the ties that came on the apron panel, I used a 28-inch length of cotton belting for the neck ties and cut 3-1/2 inch wide by 32 inch long strips from coordinating fabric for the waist ties. To line and make the a...

Anita Solomon's tessellating tees quilt block design

My tessellating tees quilt, prepared for hand-sewing the flanged binding. Borders and binding from Henry Glass & Company's "Sunny Side Up" collection. I have been a fan of Anita Grossman Soloman  ever since making the "arrowhead" quilt from her Rotary Cutting Revolution (C&T, 2010) book in August 2011. (You can see the arrowhead quilt I made in my August 2011 post "Arrowhead quilt block from Solomon's Rotary Cutting Revolution" .) When I saw that Soloman had a tessellating-tee block in the Mar/April 2014 edition of Quiltmaker Magazine, No. 156 this spring, I bought the magazine right away and got busy searching for fabrics. I decided to use only fabrics from my stash. I needed about two yards of a solid for the background and about 1/3 yard each of six different prints. The majority of my prints came from patterns and colors from the "Sunny Side Up" collection by the Buggy Barn for Henry Glass & Co. that I bought a...

Pittsburghers inspire

Last weekend I returned to Dutilh United Methodist Church in Cranberry Township, north of Pittsburgh, PA where I was privileged to attend the memorial of beloved friend Francis Sutter, an advocate for peace and social justice who passed away last month at the age of 101. She was the founder of the Pittsburgh North People for Peace and Justice , and a supporter of the Thomas Merton Center, Pittsburgh's Peace and Social Justice Center. Mrs. Sutter was honored and revered by many for her good works, and she was loved by everyone for her great and generous soul. She touched her friends with kindness, and like her Pittsburgh compatriot, Fred Rogers, made everyone she encountered happier for having known her. Mrs. Sutter was memorialized July 1, 2014 by Mary Sheehan in  The New People, Pittsburgh’s Peace and Justice Newspaper  article,  “In Memory of Francis Sutter”.   * * * On this trip to Pittsburgh, I was fortunate to spend time with fiber artist Lo...