Earl Grey and Creative Mind Marination

“Rummaging through the cupboard like a wartime surgeon frantically searching for the right bandage, Peter swept aside Yogi tea, and Harmony Blend, though he hesitated for a second over camomile.  But no. Stay Focused, he admonished himself.  He knew it was there, that opiate of the Anglos. And his hand clutched the box just as the kettle whistled.  Violent Death demands Earl Grey.”

Still Life

Louse Penny


Over my lovely winter break, I had the opportunity to read more, as evidenced by the quotation above, and I was enormously pleased to find that gem in a mystery I was reading.  Earl Grey is my nightly respite, and I think it is perfect for all of life’s ills, though we all hope to avoid violent death…one cannot drink Earl Grey if one is dead.

Finished Christmas Quilts ready for delivery!


My Winter break was more than lovely, it was a much needed rest.  I worked every day of the first sixteen days or so of December–I completed at least nine quilts, and I am so pleased with all of the creative sewing.  I’ll be sharing those quilts on Instagram soon, and I will try to update the gallery here on the website, too.

I finished my Christmas Queue on December 16, and I had all of the quilts delivered by December 19, just in time for gift giving.  I always feel like Santa during December deliveries, and this year was no exception.  Special quilts were taken home as special gifts, and I was honored to be a part of so many family celebrations!

After deliveries, I cleaned up the studio, but before I closed the studio for break, I decided not to move new orders into my work baskets.  You see I have pending orders in stacked containers that move into the baskets when I start to work on them physically.  

Baskets ready for orders!

I had at least six orders to start in January, and I moved those into the baskets when I returned to the studio on January 2.  I enjoyed leaving the baskets empty in this way because it felt like a pause for rest.  I was also excited to move the orders upon my return to the studio, so that  I could let those orders start to work in earnest in my brain.  I think not filling the baskets gave my brain a rest, too; it didn’t pick up the orders and try to tease and niggle ideas in the back of my mind.  Of course, those orders were already filed neatly in my brain because my creative process begins with my first contacts with clients.  I make notes, sometimes before I meet the customer in person, or before I receive an order in the mail. Certainly once the materials for an order are in my possession, my creative brain is weighing options and making plans, even when I am not physically working on the order.  I know my mind does this work since ideas for orders will pop into my head at interesting times—in the middle of the night, on my daily walk, when I am stitching something else.  I’ve decided my creative process definitely includes pondering time.  Orders have to marinate in my creative juices.  Those “aha” moments are a lot of fun; they allow me to celebrate my own creative self!  Ha! By the way, everyone should celebrate and congratulate themselves, even for small ideas and victories!

New Year and orders ready for sewing. Under that batting is a quilt already pieced and ready to be quilted!

I’m back in the studio now, and my creative brain is fully cogitating.  I have meetings with eight or nine clients for new orders in addition to the ones in the studio.  I am excited about the possibilities.  My clients bring me the best projects!  Thank you!

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Time:  Hmmm…I have not decided yet, so you will have to come back to see! If you have an idea, then let me know in the comments below!

I am Reading:  I just finished A Widow For One Year by John Irving…so good!  I picked up a mystery Sam gave me for Christmas called Mirror Lake by Juneau Black.  Sidney gave me a new illustrated copy of Where the Sidewalk Ends by Shel Silverstein, so I have been giggling over that.  I am also reading Make, Sew, and Mend by Bernadette Banner…a birthday present from Sidney.  Lee gave me books, too, and I am excited to read those!   My boys know me pretty well, don’t they!  I think I will start The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens, too, while I am reading Northanger Abbey by Jane Austen…oh, I have so many things to read it makes me feel so warm and snuggly!  A cup of Earl Grey and a book…lovely!

How Long Does It Take to Make a Quilt?

“Just when I was settling down to it, Lettice Protheroe drifted in.

I use the word ‘drifted’ advisedly.  I have read in novels in which young people are described as bursting with energy--joie de vivre, the magnificent vitality of youth.  Personally, all the young people I come across have the air of amiable wraiths.

Lettice was particularly wraithlike this afternoon.  She is a pretty girl, very tall and fair and completely vague.  She drifted through the French window, absently pulled off the yellow beret she was wearing and murmured vaguely with a kind of faraway surprise.

‘Oh, It’s you.”

The Murder at the Vicarage

Agatha Christie

Hello and Happy Friday!

Last week I promised you a discussion of how long it actually takes to make a quilt. Of course, you might guess that I am going to say the time depends on a lot of factors.  The type of quilt, the size of the quilt, availability of fabric, and the time of year all contribute to the length of time it will take to have a quilt made.

Cutting lots of strips!

Cutting lots of strips!

The actual making of a quilt usually takes me anywhere between one to three weeks, but you should keep in mind that I tend to work on at least three projects at a time.  For instance Wednesday and Thursday of this week I made a bear, finished a tie quilt, and pieced a Classic 25T in addition to creating a pattern for a pillow case, researching classic patterns, emailing and talking with customers, and writing this blog.  The Classic 25T took me about five and a half hours to piece once I had prepped and cut the shirts and washed and cut all of the fabric.  That does not include the time it took me to piece the back and make the binding.  I can quilt and bind a Classic 25T in one day, but I often split those tasks up into two days because of the physical demands of that work, which is one of the reasons I work on more than one project at a time.  Sitting and piecing for six to eight hours is not healthy, so I break my day up into tasks.  I might work on piecing a quilt in the morning for three hours and prep the next order in the afternoon.

Cutting Fabric for sashing and borders.

Cutting Fabric for sashing and borders.

The type of quilt is a huge factor in how long it takes to make.  Classic quilts are the fastest to make.  Custom quilts are more complicated, so they take longer.  Memory quilts or special custom quilts can take the longest because of the pattern and fabric being used.  But I love having a variety of orders in the studio at once, so that I can easily make my tasks diverse

Time of year can also play a role in how long it will take me to make a quilt.  By mid-October my queue is full for Christmas orders, so if I take in an order after my Christmas slots are full, then that order will likely be the first order of the new year. 

I really try to be honest about my work load when I meet with customers, and I try to plan accordingly for anything that might arise to foil my plans.

Would you like to see a “Day in the Life” blog? Maybe I will do that next week!

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: A Day in the Studio with Ginger, and maybe I will layout a week, too.

I am Reading:  I am still reading Wicked by Gregory McGuire and Tightrope by Simon Mawer, and I am working my way through Let Your Creativity Work for You by Heather Allen. I am still reading bits of poetry, and I have stacks of things to read, which always makes me happy! I am also waiting on my copy of Fabric of a Nation: American Quilt Stories from the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston’s exhibit of the same name...I’ll put some pictures in the blog once it arrives!




Happy New Year and Many Thanks! Plus a great quotation!

“I only stayed to put away my gun and powder-horn, and give some requisite directions to one of the farming-men, and then repaired to the vicarage, to solace my spirit and soothe my ruffled temper with the company and conversation of Eliza Millward.

I found her as usual, busy with some piece of soft embroidery (the mania for Berlin wools had not yet commenced), while her sister was seated at the chimney corner, with the cat on her knee, mending a heap of stockings.

‘Mary-Mary put them away!’ Eliza was hastily saying just as I entered the room.”

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

Anne Bronte

Quilts, wall-hangings, bears, and pillows!  My little Mini-Cooper was full when I did my deliveries!

Quilts, wall-hangings, bears, and pillows! My little Mini-Cooper was full when I did my deliveries!


Happy New Year!

I hope you have had a wonderful, warm holiday season, and I hope for all the best for you in 2021.  I am keenly aware that the ringing in of the new year does not change the current climate or situation, and I am not seeking a heap of change right now.  I am determined to continue to improve on myself and my work by quiet, steady progress.  The new year does feel shiny and new (even though, looking out of the window, I see a dreary, rainy day, which I do not mind!), and I am hopefully going to keep that hope kindled well into the coming months.

Today’s quotation comes from one of my current reads, and as you know, I love to find sewing references in my reading.  Several things caught my eye in this quotation...the first being the nod to a female author, who would be interested and knowledgeable about current embroidery trends.  This section of the book is narrated by a young man, so it is interesting that the narrator chooses to explain why Eliza is not using Berlin Wools!  I did look up the Berlin Wools mania and I came across an article in Piecework Magazine which describes Berlin Wool work as something like needlepoint, but worked in Berlin Wools, which were famous for their “clear bright shades, pure whites, and delicate pastels. Vibrancy of color was imparted to the yarn by newly developed synthetic aniline dyes.”  

I am also intrigued by the mention of not mending stockings in front of gentlemen guests!

Besides my reading, I have been very busy with the Christmas season and new projects after the Christmas projects were finished and delivered.  The picture above says it all...bears, pillows, quilts...so many fun projects went to wonderful customers this holiday season, and I am pleased and honored to have made them all!

I also received so many wonderful notes and thanks from my great customers...one customer sent me a photo of her new grandbaby with a quilt I made for her daughter in law!  Her son is holding the baby with the quilt all snuggled up around them both.  Needless to say my day was made.  I know I have said it before, but making beautiful quilts for people and seeing their joy is one of the things I truly love about my job. 

Thank you to everyone who chose me to make special quilts, pillows, bears, and other sundries for them in the last five years, and I am so excited about the projects currently at work in the studio and the future projects yet to come.

I will try to get back to the regular blog schedule, too, as I tackle these new, exciting endeavors!

Happy New Year and Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Week:  New projects and an anniversary quilt update. (I know you don’t believe me, but I will try!)

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands. I am slowly devouring The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte (And yes, I am still contemplating the other Bronte novels---I do love Wuthering Heights so much!), and I picked up Call Me By Your Name by Andre Aciman at the library.  I am also reading The Yellow House by Martin Gayford.   



Busy Christmas Order Week!

“On a personal level, too, art is life intensified: it delights more deeply, consumes more rapidly; it engraves the traces of imaginary and intellectual adventure on the countenance of its servant and in the long run, for all the monastic calm of his external existence, leads to self-indulgence, overrefinement, lethargy, and a restless curiosity that a lifetime of wild passions and pleasures could scarcely engender.”

Death in Venice

Thomas Mann

Just off of the frame, some of the echo quilting I did this week.  See that orange fabric…that is the back and it is going to be the binding!  I think it will really pick up the appliqued flowers!

Just off of the frame, some of the echo quilting I did this week. See that orange fabric…that is the back and it is going to be the binding! I think it will really pick up the appliqued flowers!

Happy Friday!

I hope you have had a wonderful week!  I have been busy sewing, prepping, quilting, and enjoying my work.  You can see above the lovely echo quilting I did earlier in the week...I am really starting to like custom quilting!  I do enjoy the simple stipple I use on t-shirt quilts; it is a soothing pattern that allows me to avoid any parts of shirts that need special care like pockets, buttons, placards, or areas with heavy paint.  I do enjoy having the opportunity to do some custom quilting, though, too, and I think in the new year I will endeavor to do more practice with it.

I am deep into getting Christmas projects completed.  I am trying to finish the Christmas orders by mid-December, so that if people need to mail items they can.  I feel good about my progress, too.  

I think the anniversary quilt will have to be put on hold until after I complete that work, though, so you will likely not see more about it until later in December.  I have also hinted at showing you the embroidery work I have been doing in the dark evenings before bed...I may get some pictures taken of it, but lighting is not great when I am working on it.  

Next week is Thanksgiving, and I won’t post another blog until the week after, I think...unless I get it set up and ready by Wednesday evening.  I have promised myself that I will take the entire day of Thanksgiving off, so I cannot set up the blog on Thursday if I do!  Maybe I can get it set up on Friday...which will mean it will be late, but even if I do not get a blog written next week, know that I am thinking of you all!  I hope you all have a safe, socially distant Thanksgiving, so that we can all enjoy a table full of family next year!

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: That depends on you...what would you like to hear about?  Leave a comment by next Monday or Tuesday...maybe a few suggestions will help me get the blog finished early next week!  Really, I would love to hear from you!

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands. I am also reading Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice, and now I am casting about for what my mind needs next.   The Mann novel was acquired at the library along with Blue Rose by Carol Muske-Dukes (poetry).  I am also reading The Yellow House by Martin Gayford.