Pixelation Quilt

It was all–the continental drift reversing direction, the folding of rocks like ribbon pasta in the earth’s warm ovens–as challenging to belief as the most fantastic dogmas of religion, but accepted by everybody sane in the modern world.  The weight of evidence accumulated all the time, like all those protective shells contributed by tiny creatures as keen to live, as self-important and ultimately insignificant as she.  Alexandra’s relation to Nature had always puzzled her; she leaned on Nature, she learned from it, she was it, and yet there was something in her, something else, that feared and hated it.

The Widows of Eastwick

John Updike


The quilt in its new home!

T-Shirt quilts and memory quilts are predominantly what I make in my custom quilt making business; however, I do have clients who want non-clothing related quilts made as well.  Most recently I have been working on a special project for one of my quilt-loving clients.  This particular client loves looking at quilts and enjoys having them in his home. He usually texts me and says, “Hey–what do you think of this quilt? Can you make something like this?”  So far, I have been able to say a resounding “Yes!” to his queries, and I am never disappointed!  He always brings me exciting, interesting ideas, and he loves to pick out fabrics, too.  

His latest idea, besides a few clothing related projects and one dog quilt (Yes, a quilt for his dog.) is a pixelation quilt.  I found the pattern Pixelated by Sedef Imer at www.lovepatchworkandquilting.com.  But he had particular fabrics in mind, so I really designed the placement of the colors myself and pieced the top the way I wanted to piece it!  I read through the pattern and the instructions are well done, and I think anyone could use their own scraps to create a similar quilt with that pattern.

I have to say, this quilt has taken me a long time! I’ve discussed my creative process here before, and this quilt needed some time to foment.

First, I ordered the fabrics from Cherrywood Fabric (https://cherrywoodfabrics.com/).  I ordered several of their 12 step bundles and several yards of the solid white fabric, which gave me a good variety of colors to use along with the “background,” and they arrived bundled and bursting to be cut and pieced!  I let the idea of the rainbow and the placement of the colors sit for a little while— the fabrics sat on my big studio table, so that I could see them everyday.  I washed the fabrics and I began to plot placement.  Dark to light?  Rainbow order (ROYGBIV)? Or follow the inspiration picture?  Light to Dark?  Even before cutting anything, I moved fabrics around and organized them in different ways.  Always the color pattern was slowly emerging in my mind.

Then I had to decide on scale—1” squares? 2” finished squares?  How would I piece them? Do I want to use an interfacing foundation to expedite piecing?  Plus I wanted to lay out the whole quilt before I began piecing it.  So while my brain worked on the construction side of the quilt, I began to work on the cutting.  I decided on 2” finished squares, so I cut all of the fabric I ordered.  I used 1600 squares in the quilt top, and I had some left over from the layout—I cut extra to make the layout easier.  Luckily, I could stack and whack.  I stacked a family of fabrics together up to eight layers and cut strips and then squares.  Those piles of colored squares were so satisfying!

I decided using an interfacing foundation for the piecing would also be beneficial for working on the layout.  I could lay out the squares of interfacing, which is already marked with 2.5” squares, and then lay out the squares.  Then the interfacing squares could be carefully stacked.  The layout would be easy to maintain through piecing that way. I also labeled the interfacing squares with numbers on the back, so that I could better keep them in order, too.  I used twenty-five interfacing squares, with sixty-four two inch finished squares in each.  Each row had five interfacing squares, so the quilt finished at 80”x80” with a total of 1600 two inch squares!

One row…

After I worked on the layout and the steam pressing, (I am lucky enough to have a steam press, which made this process so much easier!) I began piecing the quilt top.  The sewing of each interfacing square took less time then sewing individual squares together, but it still took me several weeks to piece while I was also working on other bits in the studio.  The result is well worth the labor, though; the finished top is stunning! 

I used Kona White 108” Wide for the back, and I spent some time trying to decide how to quilt it.  Did I want to change threads?  Would one color of thread suffice?  How dense did I want the quilting?  What quilting design would best compliment the pixels?  I finally settled on a lovely wavy lines quilt design, and I decided to match thread to the colors in the quilt top.  I used corresponding colors in the bobbin, so that the back has a rainbow pattern, too.

Needless to say, I am so pleased with this quilt, and my customer is beyond excited.  He sent me a picture of the quilt hanging over his upstairs railing, and it is even more beautiful in its home!

Do you have a quilt you have been dreaming about?  Let me know in the comments below!

Sending Quilting Love,

Ginger

Coming Next Time: Maybe Elongated Stars?

I am Reading: I have been reading The Foundation Series by Isaac Asimov…I have finished the first three books, and I finished The Widows of Eastwick by John Irving.  I am reading Crying in H Mart by Michelle Zauner at the recommendation of my oldest son.  I am also reading several nonfiction pieces and the New Yorker Magazine.  What are you reading?

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!

Quick Studio Tour!

“Women have served all these centuries as looking-glasses possessing the magic and delicious power of reflecting the figure of man at twice its natural size.”

“A Room of One’s Own”

Virginia Woolf

Happy Friday!

I often revisit Virginia Woolf’s “A Room of One’s Own” because it is not only a wonderful essay about women and society, but it is a beautiful essay about literature and its importance.  I also thought “A Room of One’s Own” fitting today because I am sharing a video of my studio space...my own room where my work and creativity shine.

You can find the video here: https://www.instagram.com/finished.fibers/ once you get there, click on the sleeping dog! Enjoy!

Don’t worry I have not forgotten the half square triangles...they will get to shine next week!

I know today is September 11, but the more than 190,000 deaths in the US from Covid-19 seems to overshadow that to make me immensely sad.  Wear a mask and take precautions.

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: An update on the Anniversary quilt.  I did say I have a secret plan, right?  I need to get a picture for that blog post! :)


I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still...Edmond Dantes still has me spellbound at the moment...at once tragic and beautiful...he is terrific and I am frightened for him, still. I have been eyeing The Witcher books, too.  I spent most o

Fall Plans and a Busy Studio

“A light wind swept over the corn, and all nature laughed in the sunshine.”

Anne Bronte

The Tenant of Wildfell Hall

Some of the quilts that were delivered this week!

Some of the quilts that were delivered this week!

Happy Friday and Happy September!

A lot of people seem to be talking about fall this week...the weather changing, or not changing as the case is here in North Carolina, fall decorations, Halloween...so I thought today’s quotation was lovely.  The summer is waning, and pretty soon the corn will rustle dryly in the fields and pumpkins will be found everywhere.  Hopefully all of nature will continue to laugh in the sunshine.

My week has been very busy.  I delivered eight quilts this week to three customers, and I had a happy reception from them all.  One lovely customer said:

“You made magic!  You were able to bring together a grandmother and granddaughter and create a wonderful memory...through your talent and skill they created a timeless quilt TOGETHER!  The quilt honored both of their styles-I love it.”

I really do love making my clients happy by creating lovely, warm, special quilts for them!  

I have also been working on my secret plan that will be finalized today in an exciting meeting...so you will have to wait until next week to learn more about it!  In addition to that I have been prepping and piecing three more quilts for next week!

The studio reorganization is fantastic...as you can tell the studio is a happening place, and now everything (almost) has a place of its own!  I have really enjoyed working in my space this week.  I am plotting that video tour…I might use IG TV...I’ll let you know!  I will try to link the video here in the blog when I make it, too!

My half square triangles are still coming along, but they are not finished...I know, I know...but really, I am working very hard!  My secret plan will hopefully help me with time...I am so excited! I think you will be, too!

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger


Coming Next Week: An update on the Anniversary quilt.  The reveal of the secret plan! :)


I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still...Edmond Dantes still has me spellbound at the moment...at once tragic and beautiful...he is terrific and I am frightened for him, still. I have been eyeing The Witcher books, too.  Hmmm.

Organization can be key!

“He was a great teacher, Mr. da Silva.  He treated us with complete seriousness, as if we eighth graders, during fifth period, might settle something scholars had been arguing about for centuries.  He listened to our chirping, his hairline pressing down his eyes.  When he spoke himself, it was in complete paragraphs.  If you listened closely it was possible to hear the dashes and commas in his speech, even the colons and semi-colons.  Mr. da Silva had a relevant quotation for everything that happened to him and in this way evaded real life.  Instead of eating his lunch, he told you what Oblonsky and Levin had for lunch in Anna Karenina.  Or, describing a sunset from Daniel Deronda, he failed to notice the one that was presently falling over Michigan.”

Middlesex

      Jeffrey Eugenides

Happy Friday!

I hope you are well and have had a super week.  I chose today’s quotation in homage to the best teachers I know and to all of the teachers who are working to make places of learning wherever they are.  I know this school year is a challenge for everyone.

Last week I told you I was going to work on organizing and cleaning up the studio, and I feel very successful in that endeavor!  I have a few things left to do, but overall everything is neater and better organized, especially my orders.  Prior to the reorganization, orders were in either one of six stackable laundry baskets or they were in giant ziploc bags.  You can see how that would be cluttered after a while.  I now have all of my orders in containers (save one, but it is neatly tucked away), and I am so pleased with the room it created in the studio.  

New bins for orders creates more space in the studio!

New bins for orders creates more space in the studio!

My embroidery machine along side the big stackable laundry baskets.  Do you spy the six quilts all packaged and ready to go?

My embroidery machine along side the big stackable laundry baskets. Do you spy the six quilts all packaged and ready to go?

I also dusted and organized shelves.  My husband had some books on shelves in the studio, and I packed those up and made space for fabric scraps.

My steam press and new fabric scrap shelves!

My steam press and new fabric scrap shelves!

Shelf under my cutting table…everything within reach!

Shelf under my cutting table…everything within reach!

I also reorganized all of my thread and personal projects.  Now everything has a place and I feel like the studio runs more smoothly!  I will try to create a video for my stories or do a live video on Instagram of my studio, so that you can see how it is organized better!  Would you like that?

Thread and personal quilts.  I have a new thread holder for my longarm thread…it is waiting to be hung on the wall.

Thread and personal quilts. I have a new thread holder for my longarm thread…it is waiting to be hung on the wall.

I have also spent time binding, piecing, and quilting this week.  I have six quilts ready to deliver!

I am still chugging along on my half square triangles---I am getting so excited to see them come together!  How about yours?  Can I see some pictures?  Leave me a comment or send me a DM or tag me in your stories on Instagram.  

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: An update on the Anniversary quilt.  Definitely news on my secret plan I mentioned last week!

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry.  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still...Edmond Dantes has me spellbound at the moment...at once tragic and beautiful...he is terrific and I am frightened for him. (Yes, I have read the book before, but I am the person who always cries at the end of A Tale of Two Cities...even though I know what is going to happen...and the person who hopes 1984 will end differently, even though I have read it a hundred times.)  Please let me know what you are reading...it really doesn’t matter what it is as long as it is giving you pleasure!




Studio Reorganizing!

“But our dreams are the anterooms between quickness and death---where we divest of meaning’s demands.”

“Conversations with Sleep (IV)”

Lines 19-21

Kyle Dargan

Happy Friday!

May I ask:  Where has August gone?  I can hardly believe we are so close to September.  Well, school has resumed for all of my boys (husband included both teaching and learning), and it has been an eventful week.  NCSU began classes a little over a week and a half ago with a hybrid in-person schedule and this afternoon (I am writing this Thursday evening!) undergraduate classes were moved to all online.  ASU looks like its Covid numbers are good so far, so we will hope Sam can safely stay on campus.  High School classes for my youngest have been underwhelming, but I think this week has been, really, just an acclimation week.  I think everyone is trying to settle in before major work starts.  I seriously want to give Sidney some work, though! (Can you feel the eye roll?)  Teachers, professors, administrators…everyone trying to school has my deepest sympathy and respect right now.

My week has been busy and enlightening...I have been wanting to move things around in my studio for a while now, and I have a pretty solid plan.  My business, five years in, is beginning to outgrow my little studio above the garage, so reorganization has become a necessity.  This week I started moving things around, and I think I have decided to dig in and finish the shuffle tomorrow.  Otherwise my head might explode!

Earlier this summer, I moved my desk, where I do paperwork and answer emails, completely out of the studio.  I now have a sweet, very organized desk in our dining room, and I love that set up.  (I am typing this blog there right now!)  In the studio this week, I cleaned off one bookcase, so that I can store fabric in it, and I moved my bolts of fabric to the corner where my table used to be.  The bolts are now more accessible, and they are organized and neat!  

Easily accessible and organized…I am so motivated and excited to finish more reorganizing for you to see!

Easily accessible and organized…I am so motivated and excited to finish more reorganizing for you to see!

I plan to move my embroidery machine to the corner where my bolts used to live, and I have acquired new bins to keep customer orders in.  I plan to get all of that squared away tomorrow, so I should have good pictures for next week.

The cleaning and organizing so far has been at odd times built around the work I am currently trying to complete, but I decided today that I need to just get organized.  My work-flow and my mind flow will appreciate and benefit from the studio being cleaner and more organized.  I hate to halt production of quilts for even one day, but I know that getting the studio finished in a day will be better for me.  And every little bit helps these days!

I am also looking at another big...and excellent...change for the business, but I will have more information about that later.   I have also been spending a lot of extra hours on this plan!

All of that being said, you know my half square triangles have been in tiny bits of production all week!  I will continue to work on those, but the Anniversary quilt is only one facet of this five year celebration!  I will not lose sight of it, though! How are your quilts going?  Can I see some pictures?  Are you struggling to get all of the half square triangles finished?  Let me know how things are going in the comments below.  Are you super peeved that I am taking so long?  Let me know! I would also love to see your work!

Have a great week. Stay safe.

Sending Quilting Love, 

Ginger

Coming Next Week: Okay...definitely studio pictures.  I’m sure an update on the Anniversary quilt, too.  And who knows, my other plan may be ready to be revealed, too! 

I am Reading: Cræft: An Inquiry Into the Origins and True Meaning of Traditional Crafts by Alexander Langlands and The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (unabridged).  I am also reading various poetry---Kyle Dargan’s Honest Engine lives on my nightstand--beautiful, timely, and important.  What are you reading? I would love to know!  I haven’t started Mozart’s Starling yet, but I am still thinking about it...still.