Our Fabric Gems – Chilliwack Quilt Show -October 19, 2019

There are two quilt guilds in Chilliwack – each meet once a month, one meets in the mornings and the other meets in the evenings.  Each guild hosts a quilt show every other year.  Both guilds hold their quilt show in the same location in the month of October.  This means that there is a quilt show in Chilliwack every October.  I think to the public attending, they likely think it is all one guild, but it isn’t.

This year it was the Day Guild’s turn to host their show.

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I used to take hundreds of pictures at quilt shows.  However, for the last few shows I have attended I have tried hard to focus just on what inspires me and why.  Our Modern guild had a guest speaker earlier this year who mentioned that in a show there are likely only 5% of the quilts that truly speak to us and everyone’s 5% will be different.  The following 3 quilts were in my 5% and were the 3 quilts that spoke to me.

My favorite quilt in the show was called “Christmas is Coming”, pieced by Shirley Square-Briggs.  This was a Split 9-Patch quilt set on point that was flawlessly pieced and quilted.  My favorite quilts are scrap quilts and I love this design.  Shirley picked the most perfect shade of red fabric to best show off the scrappy Christmas fabrics.  This was my pick for Viewer’s Choice.

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The second quilt to make my 5% was called, Abbies Quilt which was pieced by one of the gals that belongs to my Modern Guild,  Lyn Robinson.  The pattern is called Modern Mingle from PatternWorkz Design Studio, by Canadian designers Kelsey and Joanie Morrow from Olds, Alberta.

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The third quilt to make my 5% was called Circle Block which is made from a pattern from Cozy Quilt Designs that was made by Sharlene Fairhurst.  I love that this is a scrappy quilt in a unique layout.DSC_0754DSC_0755From the 5% of the quilts that made me stop and take a look, I can confirm that the quilts that appeal to me share the characteristics of being simple, scrappy, and modern.

There were a lot of fantastic quilts at this show – many were very impressive (quilts that were hand pieced from thousands of pieces and then hand quilted, quilts that were fantastic works of hand embroidery, or paper piecing) – but they weren’t my particular style or in my 5%.

More Jam

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The fruit this year is plentiful and so tasty so it is a great year to make jam.  I have been busy the last three weekends making jam.

Back row:  10 jars of apricot jam

Middle rows:  15 jars of blackberry jam

Front row:  9 rows of peach jam

 

 

Organizing Backing Fabric

I needed a better system for organizing my quilt backings.  I had folded the fabrics that I had purchased for future quilt backings on my bookcase shelves.  However, when I would go looking for the perfect backing I would pull out backings from the pile and measure the yardage only to find out the piece I had selected wasn’t suitable in quantity for the quilt I was wanting to quilt.  After doing that a few times, I would have a mess on the shelf from pulling fabrics out of the middle or bottom of the pile and the fabrics that weren’t selected would then accumulate on the floor.  Although having fabrics nicely stacked on shelves may look neat, it doesn’t seem that this is a practical way for me to store and manage my backing fabrics.

I went to IKEA with a friend this week to see what they might have as a storage solution for my quilt backings.  I came home with two large Kuggis boxes.  (14.25″ W x 21.25″ D x 8.25″ H) I measured the yardage I had for each backing and recorded the number of inches, number of yards, and number of meters as well as a description of the print into a spreadsheet.  (Once I had the number of inches, I used formulas to convert to yards and meters since I was using Excel.) I folded my fabric lengthwise twice so I could use my 6″ x 12″ Omnigrip ruler to roll the fabric to a uniform size.  My fabric ended up in a nice neat rectangular shape that fit perfectly into the Kuggis box. rn12-omnigrip-1I added a hard copy of the spreadsheet to the box. Because the fabric is stored on its end using the KonMari Method of folding, I can easily see all backings at a glance and I can pick the backing that best suits my quilt top.  By referring to the spreadsheet, I can easily determine if there is sufficient yardage without having to pull the fabric out and measure it. DSC_0674

 BACKINGS – Box #1

In Inches      In Yards      In Meters         Description

182               5.1                4.6                   Construction
206               5.7                5.2                   Cacti
124               3.4                3.1                   Blue alphabet
206               5.7                5.2                   Gray & black chevron
202               5.6                5.1                   Green with pine branches & pinecones
174               4.8              4.4                    Black with cars
300               8.3                7.5                   Fall with red, green, & yellow leaves
144               4.0                3.6                   Red with brown lizards
336               9.3                8.4                   Blue daisies
170               4.7                4.3                  Blue roosters on grass
135               3.8                3.4                   Brown with bears & deer
206               5.7                5.2                   Blue with houses
168               4.7                4.2                   Grey background with black cats

DSC_0673 BACKINGS – Box #2

In Inches      In Yards      In Meters      Description

216                6.0               5.4                 Snowman with cacti
196                5.4               4.9                 Blue with glitter / winter
230                6.4               5.8                 Red with gold Christmas trees
240                6.7               6.0                 Green with black cats
346                9.6               8.7                 Brown with daisies
254                7.1               6.4                 Black with gold flowers
250                6.9               6.3                 Desert with cacti / Monument Valley
324                9.0               8.1                 Palm trees
152                4.2               3.8                 Turquoise with Kokopelli
71                 2.0               1.8                 Blue with pink flamingos – first piece
98                 2.7               2.5                 Blue with pink flamingos – second piece

 

In the photo of the closed boxes on the shelves you will see that I have some pieces of fabric stored on top of the boxes.  These fabric pieces are wide backings.  I haven’t measured these as I only buy wide backings in sufficient yardage to back large queen size quilts.

I still have more backing fabric to organize, but I will need to purchase more boxes.  Just a warning though;  these boxes are heavy once they are full of fabric so do not store them on high shelves as you may end up dropping a full box of fabric on yourself when you go to remove the box from the shelf!

A Special Pillowcase

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My husband, my adult children, and my grandson headed off for their annual bush camping trip.

My grandson (he will be 2 in September) loves trucks.  If it moves and has wheels, it must be a truck, even if it is a car, a tractor, etc.  I found this perfect fabric that has trucks, cars, tractors, fire engines, trains, ambulances, police cars, etc on it.  Since homemade pillowcases are so much nicer than the ones that come with the packages of sheets, I decided that my grandson needed a special pillowcase for this camping trip.

When I showed the pillow to my grandson, he promptly pointed to one of the vehicles and said very loudly, “truck”!  I would say that this pillowcase was a success!

One special pillowcase for one very special little boy from his grandma!