South American Challenge

My niece is the world traveller of the family. Before she headed to South America a couple of years ago we talked and I told her to bring back some fabric. I told her that if she brought back fabric, I would make her a quilt to commemorate her holiday. I guess I should have been a little more specific as to what would be suitable for a quilt, because this is what she brought back.

These fabrics are beautiful, but not your traditional quilting fabrics. They are natural fibres, although I am not sure just what. They are very loosely woven and and i am sure if i cut into the fabrics they will ravel.

The picture is not exactly true in colour–the piece on the left is bright yellow, not orange like in the picture and the piece on the right is royal blue, not black like in the picture.

Since the trip to South America, my niece has been to school in Denmark. While attending school in Denmark, she met her fiance who was from England. This May they were married in England. I asked my niece if she wanted me to make a quilt for her out of the fabric that she brought back from South America as my wedding gift to her. She jumped at the offer.

Now the pressure was on. What was I going to do with this fabric? I toyed with various patterns, all of which were discarded. I then got the bright idea to make a Trip Around the World Quilt–using the South American fabrics as the border to the quilt. I decided that if I treated these fabrics like I treat t-shirts and stabilize them in the same way as when I make a t-shirt quilt, I could arrest the ravel problem.

These are the fabrics that I chose for the center, Trip Around the World portion of the quilt. I lucked out and found a fabric line at Fabricland that featured all of the bright colours that were in the South American fabrics.
Today, I managed to get together 1/2 of the quilt body.

This is a closeup of the fabrics. Each fabric has the same navy blue flower outline. This outline ties the fabrics together nicely.
The newlyweds will be in Canada in August for a second wedding reception for those of us who could not make it to England in May. The pressure is on to finish this quilt quickly!

Special Trees

One of the things that we did this weekend was to document with photographs some trees that have very special meaning to our family.

This is a Golden Leaved Black Locust tree that was planted on the grounds of the Research Station that my FIL worked at for his entire career. This agriculture research facility is home to over 500 species of ornamental trees and shrubs.

My FIL passed away on Thanksgiving day in 1994 and this tree was planted in his memory shortly after.

My husband now works at the same research facility and so this farm continues to hold a special place in our hearts. When my daughter was in grade 2 and my son was in grade 4 they brought home small tree seedlings from school. We had no room to plant these seedlings at home and so we headed over to the Farm.

This is a picture of my husband standing behind one of the seedlings that was planted 11 years ago. The location that the kids chose to plant their trees was very sheltered and shaded. The seedlings have to compete for sunshine with the other trees nearby so I am sure that is why this tree is still so small.

A few years ago, my husband rescued some abandoned feral kittens and brought them home for my daughter to foster. Unfortunately, the kittens were very sick and way too young to be separated from their mother and so we lost them. They were been buried at the foot of this tree.


We continued to drive along the base of the mountain–for the most part on a path of sorts that had been recently mowed. We came to the end of the beaten path and the terrain changed a great deal. You can see from this picture that the grass suddenly got very tall. Yes, that grass is really the height of the hood of our truck. Finally, my husband decided that he could no longer see where we were driving and so he turned back. Thank goodness!

My Favorite Quilt Pattern

This is my favorite quilt pattern. It is a pattern from Quiltmakermagazine called, Warm Wishes.

I have made this pattern enough times now that I know how the quilt goes together with very little reference to the pattern. It is a favorite because I know just how much fabric I will need to buy, just how many pieces of fabric to cut and what widths. I know how this quilt pattern is going to turn out and I can easily reduce or enlarge the size to fit the recipient–fewer number of blocks for a crib quilt, increase the number of blocks for an adult lap quilt. This pattern has become an old reliable when I need a quick gift–I just choose a novelty fabric as my focus or theme of the quilt based on what I know the recipient will like and then I pick three contrasting colours from the focus fabric as my rail fence blocks. The border can be more of the focus fabric if I have enough on hand or as in the case of this quilt top, a narrow strip of the print with one of
the contrasting fabrics as an outer border.

In this case, I have used up all of what was left of the butterfly fabric from a previous quilt–The Simple Life Quilt. The small trimmings that were left when I was cleaning up my sewing area have already been sewn into some colour catcher string blocks so there truly is no usable remnant of this fabric left.

I finished putting this top together on Saturday.

This is another Warm Wishes quilt–the one that featured the colourful frogs. Quilting this top was today’s project. The quilting pattern is accomplished with Circle Lord’s Swirls template. The quilt is shown in this picture while it is still on the long arm machine. The quilting is now finished and the quilt has moved on to the binding pile.

I Have Been Tagged…….

I have been tagged by Chookyblue to mention seven things about me. I was tagged before and so I will try to come up with seven new things not previously mentioned.

1. I don’t mind travelling, but I don’t seem to get away very often. It is the decision part of where to go that keeps me from getting away!

2. I love animals–especially chickens, dogs, cats, and horses. Our current property is far too small for horses and chickens are out of the question due to DH’s line of work so I will have to stick to dogs and cats for now.

3. I hate rain but I live in a part of the world where it rains a lot!

4. I love a challenge. If the guild sponsors a quilt challenge, I am right there.

5. and 6. I don’t like mystery quilts. I like to see the finished quilt and then decide what fabrics I want to use to make my version and if I am going to make any changes to the pattern. In a mystery project you are following someone else’s lead and I like to decide which direction I am going to go rather than have someone else determine that for me. I am going to say that this item counts as 2–first for the mystery quilt thing and second for deciding my own direction. *LOL*

7. I am no where near retirement, but I already have plans for when I am retired! I can hardly wait until I can quilt full time every day!

I will not name you specifically, but if you belong to the Stash Quilts ring and you have not yet participated in one of these Memes please consider yourself tagged and play along.

Summer Has Arrived!

Yes, it really was this hot today on our deck! This picture was taken this afternoon after I came home from work.

They are calling this the hottest day of the year. Weather records were broken all over the province.

The forecast is for more sun, sun, and more sun!