Saturday, 24 January 2015

Feathers and cosies

We've had some chilly old mornings here recently, -2 degrees a couple of times, very heavy frosts but to date no snow.  I see reports and pictures of snow 'up north' and, well, it would be nice to have something to show for the freezing temperatures here, too, but it doesn't seem to have ventured across the Solent yet.  In the meantime, I had to spend 20 minutes scraping ice from the car windscreen before I could drive to work yesterday morning, but the ice on the fields and trees was incredibly pretty, and the creek at Wootton was frozen as I drove over the bridge.





I went to the second half of the 'feathers' workshop yesterday afternoon and spent a most enjoyable three hours practising machine quilting.  It's such a treat and I was surprised how much more confident I became as the afternoon progressed.  Lots of hints and tips picked up along the way, and so many ideas and inspirations.  Now it's just a question of lots and lots of practising.  The only down side is the amount of thread I seem to be getting through - a great way of using up strange colours and oddments but I'm getting quite a collection of empty cotton reels on the window sill!



I mentioned, a few days ago, that I was knitting a hat to take away with me, but forgot to post a photo.  N refers to it as my 'tea cosy' (goodness, so sweet!) but as it keeps my head and, most importantly, my ears warm and toasty, I guess 'cosy' is a very apt description.  It's made from Shetland wool bought in Orkney, so it is very dear to me.  I used this pattern (aptly named Gin and Tonic hat!), but added a few extra rows as the wool was quite dense when knitted up and didn't slouch quite as I had hoped.   

After some deliberation, I finally decided on a self-bind for the bowtie quilt; I was going to do a separate binding but decided to opt for a bit of a short-cut. 



 I machined around the edge of the quilt, trimmed the top border fabric to about 1", the backing and wadding to 1/4", and turned the border fabric over the edging and hemmed it in place on the back.  The quilt police would probably have something to say about that but the finished result is neat and, amazingly, the opposite sides are the same length!  It's being pressed into service tomorrow - we have visitors for a couple of days - and an extra layer on their bed will not go amiss.  I'll get around to quilting it later in the week.  I feel some feathers may be in order ;-)

2 comments:

  1. Congratulations on taking the leap into free motion quilting! Just need that regular practise.

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    Replies
    1. Yes, lots and lots of practice needed, it's just finding the time to fit it in! Congrats on your retirement - look forward to reading about your plans.

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