The Sassy Quilters met at Meg's home for their April meeting. Present were Marcia, Sylvia, Debbie, Meg, Tara (Meg's guest), Susan and Estela, who was in town for a few days. The hostess for this evening was supposed to be Sharon, but she was sick, so Susan and Meg took over for her. Together they provided some delicious snacks--hot chocolate, cookies, different flavors of Triscuit crackers and cheese, homemade chocolate-peanut butter candy, and lemon pound cake. Susan presented the night's project.
BUSINESS MEETING/TREASURER'S REPORT
Marcia conducted a brief business meeting. She reviewed the Treasurer's report and told the group that there is $220.08 in the club fund to be used for quilting and supplies for our donation quilts. Marcia mentioned that the club did not collect dues for this year because the treasury at the end of last year had close to $500, but we may need to collect dues next year if the fall auction does not bring in as much as it did last year.
At this time the club has about 22 quilts ready to be donated! This is surprising in that we don't usually have that many quilts this early in the year. Everyone has been busy making the donation quilts, it seems. One of the upcoming projects is to take orphan blocks donated by members and making quilts out of them, which will result in even more donation quilts. Someone suggested that perhaps we may not need to make that many more during the rest of the year, and can spend club meetings on other projects.
SUNSHINE AND SHADOWS
Sunshine: Estela said that she has been doing really well after her kidney transplant although there have been a few minor glitches along the way. She is still planning on coming back to Arkansas at the end of May, then go back to Texas for a couple of weeks for family graduations, etc., but should be back full time by mid June.
Shadows: Marcia's husband John had surgery and will be deciding whether to undergo chemotherapy. Meg reported that her daughter Glynis had a pacemaker implanted and is still recovering from the procedure. We learned also that Linda Jones' husband is having some heart problems. Prayers are invited for these families.
BIRTHDAYS
There were no birthdays in April, but Estela was absent in March, so her birthday fat quarters were presented to her at this meeting.
BLOCK OF THE MONTH
Marcia handed out this month's copy of her mom's old quilt patterns. The block is called Cypress. Here's a picture of Marcia showing what the Cypress block looks like. Marcia is making each block using a red, white and blue palette, so she'll have a color coordinated set of blocks at the end of the year that will make a very pretty quilt.
APRIL PROJECT
The night's project was to make a "moebius" scarf, which is also called an infinity scarf or infinity circle scarf. Susan had precut the strips of fabric for everyone to make one. The best fabric for these scarves is something soft and silky, something that drapes well. Rayon, polyester, silk are all appropriate; wool and cotton would not work well. The scarves make up very quickly, and everyone in the group made one in about 15 minutes, most of which was spent listening to the instruction on how to turn the scarf right side out. The directions are hard to put into words, and it is much easier if you do it while watching someone else turn it. Fortunately, Susan is a great teacher and was able to demonstrate the technique very effectively. Here's a group picture of everyone wearing one of the scarves. Please note that although it looks like Meg was falling down, she was actually trying to hunker down so as not to hide the people behind her. Apparently I took the picture just as she moved and Marcia was trying to help steady her. The lady between Meg and Debbie is Tara, a new quilter who was Meg's guest as she is in town for a few days.
SHOW AND TELL
After finishing the scarves, we had show and tell. Susan made a beautiful Easter Bunny Quilt that had just been quilted and is not yet bound. What colorful bunnies!
Estela brought three items for show and tell. The first was a Christmas quilt of her own design. The idea is for the quilt to make the bed look like a large Christmas present.
The second quilt Estela showed is a Texas theme quilt made from blocks that she had previously made (about 1996) in a "mystery quilt" class that she took when she was a brand new quilter. Estela explained that the blocks were all wonky and crooked because at that time she was not too careful about 1/4 inch seams, squaring up blocks, etc. So a few months ago she took the mystery quilt apart, trimmed the blocks so that there were at least squared up, then framed them either in red or blue. The blocks were then reassembled into a nine-patch quilt sashed in a red-white-blue print, with red and blue four patches for cornerstones. The Texas theme comes from the names of some of the blocks--yellow rose, blue bonnet, road to Texas, T for Texas, lone star, etc.
Here is a picture of the pillow shams that will be used with the Texas quilt.
Marcia showed us a small quilt made from the left over rainy day umbrella blocks that she had previously made. This quilt is a good stash buster or scrappy project because you only need small pieces of each fabric, and even the backgrounds don't all have to be the same. Marcia used leftover scraps of Laurel Burch fabrics for these blocks. Can't you just feel the comfort of snuggling down under this quilt with a good book on a cold and rainy Arkansas day!
Marcia also showed us the treasure she rescued at a garage sale a few months back. The scrappy quilt, consisting of hexagonal star blocks, is completely hand pieced. She said the quilt was irregular in shape because it seemed that the quilter had added block after block to it, without thought of where each was placed. Rather than trying to move blocks around to make it more symmetrical, Marcia said she just cut off some of the dangling pieces and bordered it in a rose print that picks up the pink of the star blocks. Meg quilted it beautifully.
Tara showed us a bath mat that she made, which impressed everyone because no one had thought before to make a quilted bath mat. What a great way to color coordinate with towels and/or the shower curtain. Not shown is the back of the mat, on which Tara had sewn fabric triangles at the corners to form pockets so that she can tuck in a non-skid rubber back to keep the bath mat from slipping around. Good safety measure!
Meg showed a jigsaw puzzle quilt that she made as a cover for the TV in her church's youth room. The cover will protect the TV while not in use. This is another great pattern to use up scraps. Although this is a scrappy quilt, Meg chose a palette of black, blue and gray, so the top looks very coordinated.
Meg also showed us a quilt that she quilted for Cyndi. Each block is made from the front of a "one-sie" worn by Cyndi's granddaughter. It's sort of like a T-shirt quilt because the one-sies are made of soft knitted fabrics that need to be backed with stabilizer in order to be set into a quilt. Cyndi's granddaughter was a well-dressed infant, judging by the number and variety of one-sies!
Thursday, April 18, 2013
Friday, March 15, 2013
March Meeting
Club News: The March meeting was held on Thursday, March 14th, with Meg hosting. In attendance were Diane P., Sheila, Cyndi, Sharon, Sylvia, Marcia, Mary Ann, Debbie, and Meg.
After snacking on some delicious goodies, we discussed the upcoming Shop Hop. Sheila announced that she now has a job at Hancock's--every quilter's dream job! Sharon has received a grant that will entail a lot of travel. Congratulations to both of you!
A report was given of the birthday party held earlier that day for Mozelle at Gabriella's in Prairie Grove. The club presented her with a photo tree with photos of the club members, in recognition of the many meetings that she allowed the club to have at her home. You can see some of the tree at the right of the lower photo.
Meg announced that a TrueSharp Rotary Blade Sharpener has been purchased for the club, and is available for anyone to use at club meetings. Bring your dull blades and leave with sharper ones!
Susan, Meg, Marcia, and Sylvia took 25 donation quilts to the Prairie Grove Health and Rehabilitation Center on February 21st and distributed them to residents selected by the Social Director, Ginger (shown above.) The residents were all very appreciative.
Sharon will be hosting the April meeting instead of Susan. Members are asked to bring their "orphan blocks" of any size or color. We will sort them into groups to be made into donation quilts in May.
The Block of the Month for April is called "Little Boy's Breeches." Ask Marcia if you want a copy of the pattern. It is paper-pieced.
Birthday FQs were collected for Susan and Estela, neither of whom were in attendance, so you'll get them next time we see you, ladies!
**********
Show and Tell:
Sheila has been very busy crocheting and piecing quilts, all very lovely!
Sharon made the cutest little bunny Easter baskets and allowed Meg to make a pattern from them. She also made the blocks on her lap from the Block of the Month patterns Marcia has been sharing. The lower photo shows her pretty woven design block. She is in the Easter spirit!
Debbie finished this extra-large King-sized quilt. The corner blocks are really special. Great colors, Debbie!
Meg finished several donation quilts, and the bottom photo shows a quilt made with gorgeous metallic batik fabrics. She made this one for her loveseat that Salty sits on. She may be spoiling him.
Diane made a lovely red-and-white table runner, and the fresh pink and green baby quilt. The bottom photo shows the quilt made of blocks turned in by club members several months ago, remember? It's really stunning!
**********
Program:
Meg's program was to teach us how to make a block called Disappearing 4-Patch or the 4-to-9 Patch.
It starts with a large 4-patch (actually any size.) It is then cut apart and the center sections turned to mix up the colors. Hard to explain, but easy to do. Meg provided a kit to each of us, and we all got down to business (except Marcia, who took photos and helped in the cutting process.)
Pretty nice results! These will be made into donation quilts just the right size for a wheelchair or lap.
As you can see, if you didn't come to the meeting, you missed a great time! We hope to see you next month!
Friday, February 15, 2013
February Meeting
BUSINESS:
The February meeting was held on February 14th (Valentine's Day!) at Meg's house. Attending were Meg, Sharon, Susan, Debbie, Sylvia, Marcia, and Linda, who hosted. We began by cutting up donated fabric into squares and strips, which will be used for donation quilts. The work being tiring, we soon broke for the refreshment table. Linda provided several delicious Valentine's Day goodies.
While we ate, we discussed business. Susan suggested that we needed a leader to keep the meetings moving, and the group chose Marcia to do this. We also agreed that the refreshments should be served early in the meeting, during the business discussion period. Susan then reported that the Veteran's hospital no longer wants to accept our donation quilts. Several alternative programs were discussed, and the decision was made to approach the nursing home in Prairie Grove. Susan and Sylvia will do this. It was also decided that all donation quilts should be washed within a few hours of being donated, as some people have pets that may cause allergic reactions for the recipient.
Please dig out all your orphan blocks and bring them to the next meeting. We will spread them all out and divide them into batches to make donation quilts during a future meeting.
Q.U.I.L.T. will hold their biennial quilt show at the Benton County Fairgrounds in Bentonville on April 12 and 13. More info can be found at quiltguildnwa.edublogs.org.
Susan showed a nifty product she found called "Get a Grip Pads." She found them in the auto section at Walmart. They are used to keep things from sliding off your dashboard, but Susan found them to be great for keeping your sewing machine foot pedal from getting away from you! They are inexpensive, so if you keep having to chase down your pedal, you might want to give them a try.
Happy Birthday was sung to Marcia as she received her fat quarters. Next month there will be three birthdays to celebrate. Meg will be the host, and she has a great program lined up for us, so please attend!
***********
SHOW AND TELL:
The Thursday group has been making Snap Happy bags. These are made with pieces of metal measuring tapes sewn in, to provide a "snappy" opening. They are fun and easy to make.
Marcia made three sets, but mailed two of them away as gifts. She only brought one set to show.
Meg went a step further, sewing three bags together and adding a strap. So handy for fairs or festivals!
Susan went even further, by using the metal tape idea in a larger bag. This was a great project for all of us. Thanks for bringing it to our attention, Susan!
Sharon is doing the Block of the Month that Marcia has been providing. This is her January block. The colors are really pretty. If you want to join in and need the patterns, let Marcia know. The block she passed out for March is called Flyfoot, but is also known as Swastika.
Sharon is also putting together a scrap quilt. A portion of it is complete and is shown above. Very pretty!
Susan displays a fleece blanket with a crocheted edge in lovely variegated yarn, done by Mozelle. We are glad to know that Mozelle is feeling better.
Susan also made this lovely zippered bag (above) and the absolutely stunning quilt (below.) WOW!!
Finally, Marcia showed her "Hanging Gardens" lap quilt. Meg quilted it but it hadn't been trimmed or bound yet.
The February meeting was held on February 14th (Valentine's Day!) at Meg's house. Attending were Meg, Sharon, Susan, Debbie, Sylvia, Marcia, and Linda, who hosted. We began by cutting up donated fabric into squares and strips, which will be used for donation quilts. The work being tiring, we soon broke for the refreshment table. Linda provided several delicious Valentine's Day goodies.
While we ate, we discussed business. Susan suggested that we needed a leader to keep the meetings moving, and the group chose Marcia to do this. We also agreed that the refreshments should be served early in the meeting, during the business discussion period. Susan then reported that the Veteran's hospital no longer wants to accept our donation quilts. Several alternative programs were discussed, and the decision was made to approach the nursing home in Prairie Grove. Susan and Sylvia will do this. It was also decided that all donation quilts should be washed within a few hours of being donated, as some people have pets that may cause allergic reactions for the recipient.
Please dig out all your orphan blocks and bring them to the next meeting. We will spread them all out and divide them into batches to make donation quilts during a future meeting.
Q.U.I.L.T. will hold their biennial quilt show at the Benton County Fairgrounds in Bentonville on April 12 and 13. More info can be found at quiltguildnwa.edublogs.org.
Susan showed a nifty product she found called "Get a Grip Pads." She found them in the auto section at Walmart. They are used to keep things from sliding off your dashboard, but Susan found them to be great for keeping your sewing machine foot pedal from getting away from you! They are inexpensive, so if you keep having to chase down your pedal, you might want to give them a try.
Happy Birthday was sung to Marcia as she received her fat quarters. Next month there will be three birthdays to celebrate. Meg will be the host, and she has a great program lined up for us, so please attend!
***********
SHOW AND TELL:
The Thursday group has been making Snap Happy bags. These are made with pieces of metal measuring tapes sewn in, to provide a "snappy" opening. They are fun and easy to make.
Marcia made three sets, but mailed two of them away as gifts. She only brought one set to show.
Meg went a step further, sewing three bags together and adding a strap. So handy for fairs or festivals!
Susan went even further, by using the metal tape idea in a larger bag. This was a great project for all of us. Thanks for bringing it to our attention, Susan!
Sharon is doing the Block of the Month that Marcia has been providing. This is her January block. The colors are really pretty. If you want to join in and need the patterns, let Marcia know. The block she passed out for March is called Flyfoot, but is also known as Swastika.
Sharon is also putting together a scrap quilt. A portion of it is complete and is shown above. Very pretty!
Susan displays a fleece blanket with a crocheted edge in lovely variegated yarn, done by Mozelle. We are glad to know that Mozelle is feeling better.
Susan also made this lovely zippered bag (above) and the absolutely stunning quilt (below.) WOW!!
Finally, Marcia showed her "Hanging Gardens" lap quilt. Meg quilted it but it hadn't been trimmed or bound yet.
Thursday, January 10, 2013
January 2013
We met at Meg's house for the first meeting of the year. Present were Diane P., Sylvia, Debbie, Meg, Estela, Susan, Sheila, Cyndi and Marcia. All meetings will be at Meg's for the foreseeable future. Thank you, Meg!
CLUB NEWS:
Diane P. informed us that she will be stepping down from leading the group for awhile, so she can concentrate on home remodeling. The group decided to try going leaderless. We will see how that works out.
Estela has decided to become a snowbird! She and her husband have bought a second home just north of Ft. Worth, and will be living there during the coldest months. During her absence, Marcia will be updating the blog. It may look a little different for that reason. Please forgive any mistakes!
Marcia hosted the meeting, providing refreshments of Rum Cake with Cool Whip, and a crunchy party mix. The program was a swap of 8" squares of spring fabrics. After swapping twice, leftover squares will be used for donation quilts.
Susan talked about a new project for making donation quilts--if everyone will bring their "orphan blocks," panels, or even pieces of blocks, we will work on piecing them together into attractive quilts. Most of us have blocks in our stash that we didn't use, didn't like, weren't the right size or the right color, or were just trial blocks. Rather than having them collect dust, bring them in. Any size, any color, pieced, appliqued or paper-pieced; it doesn't matter. That way there will be minimal effort needed to complete our donations!
Meg gave the treasurer's report, and the consensus reached was that we do not need to charge dues this year. We will probably have a fund-raiser later in the year, possibly another white elephant auction.
We have people signed up to host for the rest of the year, but some are doing more than their share. If you intended to sign up but forgot, please let us know. If you have an idea for a project, there may be someone signed up who would welcome the help for their month.
Other members told us of their intentions to bow out of the club for awhile, some due to health reasons, others because of lack of time, etc. Mozelle, Lola, Diane B., Dollie, Diane P.--we hope your time away from us will be short. We will welcome you back when you are able to return.
The club owes Mozelle a great big Thank You for hosting the meetings in her home. We really appreciated it, Mozelle! You are in our thoughts and prayers. Get well soon! We miss you!
Susan talked about the project to provide fleece blankets to a local oncology unit, started by Mozelle's daughter. Mozelle has a rotary blade that cuts slots in the fleece along the edge, so that an edge may be crocheted around it. Susan currently has this blade and will let you use it on request. In the photo below, Susan is showing a blanket that was crocheted by Mozelle for the project.
The Accuquilt die-cutting machine is at Meg's for the use of any club member. Give Meg a call if you have a desire to use it.
**********
SHOW AND TELL:
Two recent Thursday projects were the Moebius (or eternity) scarf that you can see Susan wearing in some of the photos. It's very easy to do, but the instructions sound complicated until they are shown. The other project, shown below, is a pin made from a strip of fabric gathered around an empty metal bobbin, then decorated with a jewel in the center and a pin back on the reverse side. Very cute and easy! Contact Susan if you would like to try one of these two projects.
Sager Creek Quilts gave Susan a box of fabric scraps, to which were added scraps from Estela and Iris. The Thursday group divided these into color coordinated batches, and Marcia suggested each of the Thursday ladies take some of the batches, and issued a challenge to make a quilt using each batch. Fabric from our own stashes could be added if needed. The quilt above is one Meg made from little bitty pieced segments, most of them only a part of a small block. A challenge indeed--and one she successfully met, don't you agree?
Here's Marcia's finished quilt that started with a small pile of browns and aquas with just a small strip of coral thrown in to confuse things. She added the lighter pink and the brown border fabric from her stash.
Susan's challenge was to use these square-in-a-square segments with the stripe. She had to get creative with placement and design on this one, but the result is a very lovely and graphic quilt. These quilts are all donation quilts, by the way.
**********
Susan made this lovely quilt as a gift for a friend's baby. She explained the braid was pieced from half-hexagons, and said the hardest part was that each "block" seemed to go on forever when she was piecing it! It was worth it to get this result.
Susan also made this quilt in yellows and greens. It's a real eye-opener! Beautifully pieced, Susan.
It's sometimes difficult to use yellows, but they blend in very well in this quilt.
**********
Sheila has also been very busy, "playing" with her embroidery machine. This towel is one of two she embroidered over the holidays. She also embroidered names on these stockings for Cyndi. In addition she made several table runners (27? or was it more?) for gifts.
...AND Sheila is making this bandanna quilt for her 'honey.' The bandannas came from Tractor Supply--a new source for quilting materials???
**********
That's it for this month. Remember to send any news for the blog to Marcia for the next few months. Have fun in Texas, Estela!
CLUB NEWS:
Diane P. informed us that she will be stepping down from leading the group for awhile, so she can concentrate on home remodeling. The group decided to try going leaderless. We will see how that works out.
Estela has decided to become a snowbird! She and her husband have bought a second home just north of Ft. Worth, and will be living there during the coldest months. During her absence, Marcia will be updating the blog. It may look a little different for that reason. Please forgive any mistakes!
Marcia hosted the meeting, providing refreshments of Rum Cake with Cool Whip, and a crunchy party mix. The program was a swap of 8" squares of spring fabrics. After swapping twice, leftover squares will be used for donation quilts.
Susan talked about a new project for making donation quilts--if everyone will bring their "orphan blocks," panels, or even pieces of blocks, we will work on piecing them together into attractive quilts. Most of us have blocks in our stash that we didn't use, didn't like, weren't the right size or the right color, or were just trial blocks. Rather than having them collect dust, bring them in. Any size, any color, pieced, appliqued or paper-pieced; it doesn't matter. That way there will be minimal effort needed to complete our donations!
Meg gave the treasurer's report, and the consensus reached was that we do not need to charge dues this year. We will probably have a fund-raiser later in the year, possibly another white elephant auction.
We have people signed up to host for the rest of the year, but some are doing more than their share. If you intended to sign up but forgot, please let us know. If you have an idea for a project, there may be someone signed up who would welcome the help for their month.
Other members told us of their intentions to bow out of the club for awhile, some due to health reasons, others because of lack of time, etc. Mozelle, Lola, Diane B., Dollie, Diane P.--we hope your time away from us will be short. We will welcome you back when you are able to return.
The club owes Mozelle a great big Thank You for hosting the meetings in her home. We really appreciated it, Mozelle! You are in our thoughts and prayers. Get well soon! We miss you!
Susan talked about the project to provide fleece blankets to a local oncology unit, started by Mozelle's daughter. Mozelle has a rotary blade that cuts slots in the fleece along the edge, so that an edge may be crocheted around it. Susan currently has this blade and will let you use it on request. In the photo below, Susan is showing a blanket that was crocheted by Mozelle for the project.
The Accuquilt die-cutting machine is at Meg's for the use of any club member. Give Meg a call if you have a desire to use it.
**********
SHOW AND TELL:
Two recent Thursday projects were the Moebius (or eternity) scarf that you can see Susan wearing in some of the photos. It's very easy to do, but the instructions sound complicated until they are shown. The other project, shown below, is a pin made from a strip of fabric gathered around an empty metal bobbin, then decorated with a jewel in the center and a pin back on the reverse side. Very cute and easy! Contact Susan if you would like to try one of these two projects.
Sager Creek Quilts gave Susan a box of fabric scraps, to which were added scraps from Estela and Iris. The Thursday group divided these into color coordinated batches, and Marcia suggested each of the Thursday ladies take some of the batches, and issued a challenge to make a quilt using each batch. Fabric from our own stashes could be added if needed. The quilt above is one Meg made from little bitty pieced segments, most of them only a part of a small block. A challenge indeed--and one she successfully met, don't you agree?
Here's Marcia's finished quilt that started with a small pile of browns and aquas with just a small strip of coral thrown in to confuse things. She added the lighter pink and the brown border fabric from her stash.
Susan's challenge was to use these square-in-a-square segments with the stripe. She had to get creative with placement and design on this one, but the result is a very lovely and graphic quilt. These quilts are all donation quilts, by the way.
**********
Susan made this lovely quilt as a gift for a friend's baby. She explained the braid was pieced from half-hexagons, and said the hardest part was that each "block" seemed to go on forever when she was piecing it! It was worth it to get this result.
Susan also made this quilt in yellows and greens. It's a real eye-opener! Beautifully pieced, Susan.
It's sometimes difficult to use yellows, but they blend in very well in this quilt.
**********
Sheila has also been very busy, "playing" with her embroidery machine. This towel is one of two she embroidered over the holidays. She also embroidered names on these stockings for Cyndi. In addition she made several table runners (27? or was it more?) for gifts.
...AND Sheila is making this bandanna quilt for her 'honey.' The bandannas came from Tractor Supply--a new source for quilting materials???
That's it for this month. Remember to send any news for the blog to Marcia for the next few months. Have fun in Texas, Estela!
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