I finished a wallhanging for the shop this week. Wanna see it? Of course you do!
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Coffee Rocks! an adaptation by me |
It's a bit ironic, actually, because I don't drink coffee. So I thought I might explain the genesis of this piece.
Here is
our shop's entry for 2016
Row by Row Experience, which starts June 21. Each year Row by Row has a theme; this year's theme is
Home Sweet Home. Our block is titled "Earth Rocks!" and it was designed by shop employee Janet McDonald. Being in Berkeley, California, we often conceive of
home in a more global, earth-embracing way. Plus, being in the Bay Area, we live on a major earthquake fault zone. Thus, the
fractured Earth nature of the block.
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Look at those steam-y swirls! |
I saw the fabrics that Janet had used in her sample--swirling Stonehenge patterns from Artisan Spirit--and thought of swirling fabrics I had in my stash
Specifically,
fabrics from the Have a Latte line, that I used in making a coffee-themed wallhanging when I participated in a
latte blog hop in 2015. (See? Precedence for sewing items that declare my
secret nonexistent love of coffee.)
Janet's pattern was for a 9" tall row; but the four individual blocks could be joined into a circle. A circle? Yes! An entire planet of coffee beans and steamy swirls: how else to show off the
Love of Java that these fabrics and this pattern evokes?
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Embroidery anyone? |
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FMQ coffee cup |
A little embroidery embellishment, a little
quilting: big stitch (love me some Finca Perle cotton #8), straight-line-with-walking-foot, and the tiniest FMQ scribbles in the center.
And something new for me: MF&B!
MF&B is the shorthand we use at
the shop when a customer wants to use our quilting services to attach binding to their quilt and finish it by machine, rather than handstitching (machine front and back). Can't believe that I had never bound a quilt this way: always, always I have blindstitched by hand. (Or had Ginger-the-Binding-Angel or
Linda-the-Marvelous-Mama do it for me.)
And to help me with this MF&B adventure? A stitch-in-the-ditch sewing machine foot! What
IS that, you say? Why, a feat of modern engineering that will absolutely change my life.
Behold, the extra piece of metal nestled up against the binding seam, right where it attaches to the quilt top. And the needle follows that piece of metal so very smoothly; the stitching becomes lost in the
ditch where the two fabrics come together. Invisible from the quilt front. Magic, I tell you!
Okay, so I've never stitched down my binding by machine before. Like, ever. Even the
nobody cares what it looks like bindings on all the Sew Together Bags I have made. (Even
Oakie's luggage bag.) But this is a game-changer. You can bet that this sewing machine foot and I will be making beautiful music together many times in the future.
Are there sewing machine accessories you can't live without? Brag to me about your fave!
I haven't linked up a finished project in awhile. Might as well show off a bit with
TGIFF and
Can I get a Whoop Whoop?
Stash report: used 1/2 yard of coffee-themed fabrics from my stash for the front & back; the background fabric on the front was a new purchase (but it was from the sale table!)