Monday and a Stack of Fabric

This morning I woke up intending to work like crazy on cleaning the house so I can afford time for yard work later in the week.  Usually I enjoy cleaning, or at least the results of cleaning.  Today, however, I was all out-of-sorts emotionally and found myself feeling irritated with my children while I was cleaning.  Instead of enjoying the process I felt frustrated with them for being sloppy.

That’s never a good thing to feel, especially when you know that four of them have major projects to work on after school today, and when you also know that it’s going to take patience and persistence to get them all going.  {And even then there may be a battle.}  It will never work if I’m frustrated with them before I even pick them up.

Please tell me you have days like that, days when everything that’s wrong feels really wrong and everything that’s right feels wrong anyway.  Days when reminding yourself that everything is, in reality, great does nothing to squelch the tears pricking behind your eyes.  No particular reason, just cloudy on the inside, I guess.

So I took a break.


I’ve had a large stack of 44 inch strips of fabric sewn together for weeks.  It’s for a quilt I wanted to make in September.  Today I ironed them and cut them into triangles.  While I did it, I opened all the windows in my studio (the sunniest room in the house) and enjoyed a gentle breeze and bright light.

Somehow it worked.  I don’t know if it’s the sunshine, or a stack of triangles that will never again be 44 inch strips (unlike the laundry, which will shortly be dirty again).  Perhaps it was just the steady cutting of fabric at the same angle for an hour or so.  Whatever it was, it cleared my mind and calmed my heart.


I picked the children up with a happy heart.  Two are now working cheerfully, one is working resentfully, and the other has yet to start.   At least their mother isn’t grouchy, although the family room still needs to be vacuumed.  I think it was time well spent.

Just look at all those warm, yummy colors.  I’m excited to sew them together.


Fabric is Early Bird, by Cosmo Cricket, with a little bit of their Tailor Made collection thrown in.  It’s been out for a while, and I’m finally using it!

Hope your Monday has gone well.
Jennifer

Hunter’s Star Quilt

The hunter’s star quilt is now complete.  It’s my first red and white quilt and I’m thrilled with it.


This quilt was a lot of fun to make.  The cutting and piecing method is not difficult and there is no waste of fabric.  It requires no special tools or templates.  I am pleased with the accuracy of my blocks.  It amazes me a little that two solid fabrics can produce such a beautiful quilt.


This quilt features a white cotton sheet for the backing.  I had just enough red fabric left to reduce the blocks and make two smaller stars so I gave them a red border and sewed it into the back.   Piecing a little something for the back of my quilts is becoming more fun.  This picture of the back of the quilt also shows the simple straight line quilting I chose.  I quilted 1/4″ from the seam on the diagonal lines through each block, then added vertical lines through every other block as well.


It seems I’ve also become partial to the gray polka dot binding that I’ve used on a couple of other quilts this year.  In this case it was just dark enough to ground the deep red but low key enough to let the stars take center stage.


This quilt was a project I’ve intended to make for quite some time.  It feels good to have it done.


Update:  After many requests, I have written the pattern for this quilt.  It includes fabric requirements for 4 different sizes.  The Hunter’s Star quilt pattern is available here !

-Jennifer

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