FMQ Circles on angry prints

Here is the quilt top before the FMQ circles were added.  As you know I was deliberating over the design to use on this print.  It turns out I am not crazy about this fabric as it strikes me as angry due to the angular design of the print.  It is similar to my dislike of kousa dogwood trees because the pointed leaves strike me as angry…anyway, I digress.  I wanted to soften the angular nature of the print, so I decided on circles, just circles.  Here’s a before picture:IMG_0446 I think the circles soften the angular print.  Here are photographs after the circles were added:

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I think they are happier now.  What do you think? IMG_0536

I became a little lazy on the pieced border and just meandered.  On the white border I again repeated the circles and swirls, which I had used on the white negative space in the body of the quilt top, because they are really fun to do, although so are the leaves and circles…so many options, so few quilt tops!IMG_0537circles on anglesAnd a few more close ups of the circles.  Do you find certain designs portray emotions, too?  And why do mistakes always happen where they show?  In this case, it seemed any mistitch (new word by the way or if you are not grammatically daring ‘missed stitch’) occurred when I was on the yellow with my blue thread!

The quilting is tight, so it is a quilt on the rather stiff side; however, it is meant to hang on the wall as a headboard, so this works out well.  If it were meant to be on the bed, the quilting would have been looser.

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Birthdays, quilts and memories…

I made a comment to B that it is my birthday today. B tilted his head, smirked his ‘What’s Jannie thinking now’ smirk, and said, ‘It’s C’s birthday’. However, in my crazy mind, it is as much my birthday as C’s, because I think I was as equally involved in C’s birthday as I was my own, and in fact, I remember her’s better…as I must admit I do not recall mine at all. C is my daughter, in case you were wondering. Anyway, then it dawned on me that I have been celebrating a birthday on this day for my entire life, as today was my mother’s birthday as well. And you ask, what does this have to do with quilts. I am getting there, I think.

Scanned ImageThis is my mother with C, twenty-eight years ago today.  My mother was thrilled to have a grand-daughter, born on her sixtieth birthday.  Unfortunately, she only got to enjoy C the way she wanted for five years.  Now, she can only enjoy C from another plane, but enjoy C I know she does.  Still, no quilts in this picture.

CourtThis is the picture I have been thinking about all day. C with ‘Quilty’.  I will apologize to C now for any embarrassment this post might cause.  Isn’t she adorable? Still is.  Anyway…quilts.  ‘Quilty’ was purchased from a store and not a store with handmade items, I am ashamed to say.  It is red, white and blue and has some rocking horses on it.  Yes, her nursery was red, white and blue.  I had a reason for those colors and as she turned into a fine artist, I will pat myself on the back for being correct…even if I’m wrong. 🙂  My mother actually bought the quilt for C.  We were together and I picked it out.  I have to apologize for the lack of a hand-made quilt and chalk it up to a stressful and time consuming job, husband and pregnancy.  The blue and white quilt is made with a sheet, which covers the store bought quilt I had on my bed in college.

So, now going way back to my first quilt, at least the first one I remember.  When I was C’s age in the above picture, I had a hand made pink and white quilt.  It had embroidered little girls on it, and quilted blocks.  It was made by one of my great grandmothers on my mother’s side for my mother’s childhood bed.  The little girls had one line of the pertinent rhyme; ie, ‘There once was a girl, who had a curl (right in the middle of her forehead, and when she was good, she was very, very good and when she was bad, she was horrid.)”

When I was in elementary school, I had another quilt on my bed, perhaps made by my grandmother, Lula.  I say this because my mother used to sit on the bed and point out pieces and say ‘that was my dress in first grade’ or ‘this was my mother’s dress when I did such and such’.  Eventually, it wore out and I ended up with a store bought, red and white quilt, which I liked as it matched my room. This quilt was on my childhood bed until the house was sold.

So where am I headed?  Quilts and memories go together.   And today has been a day of both.  Happy Birthday to my favorite women, C and Mom, and I guess me, too!

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Leaves and berries…

I have now added the leaves and berries…I really like them.  I put them in the orange and blue columns.

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IMG_0440I’m not sure what to use on the multi-colored geometric fabric.  Any ideas?  Still working on my photography so two of these might be the same angle, but the lighting is slightly different…

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Swirls and Circles, FMQ

I’ve been practicing swirls and circles.  This is on the white negative space of the quilt shown in my December 31st post.  I think I was fairly successful for my first quilting attempt with this design.  I need to concentrate on being circular although I have to say a little oblong often fills the space a bit better sometimes…

swirls:circlesSuggestions?

Next leaves and berries…

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Cutting Table and streamlining…

My cutting table has arrived.  I love it.  It does exactly what I thought it would do and more.  Already I have managed to properly square a quilt top as well as join backing, batting and quilt top on the table.  No more crawling around on my hands and knees!

open cut tableIt has drawers and a cupboard on one end.

closedThere are project trays on the other.

projectsHere is its small footprint when closed.  I can then just roll it into a corner or another room.

I will say I am disappointed in a sales error.  I was told it was a Horn cabinet.  We discussed Horn at length and the fact Horn is made in Canada.   I try to buy products made in the USA or Canada.  As it turns out, it was mistakenly identified as Horn.  I did not know this until it was delivered.  It was made in China.  I would not have purchased the table had I known it was made in China.  That being said, it is done.  The design is ideal and it seems like a well made piece.

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Functional Art

I ran across this quote today:

“Democratic nations…will therefore cultivate the arts that serve to render life easy in preference to those whose object it is to adorn it.  They will habitually prefer the useful to the beautiful, and they will require that the beautiful should be useful.”  –Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America

This quote brought my mind to quilting as quilts are functional art.  And yes, I know I’ve said this before and I will certainly say it again and again…

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Another quilt photo

Here is my photoshopped picture from the raw photograph that was the base for the photograph in my prior post.
_MG_9630-webIs there a difference?  Once a decent photograph has been shot, is the extra editing worth it for use on the web?  I’m going to publish this post so I can compare the two pictures more easily.  What do you think? Is photoshop for a photograph intended for use on the web worth the effort?

BTW, I have noted that I need to check the background for extraneous, unwanted objects before snapping a photograph…it is all about composition.

 

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Bob’s Quilt

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This is Bob’s quilt, one of my early quilts.  This photograph is actually underexposed per my meter, but I prefer it.  The colors are deeper, slightly darker, as they appear in person than the other photographs.  This was taken with no flash and no artificial light nearby.Image

Here I am attempting to capture the stitching, my stippling.  This quilt was actually my first free motion quilting experiment.  As I mentioned, I’m taking a photography class so I can better photograph my quilts and show the free motion quilting.  Tomorrow’s class, the second and last day of class, will deal more with photoshop, I believe.  The teacher is encouraging me to take a class to learn how to photograph art, which would help, but I think I am going to wait and see how tomorrow goes.  Nonetheless, I think my photographs have improved and I certainly understand the camera a little better!  Have a nice weekend all!

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Amerikakoffert or killing 3 birds with one stone

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This is our family’s Swedish Chest. Note the remains of the shipping labels.  It came to the US with Farmar (father’s mother). This blog is killing three birds with one stone because I am taking a photography class so I can take better photographs for this blog, I need another blog post, and I recently applied to something where I did not take the time to really think about one answer or perhaps provide sufficient information for that answer so…this is homework, a blog post as there is a quilt top involved, and further details for my application.

So back to the the Amerikakoffert. The second and third generation of Swedish immigrants in our family never knew Farmar’s name. As a result of my ‘application’ I have done a little more research into my Swedish ancestry. A hint to Farmar’s name has been in my possession since I was about ten years old, yet I never noticed! First here’s a little background information. My grandmother, Anna Louisa Almquist (Annie), was born in the US to Swedish immigrants. Her father used the name Charles August Almquist (Charlie). Her mother was Beda Norlin. I do have a daguerreotype of their wedding. I have a photograph taken in Sweden of Farmar with two young boys, one of which is Charlie. It has always been told that Charlie joined the merchant marines to come to the US. We understood that he changed his name when he joined the merchant marines, which was allegedly common practice. Phonetically, the Swedish family name was rumored to have been Miller. Farmar’s name had remained unknown, but it was believed to have been Miller. When I was young, my grandmother would tell me stories of Farmar and how she was brought to the US much later by Charlie and with her came the Swedish chest. I was given the Swedish chest as a child, and it has been with me ever since. I also have many of the articles that have always been thought to have come over with the chest. On my mantle in my childhood bedroom, I had the Swedish bible or bibeln. The first page is partially missing, but Charlie’s original name is written: Carl August Moller. The bilbeln was given to him at his confirmation on August 3, 1877. Carl August Moller was born September 28, 1862 in Kulla, Kristberg parish, Ostergotland County, Sweden. His mother, Farmar, was Anna Lena Svensdotter! She married in this parish on November 11, 1860. We had, and should still have, a photograph of a small house with an elderly couple in front, which was marked “Ma” and “Pa”. I don’t know who these people are or if they are Mollers or Norlins. The shack, really, was in a treeless and rocky landscape. The family stories said the Almquists/Mollers were from ‘near Lapland’. My non-Swedish mother said they were from Swedish Lapland. Other Swedes, I have heard, think people from Ostergotland are quite ‘different’…in what way? I would like to know from where both branches of the family hail and if Charlie was running away from something when he joined the merchant marines;i.e., the law or hunger?

I would also like to know more about the Norlins and why they left Sweden. A briefly located relation of the Norlins in Sweden was a Lars-Hugo Norlin who appeared to reside in Soderham, Sweden in the 1990’s. Lars-Hugo was located as a result of a letter in my grandmother’s possession, but he passed on before any other information was obtained. We do know he had heard of the Norlins that had emmigrated. I have Beda leaving Sweden with her mother Sofia and her sister Katrina. They left September 21, 1883 from Vasternorrlands via Stockholm to New York. Sofia, a widow, was 58, Beda was 18 and Katrina was 21. They arrived in NY on October 10, 1883 aboard the Habsburg from Bremen, Germany. I have walked on the lands of my US ancestors back to 1642 all my life, but I would like to know more about the Swedish side, the side to which my grandmother related as she felt more Swedish than American. I want the stories to come alive, to touch and see my Swedish side.

Look at the old quilt top.  It is thought to have been made by either Beda or Farmar._MG_9615  The design is basic and must have been old clothes reused. I don’t know what to do with it. I framed a few pieces of it for my daughter, niece and nephew when they were young. Surely, unappreciated at the age they were given!

Here are some of the contents that came over from Sweden in the chest.  _MG_9628

Here’s a picture of Beda, Farmar and ? .  I love it.  Fishing in Rhode Island.Scanned Image 4

So here’s hoping my photographs are improving, my post is interesting, and that I’ll have a Swedish adventure!

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Free Motion Quilting Designs…

It is time to decide how to free motion quilt all this negative space.  That is the reason I designed this quilt with lots of solids and large pieces.  I want to start by picking one FMQ design for the white and repeat, repeat, repeat.  I’ll then pick another design for the orange, etc.

DSCN0998Here’s a close up.  DSCN1000I think something swirly would counteract the straight lines, but I’m not sure what.  I don’t think I want to work on feathers, and I don’t want to stipple.  So many choices…  Any suggestions?

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