Tuesday, August 17, 2010

The Final Pattern

I made some changes to the "Teresa" purse, and here is the finished result:






Both of these purses are available for purchase through Etsy. This purse design takes about half the fabric and half the time of the bow tucks purse, so I can offer them for about half the price. I am also a stickler about copy right (maybe it's because I am a member of ASCAP), so I also love the fact that this purse is an original design.



These purses offer a bunch of pockets (10+) for everything you carry. There are special ones designed to hold pens and lipsticks as well as larger pockets to hold sunglasses, cell phones, black berries etc.

Check out my shop on Etsy to purchase these purses. http://sewhoneybee.etsy.com

Monday, August 16, 2010

Blue Kitties

This is a cute little baby quilt. The kitties are an original design and they are made of tie-dyed chenille. The bold colors are much darker than a typical baby blanket, which helps hides any dirty spots.


I kept the quilting very simple on the blocks, just a 1/4" line on either side of the blocks. I also stitched in the ditch around the borders and quilted on the line between the grass and sky on the kitty blocks.


When I fist finished the kitty block, my dad insisted that the butterflies looked like bows. I went back and added in the yellow bottom, making them look more butterflyish. The face on the kitty was hand embroidered. I used a thick rayon cording so the wiskers and mouth would stand out more. The eyes are dark green buttons.

(Blue Kitties, 45"x60" Aug. 15, 2010)

Thursday, August 12, 2010

To Etsy or not to Etsy...

I started this quilt in April of 1999. I found it in a magazine, and fell in love with it. At that time, I had been quilting for only a few months and had finished maybe 2 quilts. I picked some of the most expensive fabrics I have ever used in a quilt, held my breath and started sewing. Then I got busy with college, then work, then my master's degree and work again, so after 11 years, I finally said I will finish this quilt and sell it on Etsy.


Unfortunately, as I worked I found my apprehension growing. I cut out all the pieces back then and did the lion's share of the sewing. Sadly, there was very little I could do to get the blocks to go where they should. My lack of skill 11 years ago permeates this whole quilt.


I should clarify... it is by not means awful. The color choice is very pretty, and it's truly lovely to look at if you don't look too closely. Even on close inspection, most of the points line up or are close. The edges of the quilt are ruffled a bit, and there was nothing I could do to prevent it. This could be solved if the quilt was hung with pins stretching it to the right shape.


So here is the question. Do I try to sell it on Etsy? I am not happy with the quality, and I do not want other people to think that this is all I am capable of doing. But honesty, I could use the money. Any thoughts? Please post or e-mail me.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

The Pines of Westcliffe

It seems like every project I make has a story. When I first started this blog, I was really more interested in posting a bunch of pictures. Now, I am enjoying telling the story about the project as much as I enjoy sharing the pictures.

This quilt has been a vague idea in my head for a few years now. The guest bedroom in my dad's cabin is often where I stay, and it is the home of an ugly electric panel. He accesses this panel at least twice every weekend because he turns off the pump to the well when he is not home (if the pipes burst, there will be less damage if the pump is off). I have been thinking that this electrical panel needs something to hide it, but also something that is easy to move out of the way. The obvious solution is a quilt.

When I gave the Four Seasons quilt to Rhonda, she said that she was going to get a quilt shelf to hang it on for her office. I mentioned it to dad, and I saw the light bulb go off. He has a cedar shelf with a bar on the bottom that he's been wanting to hang up. He thought about putting it in the bathroom, but the bar is really close to the wall, and he was worried that a guest might accidentally pull the shelf down while getting a towel (an unnamed brother did this to one of dad's towel bars before... you know who you are). So, we measured the wall, the shelf and the electrical panel and settled on a 30"x30" quilt.



I found this pine tree block on the internet, and with the help of Pythagoras, figured that I needed to make 3/4" finished strips to end up with a 30"x30" quilt with borders. I did alter the block a bit because I wanted it to be closer to a log-cabin block. The original block had 2 triangles with the trunk of the tree, so I changed it into 3 strips.


The alternating blocks are a modified log cabin block. With this block, it was easy to alter the colors to get the mountains in the background. I also liked that it made the brown background look a little more like hills and valleys.



The bear was not in my original design. I was guessing on how much fabric to get, and I miscalculated, but only by a little. I did not have enough brown to do a last log-cabin style background. So, I dug through my stash of fabric and found this almost black brown, and made an applique bear.



I tried to make it look like hills of grass while I quilted. I did some non-grasses hills as well, and outlined each tree.

Here is the quilt on the shelf. I had to use Velcro on the back, because the bar on the shelf is not removable, but otherwise it hangs like most of the quilts I make (with a long vertical pocket for the rod). We'll take it out to Westcliffe this weekend and hang it up then.

Tuesday, August 10, 2010

The "Teresa" Purse

I must admit that I am not a purse connoisseur. I have 2 purses total. One is small and the other is big. The one I use most of the time, I made for myself almost 3 years ago. Since I made it, I have not shopped for another purse. I am the last person in the world who should be designing purses!

While chatting with Teresa one day, I asked her, "What is the perfect purse?" Unlike me, Teresa owns a lot of purses and regularly switches between them. When I made her the rainbow purse, she tried to switch to other purses but found she couldn't because she loved the pockets too much. We put our heads together and came up with a look she liked, and I went to work designing.

I start by using muslin to make a pattern. I did the outside first, than pinned in the pleats where I wanted them. Once I had it pinned up, I could cut out the non-pleated liner. At first, I thought I wanted to bring it gathered up to an oval, so I also made a pattern piece for the top.



I then cut out the "real" fabric. Teresa really liked the "Skinny Mini Table Runner", so she wanted fabric like that on her purse. She also wanted pockets on the inside that stand out. It's really easy to lose stuff int he bottom of a dark purse, so I went with one of her favorite colors: bright yellow. Here is the lining before I sewed it into the purse.



Once I had trial one mostly sewn together I was not happy. The opening was too narrow to get things in and out easily. I left the project alone for 2-3 days and thought about it. I finally just ripped it apart and redesigned the top. Sorry, I did not take a picture of the original purse. I was so disgusted with it, I could not bring myself to photographing it, even for posterity. Here is the finished purse.


Teresa really wanted the shorter wooden handles, which is part of the reason the top wouldn't work. With my first design, I could not get the handles on and looking decently. I am much happier with this.



I really love how deceptive this purse is. It doesn't look crazy-full when she's carrying it, but the inside holds a lot, and keeps it organized. I am planing on using this purse design for future Etsy purses (in fact I already have fabric/handles/zippers bought for 2).


Here's the happy purse owner. Oddly enough, I did not ask her to match, yet she showed up with the exact shade of yellow that the pockets are.