Like most of you in the US, this weekend finds us in the deep freeze. No walking for me for the next several days. No snow here, just sleet, freezing rain and temperatures below freezing for the next several days. At least we didn't get the 14" of snow first mentioned several days ago. Winter in the South.
So what to do? Put a pot of 15 Bean Soup in the slow cooker. Corn muffins will be made later:
Free motion quilt Diamond Jubilee, with a new ruler:
| The only thing left is the borders |
| Wavy border straight line quilting |
This is a terrific new ruler: STITCHLINE 1 QUILTING RULER designed and sold by my friend Geraldine Wilkins--no relation that we know of. Watch her video at this link and you will want one too. It combines a channel for Stitch in the Ditch--a MUST for me, a long straight edge with needle stops at both ends AND a cool wavy edge that lets you make lots of great designs easily. In addition, there are lots of great reference lines built in that allow for less marking on the quilt itself.
Spend a few hours with the hubby doing a jigsaw puzzle:
| My “Will” Wilkins |
A few days ago I had fun teaching THE VILLAGE at Southern Charm Quilting here at home. The students did well, most learned a few valuable tricks to improve and enjoy paper piecing:
| Student work at the end of the class |
| I bet some of them are building more houses today |
Barbara, thank you so much for taking the time to write this thoughtful review—and for sharing STITCHLINE with your readers. I truly appreciate your support and kind words. It means a lot coming from a fellow quilt educator. I’m so glad you’re enjoying the ruler and putting all those features to work. Thanks again, my friend. 💛
ReplyDeleteI love the Diamond Jubilee quilt. The border is perfect! I am going to check out that ruler, thanks!
ReplyDeleteHi Barbara. I recently came across this quote regarding paper piecing and thought it worthy of repeating. I have no clue to give the credit to. I’ve taught paper piecing to several/many people.
ReplyDelete‘For me it’s a bit like looking in a mirror while walking backwards chewing gum.But when I tune in and figure it out, the points are sharp and the lines are precise’. - author unknown.
Donna K
Yes, Donna, it is upside down and backwards. Sewing on paper, fabric not visible. But the precision possible with foundation paper piecing is worth the effort to learn that skill. I also demo using freezer paper, not sewing through the paper--a different and valuable skill to have too
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