All posts by Finch

EPP Update!

IT IS FINISHED!!!!! And oh, I do love it. When I look at it, I’m reminded of the hard work and enjoyment that sewing and quilting have given me, and that I’ve given myself. It reminds me that I enjoy hand sewing and machine sewing for different reasons, and they both have their place in my creative endeavors.

It was a lot of work, but it was spread out. And very worth it. This project brought me back to college when I was only doing hand sewing, since I didn’t own a machine. It was a slow and relaxing project, which was wonderful – I’d work on it whenever I felt like it, whether that was on the train to the city or sitting on the couch with my cat.

gluing fabric to hexagons

I wanted to keep the quilting really simple and highlight the fabrics themselves, since there are so many fun ones in this quilt! I decided to echo the hexagons, and made three passes across the quilt, echoing two sides at a time (three passes, two sides at a time – all six sides covered!). This allowed me to quilt long, uninterrupted lines, which is most effective. Quilting is pretty AND increases the structural integrity of the entire sandwich, so long lines are preferable to “isolated” designs that require cutting the thread. For a little fun, I added in my “random geometric” design in some hexagons.

Quilting by aligning the ruler against the edge of the hexagon and following it, creating a quarter-inch echo line. You can see here that I’m on my third pass, four of the sides are already echoed and I’m following the last two sides (easiest to see in the light blue heart block or light pink on the left).

I decided that I would keep the hexagons on the border instead of cutting the quilt to rectangular, so I looked up how to apply binding to all the angles. It was a bit fussy, and I realized that I would have to then hand sew the binding to the back, but… it looks really cool. And it was nice to finish the quilt by hand, honoring the work I put in to the top.

Applying the binding with the machine
Hand sewing the binding to the back, with my friendly helper.
scraps from the back
This quilt’s resting place – the analog room / reading chair ❤ It is wonderful and warm and cozy… and a project for me, of me, from me.

Project completed January 9, 2022.

  • Fabrics – so many. Sourced from MSQC, Joann, Bluprint, Etsy, eBay, thrift store, Spoonflower, memory quilt scraps
  • Batting – scraps, mostly cotton and cotton/poly blends
  • I didn’t buy any supplies for this quilt except machine needles. Which!! I figured out why my thread kept breaking all those times. Just need to use a bigger needle. 🙂 But it was a true joy to create something “for free”.

Colorful Log Cabin

This was a gift for two of my best friends who got married last summer! For their gift, I was inspired by the log cabin block, since our friends often gather at their home. I’d never done a log cabin quilt, and it’s a very traditional quilt, constructed by sewing strips of (usually) the same width to a “rotating” block.

I wanted to minimize my cutting, so I used pre-cut 2.5″ strips define my block and calculated the lengths from there. My idea was to put the strips in rainbow order and have each color “march” around the block so that, say, red would start in the first position, then for the next block, purple would be in first position and red would be in the second position. (see below) This meant I cut all of the lengths from all of the colors, with some finagling (also, see below).

Log cabin blocks are constructed by adding strips to a center square (marked as 1). My idea was to have an approximate rainbow order moving clockwise around the block.
Cutting strips to the correct length

Then I was able to assemble my blocks, which I did one by one because I wanted to stay super organized with the color order. They weren’t all perfect but I am super pleased with the results.

Originally I wanted to arrange the blocks in the order I made them, with red in the first position in the first block, second in the second block, but that didn’t look that good 🙂 so I mixed them up and tried to design it by keeping busy prints scattered throughout and no prints touching each other.

This was my first quilt with sashing, the borders around the blocks. Sashing can make a quilt bigger without the need for more print fabric, and gives the eye places to rest between the busy blocks. I used a nice gray for the sashing, which ended up being really nice with such vibrant, saturated colors in the blocks.

As usual, I vamped on a few motifs for the quilting – as illustrated below.

swirling polygon
swirl with echoing
echoing the strip lines
zigzag; echoing strip lines; curvy swirling polygon; curvy lines within strips

Overall, I’m really pleased with the final result and I was so happy to make a traditional quilt in a modern, bright way.

Completed June 2021.

Print: Punch Batiks by Kathy Engle for Island Batik
Binding: Wilmington Essentials – Crackle Stone by Wilmington Prints
Backing: Punch Batiks – Fern Green Apple by Kathy Engle for Island Batik

Swirly Paintings!

I was inspired to pick up the brush again by katiesstudio on TikTok; I wanted to try out their “swirl the blobs” technique of moving and mixing color across the canvas. And of course, I brought my masking tape techniques with me.

Then I wanted to take this color blending kick over to my embroidery, because I already have variegated thread in lots of colors (shout out to Walmart for the thread).

I use this as my choir bag now 🙂

An of course my next question is… how can i incorporate this into my quilting? I’ve been thinking about trying more detailed pieces and more “thread painting”, and I think this abstract color blending mood could bring me into that. 🙂

no way of knowing

Over the past year, I’ve been exploring my feelings and memories and thoughts about my adoption. And with the support of my therapist and adoptee support group, I have created something that really encompasses this nebulous, complex…. experience I’ve had.

This is my attempt at telling, creating, authoring part of my story, and trying to communicate what it’s felt like to have this story and move into writing it myself.

I bought white fabric, dyed it with tea, and then painted it. Created the colors and used scissors and my hands to create the shape.

I took already made fabric and pulled it apart into bundles of thread and pieces with holes and frayed edges.

I incorporated the business card from the orphanage I spent time at, and little baby shoes I found in my parent’s basement. And some tea wrappers, as drinking tea is one of the ways I’m engaging with my heritage right now.

I created a landscape based on research from Google Earth of the surrounding hills and the city I was found in using this imprecise, bits-and-pieces applique.

I wanted to stop here. I had a piece I liked looking at, and it was what I had imagined. But it wasn’t the story I want to tell, the whole story, the true story. So I made it messy and complicated and disjointed, like adoption is, how adoption feels. To be cut off from the first person you ever met and knew, who grew you, to be separated from people who look like you, who you heard while you were waiting to be born. To have an origin story you can’t remember and can’t ever know. To be out of context, displaced… Displaced to somewhere nice, with good people, but to always be a branch grafted onto the family tree.

And so I covered it with black bits of fabric, obscuring it.

And cut it up and fit it together in the wrong places and stitched it together again.

And undid stitches and pulled pieces of fabric up and cut into it.

And covered it with ripped pieces of mesh tulle, covering it in more haze.

And, finally, fit the pieces of a poem I amalgamated from my bits of writing about adoption into the shredded edges. It doesn’t feel like closure, but I did need to express it. It was so strange to make a quilt that is not a grid and angles and 1/4″ seams. In the beginning it was daunting, and I instinctively tried to make it pretty, but that’s not what I feel and not what I wanted it to be.

Feel free to take a listen to the poem while you look.

Project completed May 23, 2021.

Dyed and painted muslin, scraps from previous projects, blue dresses, gray tulle, embroidery thread, and paper.

Missouri Star :)

For the longest time…. I have wanted to do a Missouri Star quilt. And finally, I have. I used the pattern from the Block of the Month, although I did figure out halfway through that I could have done it an easier way (less cuts), but it was fine. I wanted to do something bright and colorful to hang up in my bedroom.

Pressing my triangles and squares open
Squaring up my blocks – I like to trim my half-square triangles while they’re still a triangle, since it’s two cuts instead of the four I’d have to do if I ironed them open first. Squaring blocks is so tedious but it does make for an easier, flatter, and better finish. All the blocks are the same size, so they fit together the way they’re supposed to, no crookedness or extra fabric.

I did my normal stitch in the ditch for all of the vertical seams, and then did free motion quilting in each of the stars. In my layout, I put similarly-colored center squares across the quilt from each other, so I decided the do the same with my free motion designs. I did a radial pattern for the red center stars, an echo in the center for the dark center stars, an outside echo for the yellow center stars, my “abstract” design with straight lines bouncing around for the green center stars, and then a full echo swirl from the outside to the center for the center star.

I used the foot as an approximate guide to follow the outline of the star, and then follow that line, and then follow that one…. all the way to the middle. 🙂 As I got closer to the middle, I started making the space between the lines wider. You’ll see me fix a broken thread a few times in there. Anticipating those threads is why I sew with the end of my machine open now, since it’s easier to retrieve the broken thread.

As I expressed in my last post with the Plant Wall Hanging, I think I’m still moving too fast with my free motion quilting, which causes the thread to fray and then break. I had that happen less often with this quilt, since I was keeping it in mind, but it was still happening. I think it’s a combination of moving too fast and not moving at a consistent speed, which I want to work on with my next quilt.

I used hangers from The HangUps Company
View looking up at it from my pillow 🙂

Overall, I’m really happy with how it turned out. I love the Missouri Star block and I have wanted a quilt like this for a while. I made 10 stars and used one as the label for the back. As usual, I hand sewed my label on. I like having that time under the quilt as it’s in progress – a sneak peek of what it will turn into. The backing is a purple flannel which did not hold up that well in the wash, but I didn’t worry about it since it’s a wall hanging anyway. 🙂

Completed March 2021.

  • Print: Wilmington Essentials – Magic Colors by Wilmington Prints
  • Background: Kona Cotton – Medium Grey by Robert Kaufman Fabrics
  • Binding: Wilmington Essentials – Crackle Stone by Wilmington Prints
  • Backing: Comfy Flannel – Tossed Unicorns Purple by A E Nathan Co INC

Plants Wall Hanging!!

So I’m a big plant person. I love plants. I have had an ongoing collection of succulents for a couple years, and last summer my cousin (who I made the memory quilt for) gifted me a bunch of mature houseplants like pothos, monstera, and colocasia. So I’ve wanted to do a plant quilt for a long time, and I actually bought half the supplies I needed for this quilt in early 2020. At that time, I was planning on doing the entirety of Elizabeth Hartman’s “Greenhouse Quilt”. Hartman creates incredible patterns of actual animals and objects, all pieced, not applique. This means there’s a lot of cutting itty bitty pieces of fabric, sewing itty bitty pieces of fabric… and a lot of mental effort to stay organized and on track. I had done one block of hers a while ago as a pillow, and used one of the plant blocks as a bag for a friend (below).

Flower block from Elizabeth Hartman

And then I saw MSQC’s “Cactus Carnival”, which is applique, and I knew I could combine both these patterns to create something that wasn’t too hard, and had hard angles and soft curves.

I attempted to standardize the sizes of the blocks, since MSQC’s pattern has a 10″ block, and Hartman’s pattern is based on a 6.5″ wide block with varying heights. I ended up adding borders to the Hartman blocks to make them 10″ wide and 15″ tall, so they could work in columns with the MSQC blocks.

I made four blocks of each of the five general plants from MSQC, and used Heat N Bond for all the applique, which ended up going a lot faster than anticipated. I used my rainbow variegated thread (kind of my favorite thread, let’s be honest I’ve used it for probably half my projects) to outline all my applique’d plants with blanket stitch. I didn’t even have to use Heat N Bond for the pot pieces, and laid those gently on top of my applique’d plants.

I’m only applique-ing the plant pieces here, the pot was a placeholder because the fabric hadn’t come in yet
Here I’m going around the main piece, but I come back later to go around every piece. The Heat N Bond doesn’t stay sticky through the washer and dryer, so you have to secure the pieces in another way.

Then I made two versions of each Hartman block – a standard size and an enlarged size. I used the normal pattern for the standard size block, and adjusted the plant to be 8″-9″ for the enlarged size block. The whole time I was kind of stressing because I didn’t think I had enough background fabric to all the blocks, but it ended up totally fine!

I put all the blocks together in a landscape orientation, which is kind of different for quilts! But I intended this to be a wall hanging in my room, behind where I Zoom/video chat from, so that it could be my background! So I arranged my blocks and sewed them together in columns. My first pass of quilting was just straight lines, stitch in the ditch up and down the columns, and then across horizontally.

Then, I did free motion quilting on the pots! I started off using this white thread I got, but it kept breaking, so then I switched to a shiny gray that I’ve had for a while, and that kept breaking too… Finally I figured out the problem was the needle! But that kind of just made the problem happen less often.

[Future Finch, who is writing this post, has completed the Plant Quilt and is working on the next quilt and running into the same problem while free motion quilting. I am now convinced that it’s because I was pushing the quilt through the machine too fast, which pulls the thread too tight and then it snaps. I have been working on slowing down and having patience, which is difficult! The machine is running very fast, so it’s kind of loud and the needle is moving quickly, but I have to move slowly and steadily. I’ve gotten to the point where it’s happening even less often than during the pots, but I’m still working too fast. I don’t know if I want to turn up the machine speed, although I think that could help. It just stresses me out because it’s so loud, which makes me go faster.]

But I persevered through my mistakes and the pots ended up so fun. I had six different “motifs”: swirls, abstract, wavy, rainbow, zigzag, and dots. Each pot, I rolled a die to decide which motif I’d use – as long as it wasn’t the same as the pot I just did or any adjacent pots. It was so fun to vamp on different motifs and find new ways to represent them. It was nice to not have to come up with an entirely new idea, but just a new take on the same motifs. So it was fun to do and fun to look at 🙂

As I was finishing up, I wasn’t sure if it needed more quilting or if I should quit while I was ahead. The applique plants and pots had their own blanket stitch outlines, and the pots had the FMQ, but the Hartman blocks were kind of empty. I called a friend and we decided that I should do limited quilting on the Hartman plants so they blended in with the whole quilt. I matched the designs between the standard and enlarged blocks, so the small cactus has the same quilting as the large catcus, etc. I think it really brought everything together! Last up was the binding and putting it through the washer and dryer. Since I found them at Target, I throw in a “color catcher” sheet with all my new quilts (and some of my more brightly colored clothes), which did come out a gray-ish green.

And now it’s hanging up behind my desk, courtesy of some quilt hanging clips my parents got me for Christmas a couple years ago. 🙂

Project completed February 11, 2021.

  • Colorful plant pieces: Artisan Batiks – Aviva by Lunn Studios for Robert Kaufman
  • Ombre Green: Wilmington Essentials – Ombre Washart Forest by Wilmington Prints
  • Brown pots: Bella Solids – Earth by Moda Fabrics
  • White background: Kona Cotton – Snow by Robert Kaufman Fabrics
  • Backing and binding: Painterly Petals – Textures Mint by Studio RK for Robert Kaufman

Memory Quilt 2

This memory quilt for my cousin was my other big project of 2020, finished in this first month of 2021. My cousin provided her mother’s clothes, which are incredibly fun and colorful. I knew I wanted to do a crazy quilt for my cousin, since she didn’t want something too big, and her mom’s clothes are truly too fun to do something simple with.

First, I inventoried all the fabric and cut off buttons and fasteners and other 3d elements I wanted to include. I chose a 3×3 layout for the back of 9 graphic t-shirts, and figured I’d do the crazy-pieced blocks to match on the front. Through the process, the front blocks ended up a bit smaller but it wasn’t a big deal.

For the piecing, I cut pieces with an uneven number of sides (a tip from the museum employee) for the center piece. Then I added on new fabric to each side, and continued until it was the right size. Since a lot of the fabric was stretchy and textured itself, I used some scrap fabric behind the block to stabilize everything.

I chose some logos to applique, just like my other memory quilt. I appliqued them on the blocks, prior to piecing the 9 blocks together. At this point I also added some lace, belts/scarves, and other ties by machine.

Black and gold belt, some lace, and appliqued logo

Then I pieced it together because I wanted to add the buttons and fasteners between some blocks. I added the buttons and such by hand, since they’re a bit fiddly on the machine.

These were the buttons of the shirt seen in the background of the picture below 🙂
These ribbon flowers were already part of a sweater, so I extracted them from the sweater and sewed them on!
Cute little fastener from the leg of pajama pants

My cousin wanted to feature her mom’s beautifully hand painted wedding dress, so I appliqued one of the main flowers on the middle block and on the back of the quilt. I did simple stitch in the ditch quilting, since the top was already very busy.

I used jean pants pockets to allow my cousin to hang up the quilt if she ever chooses.

Project completed January 2021.

Crazy Quilts at RMQM

I knew I wanted to do a crazy quilt for my cousin’s memory quilt, and RMQM did a whole crazy quilt exhibit this past fall! Crazy quilts became popular in the late 1800s and generally include colorful scraps of cotton and silk and velvet, ribbons, buttons, other baubles, and embroidery. They vary in the level of complexity of course, and I wanted to find a style or inspiration that I was comfortable using for my crazy quilt.

I went on a Saturday morning, and if you go right when it opens, usually one of the employees will walk around with you and tell you about the quilts. I was the only one there for a while, and a very nice employee walked around with me and we talked about the quilts. As a note, this post won’t have many credits because I forgot to take pictures of most the signs.

One thing I loved was that not all the quilts had borders. I struggle with borders and knowing what fabric to choose, how to quilt it, and it’s an optional step that stands between me and finishing the quilt so I tend to skip them. So I was instantly inspired by border-less quilts.

It also made so much more sense to create crazy-pieced square blocks and then put the blocks together instead of trying to crazy-piece an entire quilt. I also went into this knowing my cousin wanted a small-ish lap quilt, so I wasn’t overly intimidated by the size and scale of most of these quilts.

I liked this one that was kind of a medallion type of quilt, and you’ll see the very typical embroidery with that fun ribbon flower in the very center.

I loved this twisting and twirling quilt. It’s pieced rhombi, where each rhombus is one of the arcs.

Star Crazy Quilt, Maker Unknown

This next quilt was my favorite of the entire exhibit. I loved the on point blocks, each with its own story. This quilt was made by Patricia and Allen Brown of Colorado Springs, Colorado.

Boom, Boom! Ain’t it Great to be Crazy? by Patricia and Allen Brown
Those adorable leaf and bird buttons!!!
More ribbon flowers
Really awesome embroidered fish and leaves
Stumpwork (3d embroidery) flowers, really cool lace, and some intricate embroidery

And here are some other up-close inspirations!

Super detailed flowers
A lace fan! Plus a cute heart button, ribbon, and tiny beads
A zipper flower!
Wavy ribbons and beads, embroidery, and lace
Embroidery over a printed fabric to create a little scene
Printed fabric with flowers, ribbon flowers, and that adorable ladybug button!

I definitely walked away with a better idea of what I wanted to do with my cousin’s quilt, and so much inspiration for future projects. I don’t think I’d do a whole embroidered crazy quilt, but maybe something more like a mini art quilt. I really liked the idea of embroidering over printed fabric to enhance or create a new picture, and making little flowers with ribbon and zippers. Could be a fun mini project!

Stay tuned for the post on my second memory quilt coming up soon 🙂

Little close up of my own crazy quilt 🙂

Memory Quilt 1

My uncle lost his wife in 2018 and I wanted to honor her with a memory quilt out of her old shirts. My uncle provided a bunch of bright polo shirts and other shirts of hers, which I made into a quilt for him. I wanted to keep it really simple and soft, so I cut out big squares from the shirts and laid them out in a grid pattern.

Layout with my friendly helper

Most of the polos had awesome logos on them, which I wanted to include in some way. I thought a bit about applique-ing them to a border, but I didn’t want there to be lumpy or hard parts throughout the quilt. I decided to put all the logos together in one corner and applique-d them onto a square that already had the Buffalo Bills logo on it. I tacked them down with my sewing machine and then hand stitched around each one to really make sure they don’t go anywhere.

I kept the quilting really simple, two sets of diagonal lines. I used rainbow thread since my aunt was so bright and colorful.

Finished quilt with my cat for scale

This was my big project of 2020 and I’m so glad I was able to deliver it to my uncle before the year’s end. 2020 has been tough on all of us and I’ve struggled to get into my sewing room as often as I’d like, but I chipped away at this project little by little and I’m really happy with the result. I sent it off to my uncle and he sent me back a picture of it with his cat 🙂

Project completed December 2020.

Christmas Bags!

I decided to use the same website for my Christmas gifts as I did for my purple geode dressSpoonflower, but making my own designs to be printed on the fabric.

I used GIMP, a photo editing software, to trace some of my own pictures and clip art to make the designs. I used a picture of a clematis flower on my porch to do some tests.

Original clematis flower on my porch
Traced clematis, plus a diagonal repeat
Spoonflower selection – you can choose the type of repeat and the size of the design

And I did a little abstract design of the graptosedum california sunset succulent I had over the summer, too.

I decided to spend the majority of my time on the designs instead of the construction, so I made some simple zipper bags out of the fabric I printed. I have a drawing pen with a tablet that connects to my computer, so I don’t have to draw with the mouse. I start out by tracing a thin outline of the shape, then a thicker and smoother outline. Then I color in the subject and do a background, usually very blurry so that there aren’t any apparent lines when it repeats. GIMP has a feature to offset the design so it will tile, so I use that and make sure that there aren’t any weird empty spaces that would be obvious in the fabric.

I did a design of bats for one of my friends, and lined the bag with a Dungeons and Dragons inspired fabric that someone else designed.

My other friend has a ton of cat themed stuff, but she also owns some geckos! So I wanted to do a bag with some geckos on it. I used a clipart picture of a gecko and made the markings match her specific gecko 🙂 I blurred out some wood clipart for the background. I used some old cactus fabric for the inside, since we’re both plant parents 🙂

One of my friends lives in a different state and I wanted to make her something Colorado themed, so I made some mountains on the Colorado flag and added a bike.

For my secret santa gift in my friend group, I used a picture of my friend’s dog to make two different prints for the exterior and interior of the bag.

Projects completed December 2020.