Thursday, March 26, 2015

Sunny Day Supply

Once in a while, I make a delightful discovery. www.sunnydayfabric.com


Sunny Day Supply, owned by Mary S. Dugan & Shawn Morris, is a new favorite online shop of mine. I'm just going to share a few thoughts about my experiences with these lovely ladies.




  


My orders, whether large or small, ship very promptly, and always come packaged with such care! The cute little extras they tuck in are always so fun-
 
  


Amongst some pretty great fabric finds, they stock Liberty of London.

Today on my Instagram account @kamiemurdock you can enter to win these Liberty Tana Lawn fat eighth bundles. I am relatively new to Liberty, but am fast becoming a fan! Giveaway closes at 10:00 a.m. EST 03-30-15.
  




I love their whimsical button selection, (these are just a couple) and plan to use these on clothing for my little daughter. Perfect!
  




This calligraphy ribbon. I'm eventually going to use it, I swear, but right now I think it looks amazing right on the spool...

They also have zippers, pulls, yardage, embroidery threads, etc. So many other fantastic finds, for sure!
 I have found ways to inject fabric from their curated bundles into several of my projects so far, and love the look they give to them. I'm so happy to have found their bright little shop!

In addition to the Instagram Liberty bundles, I am also giving away these two fat quarter bundles here on the blog. They are samplings of Yuwa "Text" and Lecien "First of Infinity"(as pictured, 7 fat quarters total). Just leave a comment on this post, and you will be entered
 to win! Giveaway ends 10:00 a.m. EST 03-30-15.


So happy to pay it forward to those that have taken such great care of me! www.sunnydayfabric.com 
-Kamie




Saturday, March 21, 2015

a cog's tale



Here is the process I use to assemble a laPassacaglia rosette. Every little shape has its own important role in this masterpiece. Truly a "sum of the parts"- type project!

the completed rosette










I use a water-soluble pen to trace my paper shape onto my fabric. I then find the repeat in the fabric design, and trace the next 9 exactly the same. Using about a 3/8" seam allowance, I hand cut around my traced shapes. I'm old-school about this part. Some choose to rotary cut these; I don't trust myself to keep from cutting into the next shape!

Fussy-cutting is definitely wasteful. For this reason, I pick and choose certain elements in each cog to use this technique. I do enjoy the designs I'm able to produce!








 
 I glue-baste my paper shapes. I use a water-soluble glue pen with a thin cartridge to keep from gluing too much of my paper shape. I then fold and clip the prepared shape. I love using Wonder Clips!









One thing I try to do when sewing a fussy-cut piece is look to see that the fabric design matches up when right-sides are together (RST). Everything to the right of my needle (see above) looks good here.










I then add the yellow diamonds around the center star. Now the blue fussy-cut pieces are ready to be joined, but I have a few layouts to choose from. That's another part I love about fussy-cutting fabrics! There are several ways I can arrange the exact same pieces to make a different look.






These stars. They are so tedious and tiny! Love them, or hate them? Either way, they truly give this quilt its unique look. I assemble mine one unit at a time, and then sew the connector diamonds in between to make a partial wreath.





This rosette is complete and ready to add into the quilt.




 I then check the quilt schematic to make sure about placement.





 At this point, my quilt top is getting weighted from all the paper pieces that are still in place. I've only removed maybe 1/3 of them to date. I find that laying it out on my kitchen table helps to disperse the weight as I sew the cog into place.


 

And there we have it! All nestled in its permanent home with its vivacious neighbors. On to the next...


-Kamie
 

tweak for laPassacaglia construction

I thought it might be helpful to share the following with those planning or currently constructing this quilt.

If you are working off of the complete quilt view found on page 164, it is correct. 

The areas circled in red are rosettes that don't quite match up to their prescribed numbers in the individual rosette instructions.





This rosette is labeled as a type 7 on the page 164 schematic, but it required an additional outer star and diamond to make it match the quilt overview. Type 7 rosettes on the individual instructions (p.162) require only 4 outer stars. This particular rosette fits beneath rosette 1 on the quilt.

This was an easy fix, because adding shapes to these is much easier than taking them off!






The other area of concern is located directly beneath the large number 3 rosette.   What is labeled as two number 4 rosettes is actually a hybrid combo. For this area, I just followed the complete quilt schematic (page 164) to help me choose the correct shapes and amounts of pieces to correctly lock it into place.

There are many, many pieces in this pattern, and it is completely understandable that a small change here or there might be necessary. I mean in no way to disrespect the author or publisher of this amazing quilt.

I would strongly suggest working off of the quilt overview diagram on page 164 to construct your laPassacaglia quilt. I switched to using it exclusively after these anomalies happened, and I have not had a problem since. It is accurate, and the best way to proceed, in my opinion. I'm sure those who are using it haven't experienced any difficulty, and are wondering what all the hullabaloo is about!

Happy stitching, -Kamie