Free Resources Friday

I’m very under the weather this week so I need to be brief. Hopefully this might give you some things to keep you occupied a bit until I get better 🙂

QuiltingTutorials.com is a website run by the folks at Missouri Star Quilt Co. There are many, many videos showing everything from quilting basics to intermediate level patterns.

Popular quilt fabric company Riley Blake Designs has 57 free quilting projects available on their site. I did find that in some cases the fabric requirements could be reduced if you can get a fat quarter instead of needing 1/3 yard to get a 10 inch square, also you may save fabric if you use pre-cuts. It all depends on the pattern. Just read closely before shopping. I plan to try several of the patterns in the future 🙂

If you want to try Craftsy.com for free but you are not a quilter, there is a free knitting workshop available for a limited time. (That is it is free for a limited time — and since you can always sign up now and watch the videos/interact with the instructor at any time in the future, it’s worth signing up even if you don’t have time right now.) The free workshop is the One-Skein Shrug taught by Stephanie Japel.

Finally, if you are interested in the history of fiber arts in Britain you may like to listen to a two-part series from BBC radio’s Coast and Country that is available for a few weeks on their website.  You can download the shows or listen directly from the web page. In the 29 December 2011 episode (Gansey) you can learn about the history of knitting Ganseys. In the episode from 05 January 2012 (Knockando) they explore the history of a small Scottish mill, including weaving and rearing sheep. If you wish to download an episode, click on the Download link beneath the show title on the left hand side of the page. If you wish to listen from your web browser, click on the show name in the small box on the right hand side of the page and you can use their built-in Flash player.

In other news I did get my new sewing machine but I haven’t felt up to blogging about it yet. I hope to be over this virus in a few days so hopefully I’ll have plenty of things to show you soon!

The Quilt and Fiber Marketplace

I had the opportunity to attend the Quilting and Fiber Marketplace which was held in Sanford, NC on the 6th and 7th of January. This was a really delightful gathering of approximately 40 vendors, about 75% quilting and the others assorted yarns and fibers. Four or five guilds were also represented.  A number of the vendors do not have bricks and mortar shops so this was a rare chance to see their wares in person.  We were also pleasantly surprised at how much wool was available for appliqué and rug hooking.

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This is one of the three main aisles, there was also space on the stage at the far end of the room (sadly that was not wheelchair accessible but fortunately for me I was not using my chair that day, still it’s a pain to carry the rollator up 5 steps :/) and there were some smaller booths and raffle quilts set up in the lobby.

The booth of Quilter's Loft Company

The booth of the Quilter’s Loft was my favourite. I would love to take home all of the batik — see the half yard pieces lined up in the bottom left of the photo. There were also many modern quilts that really inspired me. I’m fired up and itching to quilt now 🙂

Haul from the Quilting and Fiber Show

This was my total haul from the day. Actually the wool on the left is to be shared with my mother, I need to cut out some grey circles for needle felting on a rug, the rest will be for her rug hooking. I have a lot of batik and some solid black fabric for the Craftsy Block of the Month quilt that I have decided to work on. (Although like all BOMs I do reserve the right to not make blocks if I particularly dislike them! We have not seen all of the upcoming blocks yet.) I also have some Bali Pops that you can’t see very well under there, I’m working on a strip quilt from the Craftsy Quilting Quickly II course using those and some of the black solid. So I should have two color coordinated lap quilts when I am done. The embroidery floss was a great bargain. I didn’t really need it for the Take a Stitch Tuesday challenge but that is a good excuse 😉 There’s also a small scrap of undyed woven wool that I plan to try dyeing with Colorhue dyes. Those dyes work well on silk (I’ll post about them soon) and say they work well on wool so I wanted to test them out. The Lumiere paint I just got because it is pretty. I’m not sure what I will do with it yet but I still haven’t started with the fabric-based visual journalling I had hoped to do last year, plus with all of the silk I am dyeing I am sure those lovely paints will come in handy. Finally in the center is a needle threader (that after seeing in Quickly Quilting my mother and I decided we needed!) and the new Pilot pens that disappear when heated with an iron. Since I do sometimes work on fabrics that really shouldn’t be wet much I’d tried a few air-vanishing pens but they don’t stay on very long. I’ll give the heat pens a go and see if that is better.

Overall I really enjoyed the market! If you’re in North Carolina they are having another one in Statesville at the Civic Center the 27-28th of January. The vendor list is not identical but there is a significant overlap. With batik fabrics as low as $6 a yard and other fabrics I saw as low as $4 a yard it is a great place to stock up for quilts. The fiber offerings were not very interesting to me, but I already have a huge fiber stash and attend fiber fairs throughout the year so get a better offering there. But if you don’t have a local yarn shop or don’t have access to dyed rovings, etc., this is not a bad place. There are probably 10 vendors with yarn and two or three of those had roving or other spinning/felting fibers. I don’t know if it would be worth the $5 entry if that is all you are going for. I got a coupon from my local quilt store for $1 off so that helped. Please do let me know if you do go, I can’t make it that weekend but I’d like to know if it was as good as the Sanford one 🙂

Oh Brother, where art thou?

As I mentioned, I am doing some courses at Craftsy including several on quilting that I am taking along with my mom.  I’m still a very novice sewer, I’ve done a crib quilt, a few bags and aprons and endless repairs but I have a lot to learn. My mother has been quilting (or more accurately, collecting quilt supplies 😉 ) for over 20 years and in that time we have watched a lot of videos, gone to many quilt shows and bought a metric ton of fabric. I’m pretty up on quilting techniques, just haven’t put it into practice very much. So with these classes on making quick quilts we have decided to do some projects together.

My sewing machine though is a Janome Sew Mini. It’s fine for really basic things but only has two stitches and that’s about it. My mother had saved for me the Singer that she had when I was in middle school, before she started quilting. It’s not an old, heavy metal one like she had when I was tiny (when she was a home ec teacher), it’s a very basic but plastic machine with 6 stitches.  Unfortunately, after 15+ years in the attic, it has…. aged. The plastic is somewhat warped, and it’s not all that easy to use.  (It does still run so if anyone wants it and can pick it up at my mom’s house in North Carolina, let me know!) It has also developed a bit of a smell and I am really sensitive to chemical off gassing 🙁 So my mom has decided to buy me a new sewing machine.

Now she actually has two machines, but one is new and fancy and super expensive (a Babylock Ellisimo, she bought an ex-demo machine on end-of-model sale when the Ellissimo Gold came out) and so she has been both intimidated by it and not had the time to really learn how to use it (except the machine embroidery functions). I do *not* want to be in that position, so I want something that is easy and inexpensive but still has the whistles and bells that will make my life easier. (Particularly with my disabilities, some things just make life a lot easier.) I should also note that while I am looking to do a lot more quilting, my previous experience has been mostly with home dec and I also have experience with costuming and plan to do more of both this year, especially with a move and a costume con coming up!

So we’re looking. I think I know what I want but I am very open to suggestion.  Here are my criteria:

  • Must not be very expensive. I don’t want to be afraid of using it because I might break it.
  • I want to have foot control and a start/stop button. I prefer to use the foot pedal to control speed but some days my feet don’t want to cooperate so having a button is good for other days. However I am not very confident at *only* having a button, I miss the fine control of a pedal.
  • Must be able to drop the feed dogs. I really really want to start making art quilts and to do free motion quilting, thread sketching and more.
  • I want more than just a basic 6-8 stitches. I use decorative stitches more for scrapbooking than sewing but I still like having them. But I don’t need hundreds.

Optional but very desirable:

  • One-step buttonhole. Because I am completely rubbish at buttonholes, but I really want to learn dressmaking.
  • Self-threading needle, because that can be hard when I am shaky, even with a needle threader.

Based on these criteria, the Brother brand looks to have several good options. There’s the CS600i that has been very popular for many years, has a ton of good reviews and a good price. But I’ve heard it’s being discontinued soon. There’s also the CP-7500 which is newer so not as many reviews but not being discontinued, and has a few more quilting features built in. With the difference in price less than $20, I am leaning toward the latter. My only concern is that it just doesn’t have as many reviews in general.

Am I being paranoid that something only has 40 reviews per site (both are on Walmart.com too) rather than 900? Does that really matter, since in both cases reviews are 95% good? Or should I keep looking?

Or is there another machine you’d recommend? I’m really not committed and probably can’t purchase until February anyway due to my car refurb being more expensive than anticipated. So I’d really welcome any advice or suggestions you may have!

I’d really appreciate any help you can give me on this matter. In the meantime I’m sewing on my mom’s Bernina, so I hope I don’t break anything 😉 I’ll be posting in the next week or so with the very basic baby quilt I have started.

Thanks!

Free Resources Friday

I’m going to attempt to post most Fridays about the free craft resources that I have found and used during the week. I’m not going to focus on blogs or You Tube videos or individual tutorials unless they have really been a major element of my week, but I will mention courses, one-off videos, live events and similar things that I think you may not have heard about or are in some way time limited.

Please remember that these items are free but that doesn’t mean the producers wouldn’t appreciate something back from you, even if it is only comments! For more ways you can support free (i.e. make it worthwhile for the producers to keep making it), please see this series on Craftypod : Free & Sustainability (in crafty business).

This week, I’ve discovered:

1. Strathmore Papers has a free series of Online Artist Workshops this year, with a focus on visual/art journaling. The first one on doodling for mixed media has only recently started, there’s plenty of time to catch up and join in.

2. Craftsy, my favourite online craft class venue, has a free course that also just started.  It is a block of the month sewing project to make a lap quilt and finish it all in 2012. Since Crafty had a big sale just before Christmas I am already knee-deep in some of their classes (and will be posting about them soon) but this is still excellent and a perfect way to get introduced to the Craftsy format. New videos will be posted on the 1st of each month.

3. Scrapbook Soup is a tv show in the US that comes out weekly on PBS (public television). Not all stations carry it yet (it just changed its name and format, it used to be Scrapbook Memories) so they are offering limited free streaming on Saturdays. One episode will be available each Saturday between noon and 5 pm EST. I know this is somewhat inconvenient but it is better than nothing 🙂 I’ve seen most of the series but missed the first episode so I hope to catch it tomorrow afternoon if I get back from the Quilt & Fiber market in time.

4. Sharon B of Pintangle is running Take a Stitch Tuesday again in 2012. This is a series of weekly challenges and tutorials in hand embroidery and is in its 3rd year. Even if you have done it before she changes up the stitches and the order in which she presents them. I hadn’t heard of this before but I certainly plan on following along, at the beginner level. I only found out about it after it started so I am behind a bit but I hope to catch up before next week’s lesson/challenge.

5. Urban Threads, my favourite source for machine embroidery patterns, often has freebies available. Right now their featured design is a little monster in a box with a “Free Monster” sign. So cute 🙂 The design is available in several sizes for machine or hand embroidery or digital stock art. It is free until the 16th of January.

I hope you find some of these things useful and if so, please let me know. Also do remember to thank the people who have made them available.

Handmade Holiday Recap, Part 1

I’m sure you’re quite ready to be done with the recent holiday season and that every other blogger has long since posted the things they made for Giftmas 2011. Well sorry, I prefer not to post until the gifts have been received so there is no chance of spoilers. (Which is why this is part 1, as some gifts are late and the recipients are still waiting…oops.)

Do you remember the Handmade Pledge that was so popular about two years ago, maybe three? It was a pledge to only give and request handmade items, with a darling little blog badge favored by those who had made the pledge. I never signed up, never will. Not because I don’t give handmade gifts but because I always *want* craft supplies and books about crafting. I also try to give craft supplies to those on my gift list who appreciate them. Unfortunately, while I believe that is still supporting handmade it doesn’t fit the terms of the pledge and it does still mean money is going to large companies that manufacture their items en mass in foreign countries. (Like books, most of which are printed in China.) I did feel like I was a little bit left out because I didn’t get to wave a banner of indie, handmade pride like those who signed the pledge but since that fad fizzled out I guess they couldn’t really stick to those ideals either.

What I do support is giving handmade items as much as I possibly can, but only things I have made myself. Even if it is just a small fraction of the total package someone receives, it is still meaningful. So on that note, I’ll start showing you some of the things I made this year. Unfortunately, I forgot to photograph the things I made for my in-laws prior to leaving Australia. Today, therefore, is what I made for my mother to send to friends and family as part of the gifts she gave. (I don’t generally exchange gifts with the extended family so these were just little tokens, not intended to be stand-alone gifts.)

First, the cards:

A few Christmas cards with an embossed image of a stylized Christmas tree

I know they seem a little plain. It is just a Sizzix embossing folder of a Christmas tree (directly embossed on pre made card blanks). Inside is just a simple stamped greeting. My mother wanted neat and elegant so this was exactly as requested, she really liked them. Alas, even with such basic techniques as embossing and stamping, I still managed to mess up quite a few! I need to remember to never stamp when my blood sugar is low because I often get the shakes. Also I am quite a perfectionist so even if things were off by 2 mm I still counted them as imperfect. Two imperfections and they were out! What you see were the ones I deemed entirely unusable.  Still, a handful wrong and 25 good enough is not a bad average for someone very out of practice at card making, if I do say so myself. 🙂

Next, the potholders:

Red and Green woven cotton potholders

Potholders woven in a variety of bright colors

This is a little embarrassing because as most crafty folks know, kids often start making these around the age of 6. One of my cousins even asked why my mother had returned the potholders she had made her over 40 years ago. *rolls eyes* But again, this was my mom’s request and I made them even though I suspected people would not really appreciate them. These potholders hold up better than any other kind and you can’t buy them in stores, they’re only available handmade. She had originally envisaged sending everyone gifts of soup mix in a jar with potholders and spoons to go with them. She later decided against the jar mix part so the potholders I made for her wound up being rather out of context.

If you are familiar with potholders made of loops (the stretchy cotton loops are usually the leftovers from sock manufacturing), you may notice how very vivid these colors are. That’s because these are not the grab bags you can buy at craft stores but are made with Harrisville Designs’ Potholder Loops. In addition to their very saturated and modern colors these loops are guaranteed to fit the standard potholder looms. No more loops that break or simply don’t fit, no waste.

I came up with a system for making potholders where you only have to weave 1/2 of the weft loops rather than the way I learned where you have to weave all of the weft. I suspect there are more ways to improve since I’ve seen these for sale on Etsy for about $5 each and I can’t imagine anyone taking the 35-45 minutes I spend, plus expenses, and then selling them for only $5. Maybe they have found a way to make at least two an hour? Maybe they don’t have to stop and fast forward through commercials on the DVR? 🙂 At any rate, I’ve been thinking of doing a video or a photo tutorial showing my method to cut down on weaving. (It is not where you use a pencil to hold the warp in one position, but it gives the same results.) Would anyone be interested in seeing that? Don’t want to waste my time if weaving potholders with loops is too 20th century or only for under-10s. 😉

I don’t know how the cards were received but the potholders I think had dubious responses.  I suspect they thought it was too primitive an item, that only children made them and adults only own or use them to indulge the child makers. Heh. I’m not really close to the aunts and cousins my mom gave them to so I don’t feel like asking directly. In the future I think I shall only make potholders for people who appreciate them and/or serious cooks without any children in their lives to make them some. 😉

I’ll be back with parts 2 and 3 of my handmade holidays soon, including dyeing, machine embroidery, needle felting and loom knitting.

Crafty Every Day

I took a bit of time and really thought about what I could offer in a blog.  One of the main reasons I have not been blogging lately is because I haven’t been designing and I don’t really feel that just following other people’s patterns and designs is worthy of readers’ attention.  I was fine when I was doing really original things but when I started cranking out 25 identical cards or 10 matching dishcloths it wasn’t anything “to write home about”.  But I miss being part of the community, I miss contributing, sharing and encouraging others while also feeling like more than just a cheerleader.

I think I am going to take this blog in a slightly different direction. Instead of being project-oriented I am going to make it more about the crafting life.  In 2009, when my father was seriously ill and in hospital long-term, I discovered that if I don’t do something relating to art or crafts every single day I go nuts.  That “something” may be reading, watching videos, chatting with crafters on Twitter about crafty topics, shopping or just pondering new projects. However I think that as creators we all need to engage in these activities; we need to feed our minds so we can make our ideas come to life. So I am going to talk a lot more about what goes into my head and be less worried about the stuff coming out being “worthy” of a blog-reader’s time.

I hope that this will be useful to you. If you think I am taking things in the wrong direction, please let me know. I don’t want to put energy into something that no one will find useful. But I do hope that crafting and founding a craft-related charity as a person who moves around the globe often and deals with the limitations of chronic illnesses daily might bring insights and perspectives you may not find elsewhere.

I do something crafty every day. So for 2012 I am going to do my best to share it with you. I don’t think I can manage to post every day but I will try to keep a running log of as many creative activities in my life as I can remember and post them frequently. Don’t worry, there will be projects, too!  But also discussions of products, media, events, stores, tweet chats, email lists, workshops — everything that is part of my crafting life.

Welcome to The Sick Chick’s Constantly Crafty. I hope you enjoy your stay and I look forward to talking to you soon.

My tuxedo cat, Pixiebelle, sits atop a stack of fat quarters (fabric).  She's not moving for anything.
Pixiebelle says "Fat Quarters are for Fat Cats!"