However, these little bags (filled with goodies, of course) will soon be delivered to a couple of cute fairy oddkids.
After hanging my gorgeous "Bath House" Doll Swap 7 Quilt, in my dining room so I could see it while I had my meals, and my family could enjoy it at Thanksgiving, I finally added the sleeve to the back and hung the quilt in its intended location - my bathroom.
It's 30" long 3" wide, 2" deep, and the strap is about 38" long, enough to sling the bag over your shoulder or across the back. Like the other smaller skinny boxed bags, it is lined with white vinyl. (Email me at patcherymenagerie AT gmail DOT com if you are interested in purchasing this bag.)
This gold and red number is not really a stick bag.) Remember the Magritte painting, "Ceci n'est pas une pipe"?) This is actually a bag for a music stand. My son plays cello. He has a nice sturdy case for the cello, but the music stand is in two pieces, and is extremely awkward to carry. Ergo, music stand bag. (Yes, in every other aspect is is identical to the stick bags.)
Here are karate stick bags numbers 4 and 5. Apparently they were a big hit at the studio. These two are 3" wide, 2" deep, and 30" tall. The strap is situated so the bag can be slung over the shoulder or across the back.
I'm making a quilted selvage bag for my Etsy shop. This bag has nice warm brown neutrals, moving to warmer orange and beige on one side, and up to a soft yellow on the other. The handles will be neutral, and the bag will be lined and have a patch pocket.
My sister received her Second Degree Black Belt last night. This is a Big Deal. She's 47 and was by no means an athletic person. Growing up she was the very definition of accident-prone. She used to describe herself as being "completely without grace." No longer. She started karate at 42, very stiff, very awkward, but she loved it, and stuck with it.
My sister had given me some upholstery grade fabric she had bought as a remnant to use for the bag. I used the standard nylon webbing as a strap and I added a gold tassel as a zipper pull.
Presto!
You know what this means!
My Office is clean and organized. I've shredded years of old paperwork and cleaned out old books, magazines and stuff. I've dusted and rearranged what's left.
How come I find fabric like this after I've completed the houses and the top for my Devon Town Quilt? Not fair. I so totally would have had fun with this.
I'm cleaning my computer room/office. I am going through every item on every shelf, sorting through every drawer and going through every file and piece of paper in there.
Now I get to clean the house. My sewing studio is a real mess. I've got bits of fabrics all over each table, covering all the chairs and scattered about the floor.
My dining room table is pushed to one side of the room. My computer room has been a catch-all for months. It's become a junk room. I haven't vacuumed in weeks, and I've got papers stacked up in piles all over. I have books and bookcases in every room, some that haven't been touched in years occupying prime real estate.
Planning the backing of a quilt is often rather confusing. Partly because I hate to buy six yards of new fabric, and I dislike a pieced backing that doesn't really "work" with the front. But I've worked it out. This exercise with bits of graph paper and tape told me exactly how much fabric I needed, and exactly how to cut it.
Here are three blocks from the Wonky Housing Project Quilt (which still needs a better name, by the way), and a view of the batik fabric I have selected to bind the quilt together. The batik reminds me of cobblestones, and its neutral tones give the quilt unity while subtly connecting the warm tones together.