The Patchery Menagerie
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Saturday, April 11, 2026
Win Some, Lose Some
Friday, April 10, 2026
Birds Fly In!
I'm teaching the birds at Night Owl Quilt Studio in Amherst NH on Friday April 17. Alas, the class is full, but email the shop if you are interested in attending a future session.
Thursday, April 9, 2026
Size Matters
The rail fence blocks I've been making from Sujata Shah's book, Cultural Fusion Quilts, (which is a really good book, by the way, and it's still in print, so go get one...) Anyway, the finished blocks measure sixteen inches square. A quilt four blocks by five is 64" x 80". But for the design to work best, the quilt would have to be FIVE blocks by SIX. I'd need to make FIVE yellow blocks, and one extra block each of PINK, ORANGE, BLUE, PURPLE AND GREEN. That equals 30 blocks in total.
DETOUR AHEAD!
Now you may have noticed that in the previous posts I had four pairs each of Blue, Green, Purple, Pink and Orange. Each fabric is unique, so that means 40 unique fabrics. If I were to make 30 blocks, that would mean I'd need TWENTY more unique fabrics. And lemme tell ya, even with MY really terrific stash, that can be tricky. Not that I don't have the fabrics, but that I may or may not have sufficient YARDAGE to make really good pairs that meet the requirements I have already set for myself. Remember, I'm trying to DEPLETE the stash, not add to it by going fabric shopping. So stash hunting I will go. I'm a big believer that my best creative decisions come when my proverbial back is against the wall.
BACK TO THE SIZE...
If I add yellow blocks, which I am planning to do, then the size thing gets cuckoo. Thirty blocks arrange FIVE rows of SIX yields a quilt 80" x 96", which I think is way too freaking big.Wednesday, April 8, 2026
What If?
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
More Wonky Blocks
I'm moving right along making the components for each color, but it's annoying I can't see them all on the design wall. Well, this kinda sorta works, but not really. I'm pretty sure one of the oranges doesn't work, but it's hard to tell. There has to be a better way.
Monday, April 6, 2026
Making Blocks
Saturday, April 4, 2026
The Next Thing
Cherie was right when she predicted that my next project would be improvisational. But after a couple of quilts based on straight lines, you kinda had to know that I would do something off-kilter.
Given that my long-term goal is to use up as much fabric in my stash as I can in the next 15-20 years, I have decided to make quilt tops that please me. They may or may not have a purpose, or a reason, or a future home. I may or may not have them quilted. I'm going to take a look at the fabric in my stash and the bins and take whatever hits me at the moment, and do something with it.
In other words, I am going to Play. I am going to try to have some fun.
In January I made these as part of a proposal to teach a class based on Sujata Shah's method of making traditional blocks with gentle curves. Here I have arranged the blocks in a Rail Fence arrangement.Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Need Help
A few years ago I asked for birds so I could make a bird quilt exclusively from birds made by students. I got enough birds for TWO quilts. I made one, and I bring it to classes I teach so students can see REAL birds made by quilters other than me. These are the birds that I didn't use in the first quilt. I'd like to finish the second quilt, but as you can see, most of the birds face left and only four face right.
I need about a dozen right facing birds, like this one, above. Can you help me? Would you be willing to make me a right facing bird for this quilt? The birds should be on a LIGHT background, like the WOWs, above.Monday, March 30, 2026
This and That
I finished the binding on the Green Birds quilt, so that's done. I'm gearing up for changing the quilts to spring colored quilts on the first of April, so this is good. This is the first bird quilt I made that didn't use White on Whites as a background.The greens weren't even the same fabric in each block.
Sunday, March 29, 2026
Binding the Green Birds Quilt
I am finally sewing the binding on the Green Birds quilt.
Thursday, March 26, 2026
It's a Flimsy!
The Opalescence quilt is now a flimsy. Here is a shot of the back. Regular readers know all the backs of my quilt are this neat.
Here's the quilt. It's a bit lighter in real life, and I'll try to take a picture of it outside if the weather permits over the next few days.
The quilt is pretty, and I like it more than I expected to. While it looks random, it isn't. Each block was placed, and while there are some blocks that seem to blend into each other, I left them there. I wasn't too worried about the overall "scheme," I wanted something that looked fresh and didn't look too perfect.
I remember some terrific advice I got years ago, "You never want your quilts to look like a machine made them." I don't remember the name of the person who said it.
My own personal corollary is: "You don't want your quilt to look like it's a design you'll find on the tiled floor of a hotel lobby, airport, museum or public building." Yeah, I know. I'm a bad woman.
I have six yards of this in my stash, and it will be the backing of the quilt. Woo hoo!WHAT will I do next?
I don't know either!
Wednesday, March 25, 2026
Almost, but Not Quite
These are the last four rows of blocks to sew together for the pastel Macnas quilt, which shall be called Opalescence.The pieces are pinned together, and you can see by the pins I have put on the leftmost edges, which row each one is, so I don't get them mixed up when I go to sew the rows together.
Monday, March 23, 2026
Pastel Macnas Grows
I've sewn the top eight rows together into four big chunks and moved it to the top of the design wall.
There's also an eight block wide chunk at the lower left that is sewn together. That far left piece represents the bottom edge of the quilt.
So it's growing.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
The Design Wall Limitations



































