Sunday, July 12, 2026

Backings, Office and Bathroom Update

 


The studio is ready for work, and I wanted to get in there and do something. I had some backing fabrics, so I got a couple of them ready. I bought this Philip Jacobs print for the back of the pastel Macnas quilt. It was yardage, so I had to iron it all, and then seam two pieces together for the backing. So I did that.


I originally bought this fabric for the backing of the yellow Macnas quilt.

When I set it next to the orange and pink Macnas quilt it was pretty clear they belonged together. So I got that ready.




I -also- got the Office all set, I put all the books back in the bookcase, and organized the furniture and the desk, so that room is ready for use. One of the things that has always bothered me about that room is the sliding doors on the big closet. One of the sliding doors kept jamming, and I was always afraid of it because there was a mirror adhered to the door. It was loose, and I was always worried that if I pushed too hard the mirror would fall off and break and cut me badly. I wanted the guys to fix the door issue, and they removed the mirror without breaking it. They'll come back next week and rehang the doors after we paint them. The wallpaper is peeling off the front wall, so the plan is to remove that and paint that one wall. There's no real reason to paint the whole room. I'll be happy with the room after that.


Then I moved to the bathroom and gave it a good clean. The base of the spa tub was covered in carpet, which also hid any access to the plumbing, which was not good because the faucet leaks, making the tub hard to use. We can't cover that base with flooring, so we have to come up with another solution. The guys have an idea of a material to use, and I've left that decision to them. 

After all this the only thing left to do will be to replace the carpet in my bedroom and living room.

It was amazing how much work it was to get the rest of the house clean after moving all the stuff back into the appropriate rooms. I'm tired, but happy the house is back to normal.




Saturday, July 11, 2026

The Official New Studio Tour

 

The studio has been put back to rights. This is the view from the door.

Just inside the door on the right are my ironing table, bookcases, 

and fabric stash and design wall. Nothing there was changed.

At the far end of the room. I used to have a table in front of the window at the right,  but it became a place for stuff to pile up and I wanted to stop that. Besides, when I took the table down, I liked the space it freed up. I moved a bookshelf there that was previously at the other end of the room. The bins at right will go back out into the shed. 

Moving back toward the entry, there is my small drafting table. This is convenient for working sitting down. I often plan quilts, or work out the math, while sitting at that table. The top of this table, my sewing table and large worktable are all covered in white cutting mats.

My sewing table is right where it used to be, with everything arranged just the way I like it.

This is my large worktable, and you can see something you almost never could before - a rolling stool I could never use because of the carpet. I generally work at this table standing up, but when I am matching pairs of fabric strips, or pinning pieces together, it's more comfortable to sit.

I -NEVER- sit while cutting fabric. When cutting fabric I always do it standing up.

Behind the work table I've stored my portable ironing table, small step stool, my suitcase containing my teaching traveling kit and the rolling cart I have never used because it wouldn't roll on the carpet. I expect I will use it more frequently now that I can move it around. 

In the top shelf I have put the fabrics I have selected for the Gray and Pink quilt. I am pretty sure I know what I am going to do with that, but my very favorite nine-year-old on the planet (a/k/a DGD) has asked for a quilt and since all quilters live for requests like this, hers will take precedence. Fortunately I have some great ideas. The last time the two of us chatted I sent her pictures and she told me what she liked and didn't like. I have some ideas percolating in my head.

Giving the studio a deep clean cleared out a lot of clutter and made space for me to store things that used to sit out in the open, often gathering dust.

At the far end of the room, I've got a broom, a dustpan and dust-brush, and a Swiffer duster for cleaning up. 


Because a hard floor will be chilly underfoot in the winter, I made a trip to the local Skechers store and bought a nice fuzzy pair of slippers to keep my toesies toasty.

Tomorrow I have to put the books away in the office and restore the bathroom back to normal. After that I'm going to sack out on the couch with a good book.

Friday, July 10, 2026

The New Floor, a Preview

 

The new flooring has been installed. It looks great and I like it. Here you can see the shelf that runs the length of the room (20 feet) under the windows. I painted it. I figured what the heck, it was dirty, and I might as well spend the money on a quart of paint and improve the look. I'm really glad I did.

Once the floor was done, we arranged the bookcases and brought in the bins of fabric. We swept the floors,  and I even vacuumed the floors, but it wasn't until I damp-mopped the new floors that they finally felt really clean. This flooring, when cut generates a TON of very fine dust, and it covered EVERYTHING. I had to clean every piece of furniture in the room. In fact, I have decided to hold off putting the fabric back on the shelves because I want any dust to settle so it won't get on my fabric.

Here is the office. The best thing about the hard floor here is that my chair will now glide on the floor and I won't need that stupid plastic mat that I trip over half the time.

Obviously neither room is completely done. There are issues (one lamp crashed and died) and things I noticed once I got the big furniture out, and more work is going to happen (can you say Paint?). But I'm tired so that will have to wait.

But I'm happy and it was money well spent, As the contractor said as he was preparing to leave, "Well, Lynne, you've just increased the value of your house." I mean, the rugs were beige, stained, and over thirty years old. The new floors are waterproof. Woot!


Thursday, July 9, 2026

Bonne Maman

 

Back in May I wrote about having a lot of empty jars on hand. My favorites are the Bonne Maman jars.

While what we buy a Bonne Maman product for is truly great (I particularly love their Apricot Preserves), for some reason their jars are just as great.

These are the re-purposed Bonne Maman jars from my own refrigerator. After that blog post I heard from several of you saying you love them just as much as I do.

We are not alone.

Since my studio floor is being refinished (along with the floors in my office and master bathroom) my studio is off limits, so I have been reading. I am reading Martin Walker's A Murder in Springtime, one of his Bruno, Chief of Police novels. I love these and have read all of them.

In the books, Bruno cooks. Walker has even collaborated with his daughter to collect Bruno's recipes into a cookbook, but I digress.

Imagine my surprise yesterday when reading chapter four...

"...Bruno prepared his vinaigrette, measuring his ingredients by eye and instinct into a Bonne Maman jam jar saved and washed for this very purpose. ..."

How many of us do the same? I know I do.


Tuesday, July 7, 2026

They Love It!

The Field of Dreams quilt has arrived in the City of Angels and as you can see, it was very well received.

My DIL exclaimed, "It's so light!!!" 

They said the sheets were in the washing machine so they could make up the bed with fresh sheets and the new quilt.

Then my granddaughter asked if I could make one for her. To which there was only one reply possible...


YES DEAR!




This is simply a Nightingale quilt made in Green. You can make one any color you want, of course. You can get the tutorial to make one here, at my Etsy shop.

 

Monday, July 6, 2026

Oh Boy!

 

Oh boy! They guys came and made quick work of removing the carpet and getting the new floor installed in my studio. I think this is gorgeous and I am very happy. I love this. Once the trim around the baseboards is installed I'll be able to start moving back in.

I did ask for a gray. I think it will be easier to see all the pins and threads that will inevitably fall on the floor.

Woo hoo. Tomorrow, the bathroom... 

Can't wait for NO CARPET around the spa tub. Who puts carpet in the bathroom? It was here when I got here and I cannot tell you how eager I am to see the last of THIS!




Friday, July 3, 2026

Field of Dreams is Finished!

 

I tied all the knots on the Field of Dreams quilt, then trimmed down the excess backing, folded it over and pinned it down.

Then I machine stitched the binding in place.

(Look at my empty studio!)


The quilt is 78" x 98" or so, and it's already on its way to the City of Angles. It should arrive on Monday.

Woo hoo!


This is a Nightingale quilt, just in greens. If you want to make one, you can get the tutorial here, at my Etsy shop. It's an instant download, so you can get started right away.





Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Binding Little Brother

 

Since access to my studio will be limited while the floor is being replaced, I'm getting the Little Brother quilt ready so I can work on SOMETHING when the guys are here.

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

MOOO-ving

 

There's no way to move the bookcase with my fabric stash unless I remove the fabric. And since I already know installing the new floor will create dust, I want to keep my stash CLEAN, so I put them in the large plastic bins. Good thing I had emptied them.

Haven't seen THIS in a long time. So where is the stash?

It's in the dining room. I actually had to go to the big box hardware store and get MORE big bins.

I have given a lot of thought to where I am going to put the stuff that normally lives in the studio while work is being done. You'll see over the next few days. I've also planned menus that require minimal cooking and preparation while work is underway.

And yes, I am fully aware I have WAY TOO MUCH FABRIC. What's a gal gonna do?

MAKE MORE QUILTS!!!!


I mean like, duh!


Monday, June 29, 2026

Number 10 Crochet Cotton


Since inquiring minds want to know, I use Number 10 Crochet Cotton that's 100% cotton. I WANT this to shrink when I wash the quilt in warm water because that will tighten the knots and they will never come out or untie themselves. I also make sure I tie a good Square Knot (Left over Right; Right over Left) and I tie it TIGHTLY.

This is the same stuff your grandmother used to make those crocheted doilies. At least mine did.

This is the way my grandmother made quilts, tied, with no batting. We took them everywhere - to the beach or the lake where they were a lot more comfortable to lie on when wet than an itchy blanket. We took them to the park for picnics and to the fireworks. We used them to make forts over the dining room table on cold winter days or when we were bored. We used them to wrap my mother's paintings when carting them to one show or another. They were utilitarian in every sense of the word. We threw them in the wash when we got home. They washed like a dream.

And of course we slept under them. They are indeed, excellent in summer.

They were never considered "precious." My grandmother stopped making them in the 80's, but they have endured. Several of my relatives have since asked me if they could be repaired or fixed, as they have mostly worn out. My grandmother would be aghast to see them now, ratty and worn, given places of honor at the end of beds, on display. She would have thrown them out, and that is what I recommend. 

My relatives are horrified. 


 

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Left over Right, Right over Left...

 

I am tying the Field of Dreams quilt with crochet cotton. I use a needle with a big eye and a sharp point. I am tying the quilt at the corners and center of each block. First I do the corners, going. up and down the rows.

I have a little pair of scissors that are designed to remove stitches (in people), so the bottom edge can slide under the thread and not risk cutting the quilt underneath. I cut all the threads.

Next I tie the knots. Square knots. Left over right, right over left. I pull the threads to one side. 


When I'm done tying all the knots, I go back and grab the threads and trim them. Then I go back and do the centers of the blocks. This way I have threads long enough to grasp comfortably to tie the knows.


This is the color of the crochet cotton I'm using, and if you can't see the knots in the photos above, then that's a good thing. It means I picked the right color. I've got about three quarters of one half the quilt done. This is rough work for my hands, so I do it in smallish doses.  


When I was much younger I used to do this with the quilt spread out on the floor.

Not anymore!





This is a Nightingale quilt, in all greens. It is one of the easiest quilts you will ever make, and it is fat quarter friendly. You can get the tutorial here.






Friday, June 26, 2026

Needs Must

 

I finished sewing together the Field of Dreams flimsy. The thing is enormous. I didn't know how I was going to lay out the backing and place the top on it without moving any furniture in my house.

But I had an idea. I knew a place that was big enough, and empty enough, and had a nice clean floor. I made a call. The answer was yes.

Later, after my Tai Chi Quan class ended, I unfolded the back of the quilt, and taped it to the very slippery floor of Studio C at the YMCA in my town. With the help of the instructor and another student, we placed the quilt atop the backing and centered it.

Both the instructor and the other student couldn't get over it and kept complimenting me on how beautiful it was. They laughed as they pointed out fabrics they liked. "Look at those pretty flowers!" "Oh how cute, there are dinosaurs..." My instructor asked me how long it had taken me to make it, and were shocked when I told them less than three weeks.

They left and I got down on my hands and knees and used safety pins to secure the top to the backing at regular intervals. After about half an hour I folded it up and brought it home. I'll work on tying the two layers together over the next couple of days, then I'll fold over the excess backing and sew it down. I expect to have this in the mail early next week.

The folks at the Y were more than happy to allow me to do this between classes in that studio. Sometimes the answer to a thorny question is easy and nearby, you just have to ask.


Thursday, June 25, 2026

Field Of Dreams Grows

 

This is the top half of the Field of Dreams quilt I am making for my son and DIL.


The parts on the floor in the top photo are represented by the dark area in the diagram above. It's getting closer and I am getting excited.

Because this quilt is so wide and I decided not to use a wide quilt backing fabric, I needed to add a strip of leftover blocks down the middle of the back.

I like it. You can see I included some Dino fabrics from my DGD's quilt.

I got some green crochet cotton for tying the quilt. My goal is to have this finished and on the way to the City of Angels before work on the studio floor starts.






The Field of Dreams quilt is a Nightingale quilt, it's just green. You can make one too. It's super easy. You can get my tutorial here, at my Etsy shop. It's an instant download so you can get started right away. It's fat quarter friendly, too!



Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Bird Class at Night Owl

 I taught a bird class at the Night Owl Quilting Studio this past weekend. Here are some of the students and the birds they made.


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If you want to make birds, you can get my tutorial here, at my Etsy shop. It's an instant download so you can get started right away.