The Patchery Menagerie
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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
Friday, March 20, 2026
Pastel Macnas
I'm less than five feet tall and have to be very careful not to fall, so designing the top of this quilt on the design wall means I'd have to use a stepladder, and that isn't a very good thing for me.
I decided to sew the top part of what I have together, then I can lower it to a comfortable height on the design wall and then I can add the 2 rows above what is shown in the photo. Since my design wall is a bit too narrow for 30 2-1/2" blocks so I decided to sew the leftmost blocks together. This will allow me to shift everything over and add the extra blocks to the right.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
The Next Thing
I finished sewing the jewel-toned Macnas quilt together. Here it is draped over my ironing table. You can better see the fabrics and colors. A random arrangement of fabrics works well many times, but this regular arrangement has a rhythm that I like very much.
Instead of ironing the backing fabric that needs it, I went into the studio yesterday morning with my hot chocolate and looked around, wondering what to do next.
I've got a lot of fabric in the big scrap bins and I've been working my way through that, but working on the jewel toned Macnas quilt had me searching through my stash, and I discovered a lot of older stuff hidden in there.
WHAT IF... I wondered, I used all the small pieces of forgotten stuff in the stash?
So I put my hot chocolate down, (mind you I was still in my nightgown), and looked through the stash. I found several smallish pieces of a lot of light colors - pastels, really.
Something else jiggled in my brain, and I went over to where I have stacks of Macnas-sized blocks resting on trays. I brought them over to the worktable and sorted through them. I had A LOT of pastel fabrics I didn't even need to cut.
I could get started RIGHT AWAY.Monday, March 16, 2026
Piece by Piece
I've been sewing the blocks of the Jewel toned Macnas quilt together the old fashioned way. In the photo above all the blocks are sewn together into rows and except for the bottom two, the rows are sewn together in pairs, so all, (you know, that pesky "all") I have to do is sew those together and the flimsy will be complete. This one may or may not have a home yet. I haven't quite decided.
This is the backing fabric I have chosen for the Yellow Macnas quilt,
and this is the one I have chosen for my nephew's quilt, Dancing Jewels. Both are quilt backings, so quite large pieces. I have to iron them and get them organized. This past weekend my local art museum, The Currier Museum, had a show where garden groups from throughout the state were invited to do floral arrangements based on artwork in the museum. This is one of my favorite pieces in the museum, and you can see the floral arrangement beside it. I am always interested in how artists get inspired, so this was a great show to see. I was fortunate enough to be there when the floral designers themselves were available to discuss their thought processes that led to their creations.
Sunday, March 15, 2026
Decisions, Decisions
I shifted some of the blues, all three of the reds and two of the purples. I was happy with this.Then I tried to zig zag the design, but I got to this point and decided it didn't bring anything at all to the party, so I put the blocks back.
Friday, March 13, 2026
More More More
As you can see I've been making blocks and adding them to the design wall.
There is one teeny tiny problem.
The design wall is just a bit too narrow for all the blocks to fit. You can see some of them hanging off the edge in the photo above. (They are at the far right.)
The bookcase that stores my fabric stash is right next to my design wall, but the bookcase leans forward a bit, and there is a space behind it. You can see it in the photo above - it's the dark area above and below the watermark in the photo. In theory this is not a problem, but I have had some blocks fall off the wall and slip BEHIND the bookcase, which is the equivalent of disappearing into the Pit Of Doom. Since I have a finite number of blocks and have used up every last inch of some of the fabrics, I could not afford to lose even a single block, so rather than work from the center to the right, and risk losing blocks into the POD, I went back to the far left of the quilt and worked from the left edge to the middle. Once the blocks pairs are sewn up, there will be space on the wall for the pieces to adhere and not hang off into space and be at risk of falling into the POD.





































