Before
After:
Yup, It's hidden. I told you.
Before
After:
Yup, It's hidden. I told you.I was going to name the White Nightingale quilt "Mourning Dove" but I was talking to my friend Susan and she said the quilt was way too happy and cheerful. "It's a party," she said. "It's a party animal."
I liked that idea, so the quilt is now named Party Animal.

What can I say? I love containers of all kinds. Boxes, jars, bins. I'm a sucker for that stuff. Since I make my own salad dressings, and often things like barbecue sauce, chili crisp and the like, I keep jars. I keep them in the bottom part of my dry sink. Lately though, I don't have any room for more. I remembered reading something from Martha Stewart some time ago. She said you don't need to keep saving jars.
And I thought, well, I should go through mine to get rid of some. Then I thought I had better get them all out to see just how many I had. The photo above doesn't even show all of them. I found two small bins filled with jars.
Turns our WAY TOO MANY! I'd like to say I was surprised, but when I thought about it, I wasn't. I reuse some sizes more often than others.
As I get older I have had to change the way I do things. While I have no problem hand sewing, when I hold something in my lap, I can't quite see what I am doing, so now I use a card table. One benefit is the quilt isn't on my lap and the pins don't get caught on things like my couch or clothes.The biggest benefit is the quilt is closer so I can see it, and the table keeps it flat. I can put a light directly on the quilt so it's easy to see while I stitch.
I finally got beauty shots of a few quilts and here they are. This is Needle in a Haystack, so named because I hid a purple triangle in the quilt.This is the Blue Ribbon quilt.
The White Nightingale quilt is now a flimsy. Here it is on my front porch. It's really pretty and cheerful.
There is a tutorial for the quilt here, on my Etsy shop. I've said it before, it's one of the easiest quilts you will ever make.
You can also see one of Chuck Hayes's flower sculptures. I got mine from Cherie last year. Her father makes sculptures using leftover scrap metal. You can read more about him here.
I've been putting the blocks together for the White Nightingale quilt. I haven't quite determined the final layout, but I'm close. I figured I use fabrics from my stash for the backing. I had some very specific fabrics in mind.
I always tell my students never to buy fabric they fall in love with UNLESS they have a specific plan for it.After I made all the components I sewed the first batch of blocks together and threw them up on the design wall. It looks about like I thought it would. After another power sewing session I had enough blocks to cover the design wall. Again, these are not rearranged in any way.
I'm glad I made the Rainbow Crush quilt smaller. It would have been unusable that large.This was the 3x3 version, and while I could have sewn that up, I'm glad I didn't. This was simply okay to me.
I drove out to Janet-Lee's and picked up Blitzen, the Christmas Macnas quilt, and Nonchalant, the white one, which had been quilted. They are quite glorious.What I like about the Blitzen quilt is that it's a Christmas quilt, but it doesn't hit you over the head with the idea of it being Christmas. And for me, Christmas colors are red, green, gold and white, which is why those are the only colors I used in the quilt.
After I cut the strips for the White Nightingale quilt, I matched them into pairs and in a session of what my pal Julie calls "power sewing" I sewed all the pairs together, then I pressed the seams open.Then I subcut the strips into smaller chunks.