Saturday, February 20, 2021

Reality Bites

 It 's easy to think you've got it all figured out. Then Reality Bites.

I really like the ruler at the bottom of my cutting table, but then, the other night, as I was actually doing some cutting, I realized that I had to stop my blade from running over the ruler. If I did, I would almost certainly dull my blade, but also cut through the ruler. Um. Not good. The benefit of the ruler did not outweigh the risk of cutting through it.  Oops. I will have to figure something else out.

The day after I attached my original 24" x 48" mat to my sewing table I noticed this. That brown edge. It's the top of the table, and it looks terrible. I should probably have painted the piece of MDF that sits on the worktable (to reduce the vibration of the sewing machine when it is running), but I didn't have any paint, and I was overeager. I do not like the way this looks. I am going to try to remove the cutting mat. The adhesive on the tape may bring up some of the tabletop with it, so I have two choices. One: do it now before the adhesive really bonds and can never come up, or wait until I get some paint and then, if needed, use the reverse of the MDF. Or 3, I suppose, buy a new piece of MDF and paint that and when it's ready, remove the mat from the MDF and use the new piece. Option 4, of course, is to live with it. Number 4 is looking pretty good right about now.

When I wrote about eQuilter the other night, I kinda figured they'd hear about it eventually, but never in my wildest expectations did I expect to receive an email from Luana Rubin herself thanking me for my "very kind post!" Luana and her husband Paul, own eQuilter. Apparently I should thank Paul for all the technology that makes shopping at eQuilter such a pleasure.

I've been experimenting with those darned long rectangles. I thought I had the size worked out, so I found some fugly fabric and cut them into rectangles, sliced them with curves and sewed them up, trimmed them and then threw them up on the design wall. It looked good, but...

If I wanted a long rectangle version of Waltzing Matilda, and I cut only one curve, then I was going to have to make RIGHT and LEFT blocks. Hmm. I'd have to think about that.

Then I wondered WHAT IF I made the blocks square because two of them together would give me the long rectangle shape I was looking for, and since I would make a curve on only one corner, I could arrange the blocks in any orientation...

This isn't quite what I had in mind, and there certainly isn't anything wrong with this. I will make more blocks (these are from leftover fabrics I've used as backings of quilts) to play with to figure it out.

THIS is the kind of place I told you about. A place were YOUR ORIGINAL IDEA and SOMETHING ELSE collide. I have to decide if I want to try to continue to pursue the long rectangle idea, or shift gears. Many quilters doggedly stick to their original idea even if it isn't working. I'm not convinced my original idea is a failure just yet, and besides, there's nothing wrong with pursuing THIS idea, seeing where it goes and then going BACK to the original idea later. It may be another quilt entirely.

Either way, it's no loss to me.


3 comments:

Kathy said...

Not being able to read your mind or your imagination, I can only suggest a guess...would cutting rectangles two or more at a time, with right sides together give you the shapes you need? You would automatically be getting the reverse set of any curve as you go. Following your experiments eagerly because I love the idea of the rectangles!

JustGail said...

I decided the live with it option was best when I ended up with the printed side of the insulation board facing the flannel after all the swapping and flipping happened while making my design boards. If they ever need to be re-done, I'll fix it then. It's a good reason to keep a quilt in progress and put up there, so I don't see the ooops.

If you don't use the ruler for cutting fabric, I don't see the issue if it gets a few cuts, other than dulling the rotary cutter blade is bad. Or is my memory wrong that this ruler is used only for a reference and not for making accurate cuts?

QuiltGranma said...

Interesting, play and have fun with this!