Saturday, 25 August 2018

No rest for the knitted...

...or for those who have a huge queue of knitting projects to do.

RBTL is finished but I'm straight on to the next project.


This is another which has been a WIP for a good while. But it is quick to knit, even if it's taken me a little while to get used to the aran yarn.


The square is from this book. I'm not knitting every square in the book. The eventual Afghan is for my mum and she has chosen 10 designs she likes, we've split them between us and we're going to knit each one in three shades of blue.


They are knitted in Aran from New Lanark Wool. The colour is beautiful, the dark blue has threads of lots of other colours in it, almost jewel like.

My plan is to alternate each square with other small knitting projects, such as a single sock, to stop it becoming another epic knit.

Thursday, 23 August 2018

Ely Cathedral

Whilst at Festival of Quilts I saw a couple of beautiful quilts which reminded me I'd forgotten to share the pictures from a recent (ish) visit to Ely Cathedral.

First the quilts:


Memorial, Ely Cathedral - Magenta Kang

Ely Cathedral - Magenta Kang

I've only just realised they were made by the same person. Interesting concept making two quilts on the same subject, guess you could do similar with different colourways of the same quilt design...my brain is whirring!

Anyway back to the photos. We visited Ely in May right at the start of the amazing hot and sunny spell we've recently enjoyed.  I didn't know what to expect but the cathedral was beautiful...





Definitely worth a visit if you're ever in the area.

Sunday, 19 August 2018

RBTL - the finished article

Almost seven months after starting, and having fixed a small dropped stich hole, my RBTL is finished.


The picture doesn't show it too well but it is huge.

It's taken a fair few stitch markers...


And many rows were recorded...


But it's all been worth it as it is beautiful...


Now all I have to do is figure out how to wear it and find something else crafty to fill the gap left in my life (who am I kidding I have a list of things which need doing).

The Read Between the Lines pattern by Tammy Canavan-Soldaat can be found on Ravelry.

Saturday, 18 August 2018

FNSI August...the results

As often happens I went slightly off plan this FNSI, but the lure of finishing the last four rows of my RBTL knitted shawl first of all was too great.


No photos of the finished article yet as I've still got ends to sew in, a hole to fix (!), and I would like to figure out how to wear it (although that may take a while).

Then I got on with unsewing the naughty corner baby quilt.

When I quilted it a few weeks ago this was the result...


Possibly a bit hard to see but puckers and pleats everywhere. I can live with the odd one but this is a mess and it's a gift so I've unpicked the quilting, will re-baste it more securely and then quilt again. I might be able to do some of this on Sunday when I'm supposed to be making curtains.

Now im off to see what everyone else has been up to.

Thursday, 16 August 2018

Friday Night Sew In - August Sign Up

It's the third Friday of the month tomorrow which means...

... Friday Night Sew In...

...the virtual sewing group where participants from round the world spend their Friday night sewing or other crafting and then share what they've made with the group via their blogs.

If you want to join in all you have to do is sign up with Wendy of Sugarlane Designs HERE.

I haven't joined in in a long while, so if nothing else comes up I will be quilting the baby quilt and probably making some more blocks for the Sparkle Punch Quilt. 

The 1718 Coverlet

You may, or more probably may not, be aware that the Quilters' Guild in the UK have a patchwork coverlet from 1718 in their collection. Due to age and fragility it isn't displayed very often. I first became aware of it when it wasn't displayed in the American Museum in Bath ( cold weather = burst pipes = flooded display area), although I do think it was eventually displayed. As a side note it took me more than four years and a move away from Bath before I found out the American Museum had a quilt display (still haven't visited).

Anyway, where was I?

The coverlet was billed as one of the exhibits at the Festival of Quilts.


To protect it it was laid down and under perspex. Amazing that this was hand sewn in 1718 from scraps of silk.


The guild have done conservation and a lot of research into who made it and how. They've even had an attempt at reading the papers which are still in the quilt blocks. There's a piece of original linen on the back so these aren't easily accessible.

To give an idea of what it may have looked like originally the guild have made a copy...

Made in 2004 by members of the Quilters Guild

And as a bonus, if any were needed, they also had some patchwork seat covers from the 1700s on display.


We didn't have a show guide so we thought that was all for the 1718 Coverlet.

We were wrong.

The 1718 Coverlet 300 Years On - Susan Gilby

There was the 1718 Challenge category for quilts that either fully or partly reproduce the quilt, using the quilters own style while keeping the spirit of the original.

Interpreting 1718 - Helen Ginns

There was a surprising number on display, which is obviously not reflected in the number of photos I took! The amount of work that must have gone into each one is amazing.


Monday, 13 August 2018

Festival of Quilts 2018

It's that time of year again...to travel up to Birmingham, to be amazed how big the NEC is, to be awed by other people's quilting skills, to buy fabric that will sit waiting for years...yes this weekend was the Festival of Quilts.

Just a one day visit, but plenty of time to spend at the NEC due to an early train and stopping overnight in the city. No classes or lectures booked so a hope of being able to see everything (not achieved) and a shopping list to avoid impulse buys (emphatically not achieved, however, in my defence, some of the things I bought should have been on the list as I had been looking for them).

Anyway enough waffle on with a tiny selection of the quilts (in no particular order)...

My Favourite Things - Katy Whitby Last
Overall Winner

Lost in Translation II - Mary Palmer

La Flor y Nata del Patchwork - Retorno Al Paraìso

A panel from Ladies in Stitches - Mere Men

Toni's Love For The Doctor - Jennifer Strongman

A Medley So Strange - Pascal Michalski

What A Relief - Brenda McDonnell

Casino Vernier - Phillipa Tait

Twinkle Twinkle Little Star - Roz Rossitter

Close up of A Labour of Love! - Jenny Otto and Frances Meredith

I See You - Elita Sharpe

DE AQUI...EL CIELO - Carmen Santamaria

And last but not least the obligatory shot of my shopping...


We had a really good time as always and looking forward to going again in a year or two.

Monday, 6 August 2018

Ultimate long term project

It's probably evident that I take a fair while to finish projects. The RBTL is in its 7th month (although hopefully I'll have some news about that soon), Sparkle Punch quilt and the Mystery Blanket were started in 2012, as yet my cross stitch projects haven't surfaced (usually a sister adopts them).  But there is one project that has outlasted them all.


This is the result of 31 years of French knitting, with significant input from my sister's, but I do the odd bit too now and again and I try and keep the yarn supply going.

I was given the cotton reel and my first yarn leftover when I was six, and due to deciding it should be a rug, it's still going. Every now and again there's nervous and optimistic talk about how it becomes a rug but so far no more than that. 

At this rate this project is going to become an heirloom without being finished!

Thursday, 2 August 2018

A Crafter's Holiday

We've just returned from a few days in Fife, visiting my sister and mum. Unusually for me I haven't taken any scenic photos. 

My sister, being a true crafter, decided that during our trip to the nearby coastal towns of Crail and Anstruther (both worth visiting if you're in the area) we should go to Pittenween and visit her favourite yarn shop. (Luckily for those in the group not interested in knitting Pittenween is another cute fishing village).


The Woolly Brew was not the largest yarn shop but really well stocked. I got somewhat distracted by the sock yarn but I did notice a good selection of patterns, a wall full of yarn other than 4 ply sock, gifts for knitters and knitting tools. What I really liked was how there was a pattern available, often through Ravelry, for every item on display.

On hearing about the shop I decided I would just look as I have plenty of yarn...

...

...

...of course once I got there I totally changed my mind.


It started off with the bottle of Eucalan, as I'd been looking for some anyway. Then before I knew it I had the two skeins of Socks Yeah, which I had seen on the internet and thought I would buy some someday. And then there was a lovely scarf which we all admired and suddenly the Zauberball became an essential. Lovely shopping trip though and beautiful yarn. Hopefully I'll get chance to visit again.


I thought that'd be the end of my crafty purchases but no, in St Andrews a compendium of quilt blocks called to me.

And the in the beer shop (another interest not often mentioned on this blog), I spotted this...


...and just couldn't resist!