Prayers and Squares

I made lots of new friends at our recent guild quilt show.  Two of them, Flo and Jan, invited me to visit their Prayers and Squares group at one of their meetings.  I went this past Sunday and was touched by the love they are stitching together.

Angela and Linda are tying a nautical-themed quilt.

I had heard of Prayers and Squares before; I have a friend who is a cancer survivor.  Faye had received a loving gift of a quilt from a group during her time of healing.  I didn’t realize there was an international organization involved.

Jan is the machine stitcher today.

Prayers & Squares is an interfaith outreach organization that combines the gift of prayer with the gift of a hand-tied quilt.  That statement is from their website, here.  Begun in 1992 in California, their website now lists thousands of chapters worldwide.  I visited with the one at Hopewell United Methodist Church near Milledgeville, chapter #1241.

Grace says she doesn’t always color coordinate her wardrobe to the quilt she’s working on…but I couldn’t help but notice that she did that today.

This group of eleven women meets monthly.  On the day I visited, they were celebrating their fifth anniversary as a Prayers and Squares chapter, and they were putting finishing touches on their quilt #170.

The emphasis on these lap-sized quilts is simplicity. Members take donated fabrics and coordinate them with a theme or motif appropriate for the recipient.

The emphasis is on the prayers, not the squares.   Each of the quilts is tied, not stitched, to secure the layers of love.  “Each knot represents a prayer.”  

Jeanene works to get all the layers smooth before final stitching is done around the edge.

Not all of the members are quilters outside of this group.  Flo, who learned of the organization and started this chapter, says that some people said, “I’d like to help, but I don’t know how to sew.”  Her reply was, “can you pin, can you cut, can you tie a knot?”  All skills are welcomed.

Becki and Ginny are pinning quilts, backs, and batting together in preparation for machine closure. Becki’s recent sewing project at home was a granddaughter’s prom dress.

Especially welcomed in this group was the talent for organization possessed by Patty.  A retired helicopter pilot, Patty used her military-like precision to ensure efficient work habits.  Every quilt has a design sheet specifying each step of the project. Projects are carefully labeled with what’s to be done next.  Zippered bags hold projects at every stage of development – so when the group meets to work, each person just picks up a packet and proceeds to the next step.  Patty has since moved away, but her presence is felt with every quilt this group makes.

The bin holding projects at every stage of work to be completed…members had already pulled bags and gotten to work by the time I took this photo.
This is a quilt made by Patty in recognition of this chapter of Prayers and Squares. Charter members’ names are embroidered on the bindings of the books. The fabrics used for the books are left over from quilts the group had made and presented to people who requested prayers. The fabrics are in the order of the quilts made using them.
Embroidery on the back of Patty’s quilt pictured above.

I wrote earlier about a quilt I made for a friend, Every Stitch a Prayer.  That experience ties me to these women who meet to sew and pray for someone in need every month.

Flo with the latest prayerful quilt ready for the recipient.
A closeup of the tag that goes on every quilt. On the back are instructions for laundering the quilt.

If you want to know more about this organization, perhaps joining a chapter near you, or even starting another group, check out the website at prayerquilt.org.

Annie Mae’s Lace in the Garden

I love Queen Anne’s Lace.  Every year I get excited to see it emerging in our yard.  I’m always intrigued to see where it decides to show up.

I scatter some seeds and sometimes they actually germinate and I have blooms where I intended.  But there are many more along the edges of the flower beds, in the cracks in the driveway and between brick pavers. 

This year, there are more clumps than ever, and several of those are growing along the picket fence in the back.

I decided to pose the quilt Annie Mae’s Lace with this year’s blooms.  It was a dreary day yesterday, but I snapped a few photos anyway.

I wrote about Annie Mae’s Lace back in 2016. I was only posting one photo per blogpost back then, but the details of the making of the quilt are fully explained. Click here to read that post.

I’ve written about Queen Anne’s Lace before – a story about it during quarantine is here.

Another quilt with a sunprinted image of Queen Anne’s Lace is GBI Blues. That quilt and its story is here.

More sunprinted images (including some Queen Anne’s Lace) are assembled on my design wall right now. And, there are more in a box waiting to become something…

Iron Water

Remember the really pretty tatting I dipped in the walnut dye?  I wanted it darker, began doing some research and learned about iron water.  We have plenty of rusty nails around here, so soaking them in a jar with vinegar and water was not a complicated process.

I had attempted some rust dyeing in the past with less than spectacular results.  But I hadn’t mixed iron water with the walnut dyed fabric.

Below are images from baths in the iron water only, and some things dyed in walnut dye, then iron water.

Before: this is a bit of linen sheet and some old tatting previously dyed in indigo, some old tatting not yet dyed.
After: those same pieces after a bath in iron water only…no walnut on these pieces.
It’s always a delight to see how different threads take the dye differently. The monogram on this linen towel is stitched with cotton thread. The linen towel was only in the walnut dye, the tatting was in walnut dye, then iron water.
Here are the two sides of a bit of a damask tablecloth. These were soaked in the walnut dye a few days, then dipped in the iron water.
This linen towel shows how powerful the iron water is combined with walnut. This whole piece was not in the iron bath, just the walnut…but the residue on my gloves made these splotches. I find the spots interesting, not offensive.
The top doily here was dyed with walnuts, then composted. It was unintentional composting…as I was rinsing these new pieces, I discovered the doily in the leaves – left there from the earlier walnut dyeing day.

I am very pleased with the results of this combo…soaking in the walnut dye, then dipping in the iron water.  Lesson learned:  make more iron water.  I had experimented with a small quantity, so only small pieces resulted from this trial.  But more, more, more, to come….

This is the featured photo on the website, but for those who just read the email version, you would miss this….I always think I need to mix browns with blue, you know….but maybe some with green, too.

The recent blog post on walnut dyeing is here…if you missed it or want to refresh your memory on the before and after images from only a walnut bath.