Celebration

WooHoo! This one’s done!

People often ask, “how long does it take to make a quilt?”  There’s usually no way to answer that…but this one was 20 years in the making.  I pieced the blocks long ago, pulled them out in February and presented the quilt as a gift early in May.

I learned a lot about quilting at the turn of the century watching the then HGTV series, Simply Quilts.  On that show, a line of fabric designed by Susan Branch was featured with this pieced combination of Lemoyne Stars and half-Lemoyne stars.  I was entranced.  Entranced by Susan Branch’s art work, by the fabric, by the star pattern.

I bought the line of fabric in fat quarters, downloaded the show’s pattern, and began piecing stars by hand.  They were lovely.  I enjoyed many hours of piecing the stars while visiting with family and friends.  

Then they sat in a box for years.  Many years.  I had memories of laying out the blocks on the design wall, labeling their position in a spreadsheet array, and putting them aside.  I thought it was a failed project because the white background fabric was so thin that it wouldn’t work to assemble them.

I opened the box earlier this year to learn that I was wrong.  I had put them away because the solid white blocks were the wrong size to connect with the stars.  Whether I read the directions incorrectly, pieced incorrectly, or whether there was an error in the instructions, I don’t know.  Fortunately the solid blocks were too big, not too small.  All the stars were consistently the same size, so I just trimmed the solid blocks to fit and stitched them together.  They went together perfectly.  Well, there are a few less than perfect points…but let’s chalk that up to an inexperienced piecer stitching them by hand.

Twenty years of experience gave me the knowledge I needed to make the blocks work.

Here are the blocks on the design wall in February. The box on the apron of the sewing machine is where they lived for years.

As I thought about a quilting design, the obvious was to quilt feathered wreaths in the open spaces.  That seemed too pretentious to me for these fun fabrics.  I wanted a curvy design to contrast with the pointy stars.  So I stitched an overall vine in green thread, then echoed it in a fine white thread.  I like the result.

Here you see I marked a suggested path for the vines with a wax pencil (removable with a hot iron). You also see that I do not feel compelled to follow those lines very carefully.

I called this one Celebration.  It was given to a family member who had reason to celebrate…but I was celebrating the completion of a big UFO!  I considered calling it WooHoo, but went with the more discreet name.

This full view was taken with a drone…a great way to photograph a quilt without a sleeve.

The quilt measures 80” square.  I’m pleased with the green vines on back and front, echoed with a finer thread in white.  The green is a 30wt cotton thread.  The white is a 100 wt silk.

I loved that this outdoor image captured the shadow of real leaves on my quilted leaves.

The on-location photos were taken at a rescued country store, Mildred’s, in Houston County.