Saturday, February 21, 2026
trees, not hearts
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
wip wednesday 2026.7
i think i failed to mention in my last post that this blog is now fifteen years old. that means i've been quilting nearly a third of my life, which feels so strange since i took it up in my later 30's, well into adulthood. in the end, i will have been a quilter longer than i wasn't one. i didn't see that coming.
what have i accomplished in 15 years of quilting? take a look at my "quilt gallery" page to see what i've completed and my "wips" page to see what i'm still working on. the ratio is about 2:1. it’s not just about the finishes or the endless WIPs it’s been about a whole lot of fun and learning and fabric and friends mixed in with a lot of mistakes and miscuts and frustrations. quilting has taught me a lot, given me a lot these past 15 years.
the opening photo is of a project nearly as old as this blog: my "london wardrobe" epp project. i began these hexagon-and-square-and-triangle wheels in 2013, planning to make 100 of them. currently, i have 22 full wheels, 2 sets of 3 interlocking wheels, and one middle piece complete. there are about a dozen hexagons and an innumerable amount of triangles and squares basted and even more cut, ready to baste. i have large cuts of a few feature fabrics for the backing and of the low-volumes for background for the front.
i took the project back out a few months ago to assess what can be done with it. i no longer have an interest in completing 100 wheels. i'm trying to figure out what i can do with the wheels i have complete instead. the answer to that question is not simple because of the state all the pieces are in. i wish i had it in me to keep at this project and see it through, but even a shortcut version is going to a lot of work at this point.
i'm still undecided on a layout. putting the wheels in rows will require making a lot of middle/half wheel/connecting pieces. making more interconnecting cogs for one big slab will require more work than i even want to think about. there's no quick fix way out of this mess.
what am i to do?
maybe i just set it aside until such a point in my life as i have the motivation and time to keep making it into something like i originally planned?
the only reason i'm even thinking about it is i'm a little "tired of pink" at the moment and needed a distraction.
as i was leaving the room last night, i noticed this bit of silliness above. i put the same star points on two consecutive pieces. the set on the right is supposed to be bird points, like the cornerstone block under it. that's going to be some work for me. upicking coming right up!
Monday, February 16, 2026
crew update 2026
| size of my people in 2012 |
my family has always been a big part of my sewing life. i've included my children in my creative pursuits as much as possible, hoping to inspire their own creative journeys. when this blog started, there were six, and number seven showed up soon after. that was 15 years ago! my littles are all mostly full grown now. the babies around here these days are my grandchildren, which currently number three. i've updated this page every few years; to watch them grow visit the older posts (2012, 2014, 2021). let's see where they are in 2026.
Wednesday, February 11, 2026
still stinky pinky (ww2026.6)
with the top row complete, i started working on the horizontal sashing pieces next. they needed the side star points added first. i got reacquainted with how to get the directional prints on the way i wanted them to be oriented, then added the 16-patch blocks.
i'm still making bonus mini hsts out of the little corner cut-offs. i'm still unsure what i'm doing with them, but i'm not wasting them! if i don't add them to the back of the quilt somewhere, i'll either make a feature patch out of them for a hazel-style improv quilt or make a small bean bag for the grans to play with. either way, i'm making them and putting them aside as i go.
i had an early walk with my seester, katee, who lives in the neighborhood, so the house was really quiet when i got home. i didn't want to do anything noisy (dishes) and didn't feel like starting house design work just yet, so i decided to put a few pieces together. once i had these two done, i decided to work on the rest of the row.
i'm having a little trouble with the V at the intersection of the star points, and i don't know why. this one turned out pretty well, but it's also puffy. i just don't know what i'm doing wrong, but i'm keeping at it and not worrying about little things like this too much.
there were some other problems with lining up of seams when i added the vertical sashings to the 16-patches that i did unpick and re-do. those were too glaringly off and did not align with my intergrity-but-not-perfectionist mentality, so i fixed them.
by the time the rest of the household was up and moving, i had the sashings complete and the first two rows of 16-patches attached together. it felt really good! the only "stinky" i had in that whole process was one set of misaligned seams i redid and my thread was being tricky. but overall, it was smooth sailing.
things just got stinkier from there: i put the wrong star points on a sashing set, i nicked the center of a star with my snips when cutting a stray thread, i had one sashing set cut too long and didn't realize it until after i put the points on, which then had to be redone also, and i had another block not line up with the 16-patches with had to be unpicked and corrected.
i took deep breaths, kept calm and carried on: never give up, never surrender, keep making that quilt.
on sunday, i was on the phone with d3, who is out of state at university currently, for 3.5 hours, and part of that time i worked on "pinky stinky" to keep my hands busy while we chatted. i got row three assembled and row four's star points added to the pieces and some of it attached, but i'm waiting for d5 to finish the 16 patches before i can progress any further. she wants me to take her shopping, but i think she's going to have to do a few blocks for me first.
(the photo looks confusing because row three is layered over row two so i could fit more on the board, and that's hard to see in the photo.)
Saturday, February 7, 2026
tip: directional prints on flip-and-stitch corners
there are lots of times when i want a directional print to be facing a certain direction when i'm making quilt blocks or components: hsts, flying geese, chevron blocks, economy block corners, snowball corners, diamond block corners (like wensleydale), and more. in the star cornerstones for "pinky stinky edna" i want the pieces in the star points to be going the same direction as the center block. this is completely personal preference in this case, but it's an effect i'm aiming for.
these corner triangles are made with the flip-and-stitch method where a smaller square is placed right sides together on the corner of the base, a diagonal seam is sewn to create a corner triangle, the excess of both fabrics is cut off 1/4" away from the seam, the new corner is flipped out to replace the part cut off, right side up, and is then pressed into place.
so how do i get the print going the same direction from each side of the star?
this is the square of the strawberry print i want to add to the bottom left corner of this two-strip sashing piece. the piece is vertical and i want the strawberries to run in the direction shown in the photo.
first, i identify the direction the piece should be facing and then the part i want to show in the corner. for this one, the part i want showing is turned in the bottom left as shown above.
if i fold the top right of the square under the bottom left corner, i can see how the shape will appear once sewn together, flipped down, and pressed into place. the bottom left corner my finger is on is the part i'll use to orient myself when putting the right sides of fabrics together for sewing the seam.
when i turn the square over so right sides of fabrics are together, i want that bottom left corner to now be in the upper right corner. that same corner that was under my finger in the upper photo is now where my finger is pointing in this photo. no matter the orientation of the corner, the thing to remember is:
the corner of the square that you want to be the finished corner piece of the triangle needs to be placed in the diagonally opposite corner when you have the square flipped for right sides together.
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
wip wednesday 2026.5
i've been eyeballs-deep in house design this week, but i took a break one afternoon to put "pinky stinky" edna up on the design wall to get a feel for where we are and to make assemble easy when i get a chance to stitch some. the available wall space could only fit 4 of 6 rows, the first of which is already assembled but needs a block moved. i was surprised we have enough 16 patch blocks for those rows. there is still a fat stack of 16 patch blocks to be completed, so i didn't think we'd gotten this far along. after seeing everything on the wall, i went over the remaining blocks sets and discovered i have far more than is needed to complete the quilt.
so the good news is d5 only needs to assemble 10 more blocks before i can complete the top. there are an additional 12 sets, which means she can make a small quilt of some sort incorporating them whenever she wants. that resolves our debate about what to name this project. i call it "pinky stinky" edna because i had dozens of problems when starting the quilt (almost all user error, not the pattern). it's pink and it was being stinky: pinky stinky. but d5 likes to call it "tired of pink," a comment i once made after several days of working on nothing but this quilt and i was craving some other colors. she thought that was really funny and a good name for the quilt. but i'm not tired of pink now and i don't think it's a very complimentary name, so i disagree. if she makes her own quilt with the extra blocks, she can call it "tired of pink" and i can call this edna "pinky stinky," which also doesn't necessarily sound complimentary but it's a term of affection used in our household when our girls were little and were being silly or sassy.
i did the handquilting for two more of the interior blocks on "groovy liberty," bringing the total up to 6/42 complete. i'd like to stitch in the sashing, as well, but haven't decided on a color yet. i think something besides white would work better with the creamy/grey grunge fabric, but i haven't decided what yet.
i bought nothing quilt related nor cleaned anything in my sewing room this week, so that sums up my report. i might have some time to get those "samiches" quilted soon, but i'm also hot on the house design front at the moment and might keep focused there.
Monday, February 2, 2026
some backs in detail
this older alexander henry print (circa 2010) of mod flowers in warm, deep pastels is a major fabric crush of mine. once i used it for an apron. scraps of it appeared in the original hst block for my gypsy wife quilt and subsequently in the gypsy child hst quilt. a few years ago when i was going at the hst quilt full throttle, i looked to see if i could find yardage of the print for the backing. i got lucky and found an etsy seller who had used it in her custom-order business for household goods and still had some on hand. it's been patiently waiting on my fabric shelves ever since. getting it out and spreading it down the hall to let the folding wrinkles relax a little before i pressed it made me so happy.
when i'm preparing to use large pieces of yardage, usually for a backing, i tend to spread them out to full length while i'm working my way up to them. this particular weekend i was hoping to back a couple of quilts, so there were several pieces laying about in the afternoon sun as i worked.
although the hst top was the first completed of the grouping, it ended up being the last one i basted together. it was well past midnight by the time i got it done, but i pushed through and saw it to completion. i knew i wouldn't have another chance for a while to do this and had no where to store all the big pieces, so it felt necessary.Saturday, January 31, 2026
seester stitching
d1 came over to finally machine attach her binding in preparation for handbinding it. i was helping with babies in the other room when i walked back in to check on her and found d5 seated on the floor next to oldest seester, conversing. my mama heart loved this little scene.



















