Thursday, December 31, 2020
2020 Wrap Up
This year, my goals through the year were:
1. Finish these quilts:
DONE a. Snowball Blossom, started January 2018
Fail b. Find backing for Baby Bow Tie, started June 2011
Worked on c. Second Saturday Sampler, started January 2005
DONE d. Celebrate Freedom, started February 2020
DONE e. Barnyard quilt, started February 2020
Worked on f. Finish Scottish Sun began 2004
Worked on g. Start/Continue Lovers Knot as RSC BOM
Worked on h. Finish Pond lily as RSC BOM
Fail i. Start Sunbonnet Sue and Overall Sam as BOM
DONE j. Make at least two donation quilts.
2. Finish these sewing projects:
DONE a. Upcycle sweater
Fail b. Make receiving blanket
DONE c. Make 25 face masks
3. Accomplish these in the sewing room:
Fail a. Find time for daily sewing at least 70% of the time
Fail b. Decrease stash by 15%
Fail c. Organize sewing space
Fail d. Join a daytime quilt guild (I'll blame Covid for this fail.)
Fail e. Learn to paint fabric
DONE f. Cover foam panels and make new design wall
DONE g. Finish wall behind design wall
8 out of 20 projects completed gives me a 40% success rate. If I look on it as 12 out of 20 projects completed or moved forward, I have a 60% success rate. In a year where four months of the year were impossible, I'll take it.
This year I will continue to work on some of those projects, but there is at least one that I disliked doing so much that I may toss the whole thing, or stop where I am and make a mini out of it. Life is too short to work on projects I don't enjoy.
I haven't given much thought to non-quilting projects for 2021, but I would like to sew some clothing, and I would like to have carpet in my sewing area. Currently, Hubby is working on his side of the room, so all the excess is still on my side. But that is the carrot I would like to dangle in front of myself.
What are your plans for the coming year?
Monday, December 28, 2020
Last Goal of 2020 Finished
Goals 7 and 10 for 2020 were to finish the drywall behind my design wall and to cover insulated foam panels and attach them to the wall. Instead of covering a 4x8 piece of insulation, I decided to use the smaller 12x48-ish pieces. I can move them around depending on the size of the quilt I am making, or take some off depending on the size of the wall hanging over it.
Since my sewing space is multi-functional, I have a curtain rod hanging over it with clip hooks so I can hang a quilt to cover everything.
This is a Bow Tie quilt made by my great grandmother. Looking at it, I don't think she had a design wall to lay it out on before sewing the blocks together. But I still love it.
Linking to:
Design Wall Monday at Small Quilts and Doll Quilts
Sunday, December 27, 2020
Sewing Report for Week 52 of 2020
I didn't have a productive sewing week, but it was a good week. We drove to Amarillo on Christmas Eve and the usual Christmas traffic was almost non-existant. We got there in time for me to spend the visitation hour with Mom and she was doing well. She had really hoped if she worked hard, she would get out in time for Christmas, but the staff there disagreed. She has at least another week of therapy before they will determine IF she gets to go home. We drove home after the noon visitation hour and again the traffic was light, until we got near Fort Worth. I think we came through Fort Worth, I was dozing a bit.
I want to thank everyone for their concern and prayer for Mom. The therapy has helped her right side immensely. Her overall strength is improving too, but I'm concerned she won't continue with the exercises once she is home. Right now, she won't even consider going to an assisted living facility; so if they determine that she go home and live alone, she will put up a fight. The local hospital, who examined Mom immediately and did an MRI, said mom had a stroke. The Amarillo hospital, who examined her hours later, said they couldn't tell if she had one. But if she did, it was a TIA (mini stroke) and the clot was either small or disintegrated by the time they tested. Studies show that a third of the people who have a TIA have a severe stroke within a year. For that reason, I'd like Mom to be in an assisted living center where they can get her to the emergency room quickly. So the fight is on.
This week in stitching, I only stitched a few days before going to Amarillo. I hope to get back on track today, not that it will help my success rate any at this late date.
Linking to:
15 Minutes to Stitch at Life in Pieces
Saturday, December 26, 2020
PhD in 2021 aka Projects Half Done
Here is my list of quilts I want to complete this year:
I'm not sure what order I will work on them, certainly not alphabetical. I'll probably start with those that are nearest a finish and build momentum like a debt snowball. My quilts and what needs to be done. Yes, they are all wrinkled. I still haven't found my iron.
1. Night Sky. It just needs to be quilted. I could send it out, but I don't really like this quilt so I think it would be a good practice quilt for touch quilting.
3. Dark Star. This one also needs to be quilted. Since it was hand pieced, I am going to hand quilt it too.
4. Depression Blocks. This needs borders backing, and binding. Then I will send it out.
5. Jacob's Ladder. This needs backing and binding. I will send this one out first. It looks like a good one to try out a new quilter.
7. Christmas Among Friends.
8. Saturday Sampler. This needs border, backing, and binding.
10. Scrappy Pinwheels. This needs more blocks, blocks put together, borders, backing, and binding.
12. Sweet Sixteen. This needs more blocks, blocks put together, borders, backing, and binding.
Linking to:
PhD in 2021 at Quilting Gail.
Sunday, December 20, 2020
2021 Quilting Goals
In 2020, I only made three goals: Have a stay at home quilting weekend every month, finish UFOs as I find them, and do something every day that moves a project forward. Pretty good goals actually and I started out full steam and with some good results. But there were some major hurdles in 2020.
I agreed to babysit my daughter's boys for a month while she found a job and daycare and that month turned into four, exhausting months. My stay at home quilting weekends ended when I started babysitting weekends. The babysitting finally ended when it was time for my eye surgeries. I've written about that before, but the downside is that my vision went from bad to worse and now I have doubled, distorted vision. But in the last few weeks I have developed a sweet spot about twelve inches from my eyes where I don't have double vision. That sweet spot gives me hope that the other problems can be corrected one day and I won't have to give up quilting completely.
In June, Hubby decided to insulate the attic and he moved everything from my side of the hobby room over to his side. Then he moved everything from his side over to my side and didn't bother to keep things together. And there it still sits today. Boxes stacked on boxes with a narrow row between them. I set up my sewing machine table and cutting table, but haven't been able to find my iron or my notions. I don't know about you, but I can't quilt without my iron and seam ripper!
In the meantime, I have been cross-stitching because that is something I can do twelve inches from my eyes. I haven't yet figured out how to get my face close enough to the sewing machine to see what I'm sewing without hunching over and killing my back. I also bought some Ikea cabinets for my sewing and crafts and was able to put them together without much help. As I unpack boxes, now I can put all my quilting supplies in one place.
While unpacking boxes and sorting into my new cabinets, I counted thirty-one UFOs. Yes! Thirty-One! I have always wanted to do the quilting on all my quilts, but my new reality is that I can't. So I have decided to send out all the finished quilt tops (flimsies), and do the quilt-as-you-go method for all the quilts that are still just blocks.
1. Send out at least six flimsies for quilting.
2. Redesign quilt patterns for blocks into QAYG.
3. Have a monthly stay-at-home quilting weekend.
4. Find that darn iron!
5. Find a way to set up my sewing table so I can see without hunching over.
6. Do something every day to keep projects moving.
7. Blog here at least once a week, even if it is just a silly picture. Note to self, start collecting some silly pictures.
My next eye surgery was supposed to be in late January or early February and the one after that two months later. I don't know if that is still going to happen. Hospitals are once again closed to elective surgeries. And I don't know how what kind of recovery or how long it will be. I know there is no bending over, no lifting, and sleeping upright for awhile. I won't even make a goal for sewing every day, or even every week, because I know that can't happen after surgeries.
What are your quilting goals for 2021?
I am once again joining the 2021 Planning Party at Quilting JetGirl and hope to complete it this year.
Reporting Sewing for Week 51 of 2020
Saturday, December 19, 2020
The Saturday Before Christmas
This is a picture from the last time I showed my progress on it. I did work on it in the meantime and had finished the gate and the lower half of the border.