Saturday, July 10, 2021

Aprons

Since becoming friends and then buddies and now M&M, Marjorie and I often crack each other up with our similarities. Often I'm texting her "a great idea!" and my phone starts buzzing with a text from Marjorie with, "I just had a great idea!"  AND ... way too often, it's the same idea!

When I told her I had a couple of yards of some OLD Sunbonnet Sue fabric, she said, "I also have a couple of yards." Now ... I tried to convince her that there's NO way she had this same OLD fabric. She insisted she did. After a little digging - she had several yards, in fact, she had more than I did.


Seriously ... who has 5 yards of this fabric?! We do! I was not quite the fan of Sunbonnet Sue as my buddy, Marjorie. I called this fabric: Mushroom People. I'm becoming a convert.

When we're teaching, lecturing, doing demos, we both love wearing an apron with pockets. What the heck were we going to do with this fabric? Make (and wear) aprons, of course.


Don't you just LOVE our aprons?!! We've had several requests for pattern info. Unfortunately it's an OLD Simplicity pattern that is no longer available. I've found a couple of similar ones if you're interested in making a cross-back/no ties apron with POCKETS.

Here's a free pattern from Purl Soho for a cross-back apron you can make for yourself. And this one is a CrissCross Apron pattern.

Summer is flying, it's already mid-July, we've had our first hurricane event (just some rain and a bit of wind). We're still sewing and plotting ... stay tuned!

Keep Stitching, Mary




Monday, June 14, 2021

The Irony Of It All

                                  NEVER TRY TO IRON A CUPCAKE

My iron is self-cleaning – a lot of newer models are. But what does that actually mean?  Late at night when everyone’s  asleep the iron jumps down off its board pal and hops over to the cabinet, pulls out the sole plate cleaner and a plush rag and wipes  itself  off?  Not hardly, although that would be nice if it did.   And if your iron is  NOT “self-cleaning” perhaps the iron fairies sneak into your home late at night with iron cleaner and take care of it while you’re fast asleep? 

Nope – cleaning an iron takes human interaction – and preferably on a regular basis.  Like many items we may own and use we are supposed to maintain/clean them on a “regular basis”.  In Florida we change our AC filters every 60 days (sure we do).  We change the oil in our cars every 5000 miles (yeah right).  That smoke alarm battery should be swapped out every 6 months (opps, I’m late).

And then there’s doctors.  How often do we see them? Fortunately for regular “maintenance” a doctor or dentist will normally schedule your next appointment before you leave the office.  Most offices will have a system that even reminds us of the appointment a few days in advance.  Easy!

So why does my iron look like I tried to iron a cupcake???  Don’t get me wrong, I didn’t intentionally neglect my iron. In fact, I wipe the sole plate with special iron cleaner every few weeks.   I also use steam, a lot of steam.  I love nothing more than steaming a bias edge into submission.  Steam is also a great way to get those bulky, overlapping seams to lay flat and corners to stay crisp. When working with wool or hand embroidery steam is wonderful for bringing out dimensional features that would be lost if flattened with traditional ironing.  After all, using steam regularly keeps the jets clean and the iron free of gunk, right?  Wrong!

In order to “self-clean” my iron I was supposed to use the button labeled “self-clean”.  But I didn’t – ever – thus the cupcake appearance.  I imagine it was building up for quite some time until finally my iron just gave up and spued forth years of mucky, yucky, nasty goo.  Lucky for me it happened when I was steaming the back side of a wool applique project so none of the nastiness got on my quilt.  Talk about a close call!!  It also caused me to use some very specific adult language - which brought my husband running to see what had occurred.  His first instinct was to say “gross, do we need to go buy you a new iron”?  As tempting as that was, I didn’t think I should have to spend a ton of money replacing an iron that cost a ton of money and is only 3-4 years old. 

Gotta love the internet and those kids who grew up with the world at their fingertips (even if they only type with their thumbs).  My Gen Y child immediately got on her phone and started searching for an explanation.  It took her less than a minute to ask “mom, do you ever push that button that says “self-clean”??   Rowenta self-cleaning function   Smarty pants!

If you “self-clean” your iron regularly I suppose the self-clean function will work just fine.  If you haven’t EVER used that function it may take a little more than just pushing that button to get the iron truly clean.  Because my iron was in such sad shape, we filled the water tank with a solution of 50-50 water to vinegar ratio - not once, not even twice but three times before the iron finally stopped oozing out the nasty stuff.

My iron is good as new!  When was the last time you “self-cleaned” yours?



Tuesday, June 8, 2021

The Stars Aligned

 M&M released a new pattern, you can find it on the M&M Sew Charming Facebook Group. Its called : Stars Aligned. I loved making this quilt. There was a lot of bits and pieces, strips and squares and miscellaneous scraps that were used up and are now gone from the stash.



You can read more about how this quilt went together for me here: Keep Me In Quilts. Marjorie designed several different layouts for the blocks. I had to come up with something entirely different ... and NOT because I was being disagreeable (me? never!) You can read the beginnings of the journey here on the blog : M&M Sew Charming


I chose sashing because I did NOT square-up the blocks until they were all stitched and they were not pretty. My corner stones and last 2 strips needed to be aggressively trimmed. This eliminated any chance of my seams matching if I stitched “block-to-block”. Sashing strips solved this problem. For my setting, I used 1.5” sashing strips in white and black prints and a constant yellow corner stone. I did sashing between the blocks and around the outside of the quilt top. I finished off the quilt with a green ombre fabric and a small section of piano keys with all the leftover scraps.

DO AS I SAY, NOT AS I DID! 

Press and square-up your block with each round. This will keep things much tidier and give you more lay-out design options because your blocks will fit together nicely.


Keep Stitching,
Mary


Tuesday, May 25, 2021

The In-Betweens

 Marjorie and I both enjoy quiet morning stitching and coffee. She also enjoys the sound of chickens, me ... not so much. In between the quiet morning stitching and the evening TV knitting there's a whole lot of day for me to "get it done."

Sometimes I get a lot done and sometimes I seem to just move messy piles around and contemplate getting a lot done. Often, for me, a project has to evolve. Seldom is the end product clear to me when I start pulling bits and pieces together.

I have LOTS of cut-off HST's (1/2-square triangles). When I say - LOTS - I mean a lot of LOTS! After pulling out all the "red and ?" HSTs, I trimmed them up to 1.5" and made piles of 8 that matched or were pretty close.


There were a lot of sets of 8, to me that said - star blocks! I was on a mission to make another quilt using up 1.5" strips. After some "strip-mining" I had all sorts of various blacks and greens. Throw in some 1.5" squares ... I save those too ... and then there was a 1/2-log cabin sort of block.



A few more were stitched together and then a few more. Still not sure where I was going with this quilt. Did I need 9? That would only measure 24" x 24" and leave way too many parts leftover. 16 blocks would be 32" x 32". I can go bigger!




There are now 32 blocks sitting on my table and parts for 4 more. Looks like 36 will be the number. Then what? Marjorie is being very helpful (I think) in sending me different layouts from EQ. Sashing? No sashing? On-Point? Straight set? 4 blocks grouped together?

Oh my  ... that's a whole lot of contemplating that I am not tackling today. Dear readers - you will get to see more of this project and some of the EQ possibilities in the very near future.

I still have HSTs leftover but I think they will hang out here on my very organized paper plate storage system. There's always the next project.


It's now time for another "in betweens" ... I'm going to go into my backyard and smell the roses.




Keep Stitching,
Mary







Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Mornings are for Handwork

 


Morning has always been a favorite time of day.  The house is quiet, the yard is still, the air is the coolest it will for the day.  I start my day in a comfy chair, on the porch, listening for the chickens to rise and start their sing-song clucking while doing handwork on whatever the project-of-the-hour might be.  Today I’m working on wool applique – the Pattern is Trees of the Season. Want to stitch-along with M&M on your own forest? Email us for the pattern, it's $5.00 

It hasn’t always been this way, starting the day as slowly as the sun rises in the sky.  More years than not were filled with alarm clocks, school bus schedules, lunches to pack and an office to hurry off to.  But life is made up of different stages and when we reach the stage where we have the opportunity to savior the mornings I highly recommend it.

Whether it’s reading, writing, knitting or hand embroidery I hope you delight in your day and can make time for the things that bring you joy.  Marjorie



Monday, May 10, 2021

Strip Tease - DONE

 Are you drowning in 1.5" strips? Wait, what? You don't have 1.5" strips? This is madness, I say! OK - seriously ... you must have 1.5" strips. I keep mine all jumbled in a basket. Marjorie keeps her neat and tidy in a plastic shoe box. Which ever way works for you - trim up and save those strips ... we have plans!


M&M shared on the Facebook group this fun pattern to use up some strips. 
We called it STRIP TEASE. For obvious reasons, we are not hashtagging it. Might need to think about #hashtags when planning quilt names, in the future. Just sayin'

This is what's posted in "files" on the M&M Sew Charming Facebook group. Not a member? Join us! Like everything we do, make it your own ... make more blocks or less blocks. Add borders or not. I happen to LOVE the flying geese and made 108 of them.

    



I made 9 blocks all from 1.5" scrappy strips. My Flying Geese blocks (all 108) are also scrappy but I did use 1 solid neutral for the background/sky/wings part. What do you call that part?


Because my sky was neutral and my blocks were also neutral around the outer part of the inner quilt (are you with me?), I decided I needed a separator border. I simply stitched together a long string of 1.5" strips and cut to size. I bordered both sides of my Flying Geese. This is why I went from needing 104 to 108 of those lovelies. 


At this point, my quilt measured 60x60 and I still wanted to make it bigger. Little hint here - I believe Marjorie plans on making more blocks. I went with another border.

This fabric has been in the tub for YEARS! Check out the selvage. I love when the selvage has a copyright date. If it didn't' ... I would never believe that I've had this fabric for 22 years. How wide did I make the outer border? I made it as wide as I could with how much fabric I had. Turned out, I could cut 6 strips at 5.5" wide. I had a teeny bit left over to be added to the scrap bins.


I ended up with a finished quilt of 70" x 70". Here it is DONE on a twin bed (Amelia's room) and on top of a queen bed. 



I enjoyed every part of making Strip Tease, even the 108 Flying Geese. And - the scrap bins are still full and waiting for the next adventure.





We have plans for more scrap-strip-silliness. Stay tuned!

Keep Stitching,
Mary (the other M)




Thursday, May 6, 2021

Exciting NEWS

There are a few new things coming from M&M . . . don't you just LOVE our shenanigans? While we can't tell you all the details yet, we can do a couple of sneaky peeks and we can point you in a direction that might help you get prepared.

If you have been following along  with our Facebook group, you know Marjorie just released Block #12 of our 1st BOM.  (hmmmm .... 1st? ... is that a hint?) We shared Mary's finished quilt . . .  because she's speedy, it's DONE.  In case you missed it - here's a look . . .

  

To be fair (and because she just might call me out on it), Marjorie has had to make multiples of all the blocks AND post videos on M&M Sew Charming's Facebook page and she's had a wrist issue for months. Her top is all laid out and ready for stitching. It will be done by our May class - Sashings, Settings, Blocks and Borders. Are you planning to join us? 

Sew . . . what's new? We've both been working on some wool applique. There just might be 12 of these trees. Did I say 12?


We have some friends at Searsport Rug Hooking and we may have been working on a collaboration with them. Their wool is SUPER DUPER in quality and color. I happen to know at least 3 people (M&M and K) who have already ordered all 3 bundles (because we couldn't pick just one) under the heading Trees of the Season.

AND . . . did you have a chance to see our beautiful Amazing Technicolor Dream Quilt? Since this photo was taken a border has been added and it might be next in line for a little longarm magic by Marjorie.


It would be so fun to make one of your very own. It's not hard . . . especially if you just happened to make a few blocks in a certain color every month for 12 months. There's that number 12 again.

Stay tuned for some announcements of what's coming up in June (and beyond). We are always thinking up new and fun stuff . . . we're good that way!