Skip to main content

Onward

To embroider the center of the koi quilt I've started with a feather stitch around the edges. This anchors the furoshiki and frames it.

For this I used a blue and green viscose thread, about the same thickness as size 5 perle cotton. The slipperiness of viscose is a blessing when you have to stitch through many layers of fabric and batting (in my case, the furoshiki, the patchwork under it, the batting and the backing, plus any seams I happen to hit along the way.) I had to use a rubber needle-pulling pad the entire time. Viscose is also a pain because it is slippery and doesn't want to stay put. I had to thumb the previous stitch to hold it in place while making the next stitch.

All of the above made keeping the stitches consistent a challenge, but I think I did okay.

Yesterday I stopped by JoAnn to pick up a few more hanks and balls of embroidery thread in various shades of blue so I'd have enough thread. It's a big quilt.

Comments

nightsmusic said…
I think you did great and I know how hard that is to work with. It looks lovely as a frame.

Popular posts from this blog

Love Means This

Invested in a couple of hand-dyed bundles from one of my favorite fabric artists. This one said "Make me into something for Valentine's Day." So I went for a quilted and embellished tote. I kept thinking about what love means to me as I worked on it. Here's the finished tote. Although I was tempted to embellish with beads and pins, I got sick and only felt well enough to do a little stitching every night. As I worked I thought about how often love seems disappointing to us, especially when it fails to live up to our expectations. But now that I've experienced love in many forms, I can say that it's made me a better person than I might have been without it. Love is a precious thing, and should be appreciated in all its forms. I am very grateful for the love of my guy, my child and my friends who have stuck with me all these years. That's you two, in case you're wondering. :) Also finally found something to do with a ve...

Other Stashes

Along with clearing out the spare bedroom and tidying my office and our guest bedroom, I decided to reorganize some of my stashes. This is all the yarn I have on hand, sorted by color. It looks like a lot, but lately I've been using up a minimum of half a bin every month, so this is approximately a year's supply. All of my solid color cotton perle thread. I go through a lot of this every year, too. I need a container in which I can fit all of it together, but I haven't found the right one yet. I won't show you all of my fabric -- I'm still reorganizing this stash -- but I went through everything and donated two bins of fabric I won't need to the local quilter's guild.

Store Closing Haul

The mega Books-A-Million store over in Sanford is closing, and offered an extra 20% off on their current stock -- all sales final -- so I went over to do some shopping. Safely but sadly there was no one in the store but me the entire time I was there. The Holly Jackson novel is for Katherine, the Halloween board book is for Oliver, and the copy of Garden Spells is to keep on hand because I give that book to everyone. The rest of the books are for me. I love Anne Cleeves, and the Galbraith novel sounded interesting (the first couple weren't, but I'm willing to take another chance.) The Escape Room is by a new-to-me author, plus it was cheap. The GreenCraft mag is just a guilty pleasure. Hopefully the smaller BAM nearer to me won't close. I don't buy many books from brick-and-mortar stores these days, but that's really the last one within reasonable driving distance.