Showing posts with label PHD report. Show all posts

August PHD Report

I'm feeling a bit panicky that it's already September. Completing my PHD this year feels like a long-shot based on my progress thus far. However, sewing is supposed to be fun and the point of PHD is to move projects forward even if I don't actually complete the PHD. Here is my progress for this month.

Linking with Ms. P Designs

In chart form, it looks like I didn't accomplish anything for a third month in a row (other than in the starts column). I did move several projects forward this month. 

I started and finished a cardinal mini that I gifted at the beginning of the month (start #5). 

I started Meadow Mist Design's Magnificent Mystery (start #6). I have all of the cutting complete. This project won't finish until 2026, so I'm not concerned about it.

 

I have not made any progress on the Linda Hahn class (start #1). It feels like forever ago that I took that class, but it was only March. 

I have made progress on Forever Neverland (start #2). I mis-cut the outer border fabric and had to order more. It arrived yesterday and I'm hoping to get it cut and sewn this week.  

I quilted Pink Grapefruit in Blue (UFO #7) and am working on hand-stitching the binding. I'm hoping to finish it off this month. 

I moved the race car quilt (UFO #11) very slightly forward by sewing and cutting more strip sets and dividing all the strip sets into block units. These block units need a stitch-and-flip corner added, which I am currently working on. I have one set finished and two more sets marked and ready to sew. I feel confident that I'll be able to finish this quilt this year. 

I have not made any progress on UFO #4, 6, or 10. These all just need to be quilted and bound. I do want to custom quilt them and occasionally try to work out a quilting plan. 

Those of you who are eagle-eyed may have noticed that I switched out UFO #8. It used to be alligator quilt, but now it's Nancy's quilt. In case you missed my previous post about it, one of my fellow guild members passed in May. In August many of us brought home her projects with the intent to finish at least some of them this year. This is a full kit that she hadn't started yet, so I'm gonna try to meet the guild challenge to complete it this year in her honor. 

Moving away from PHD, I quilted a few things since last week. I finished up quilting Box Tie on Sonja's quilt. This one took me two days to quilt. 

I attached the binding to Gina's king-size quilt. 

I made and attached the binding to Leslie's quilt. 

I stitched tiny-scale Threaded on Deb's quilt. This was a multi-day project. 

I stitched Triangle Meander on Maria's quilt after adding the borders and seaming the back. I'll add the binding to the front of this one too. 

I quilted Beaded Clam on Sara's quilt. 
On the home front, something got to our entire crop of pears before we could harvest them. I suspect squirrels, but I don't know. Every single pear is gone, not even anything on the ground. We are growing more pumpkins and watermelons and peppers. The weather has taken a turn towards cooler, drier temps. I wonder how this will affect things. The tent worms/army worms/web worms are really bad this year.

The house repairs are complete and the porch is formed. The termite treatment is scheduled to be applied today. Hopefully we can get the cement guy out soon. I'm ready to start moving past this. 

I agreed to purchase a new grill because ours is over 20 years old and starting to rust. We got the new grill home and discovered that it is damaged. The person who deals with that sort of thing was gone all weekend. Of course we had planned to do several grilled meals over the weekend. No big deal, we'll just use the old grill. Nope. The squirrels ate the gas supply line for the second time in as many months. Ugh. 

Meanwhile, we've had some drama between the county plan commission, the subdivision developer, and the residents over the developer's lack of installing sidewalks over the past 19+ years. The developer is now 90 and incapacitated, his family doesn't wish to pony up the shocking amount of money it would take in today's dollars, and none of the residents even want sidewalks. (We live out in the country and there aren't sidewalks and the proposed ones would only be in 1/3 of the subdivision.) I'm not sure why the county didn't deal with this in a timely fashion. Their lawyer threatened to sue the developer, who could then sue the residents for the money (tens of thousands of dollars per lot). I had to miss quilt guild last night to attend the second meeting. Right now it looks as if they've agreed to a better solution than installing sidewalks and street trees we don't want or need and agreed that suing the residents isn't fair or right. We'll see how it shakes out. 

So, on a happier note, my son took some fun pictures of the chickens the other night. 
Agatha

Smoky

Peanut

Henry

Thanks for indulging me with these. :) Hoping for happier days ahead.

July PHD Report & Dumpster Fire, Part II

It's time to update my PHD progress. The months seem to go by faster and faster. 

Linking with Ms. P. Designs' PHD program

As you can see, I did not finish anything this month. I am still trying to work out quilting plans for items 4, 6, 7, and 10. I didn't work on items 8 or 11 this month. 

I made good progress on item 2 in my 2025 starts. It's nearly ready for quilting. It requires two more borders to be added and I will need to seam the backing. 
I looked at item 1 from the 2025 starts. I'm embarrassed to admit that I forgot what I'm supposed to be doing for the blocks in this quilt. I'm determined to finish it this year, so I'll need to get to studying. 
I did start and finish one new item during July, the super-mini Dumpster Fire. The finished size is 4" x 6". 

Another accomplishment is getting the new-to-me iQ set up and all most of my designs transferred into it. Some of the designs I purchased are password-protected, so I can't move them between units. And some I designed in my existing tablet, so I can't export them out. 

One other thing I moved along is this fleece blanket. It's been sitting on my desk for months. I removed the selvedges and squared up the fleece and rounded the corners. Then I gave it to my daughter to add blanket stitching to. So it's no longer in my house!
I also did my annual cleaning of the motor brushes in the back of the longarm and the cleaning and oiling of the inside of the head of the machine. The motor brushes were normal, but the inside front was pretty bad this year. There was quite a bit of black debris in there this year. Usually there is only oil and oily dust. I'll probably need to think about an APQS spa day in the next few years.
I'm still adjusting to using two machines on opposite ends of the basement. This is the last of Charlene's group of Christmas quilts. Quilted with Starry.

Next is the last of Ann K.'s baby quilts, quilted with Cakewalk.
The next two are Teah's. The red one is quilted with Baptist Fan and the other is quilted with Loops and Swirls. 

Finally, I quilted Diagonal Plaid Bias Cut on Cynthia's quilt. It doesn't show much on the quilt, but you can see it on the backing a bit. 
My daughter made me this crocheted chicken for my birthday. She didn't use a pattern for this one. She's pretty new to crochet, so I thought that was great.

She also brought my husband this crocheted dumpster fire. I had purchased the yarn and pattern for her. She put her own spin on it. The pattern is available on Etsy.
Moving to the dumpster fire update, the termite damage has turned out to be pretty significant and my husband took off work Friday and worked on the house all day Friday - Sunday in addition to the evenings he'd already spent. He's replaced part of the damaged wood with new material that he treated with deterrent. We will have to replace part of the drywall in the dining room. He accidentally cut through a wire, so now I have a hole in my basement ceiling too. 
The picture below shows what's left of one of the studs from the wall. It looked like corrugated cardboard. 
If you live in an area where termites are endemic, I would highly suggest you do a preventative termite treatment around your house if you have the funds. The best treatment (at least in my area) is a product called Termidor. It's generally a one-time treatment that lasts up to 10 years when trenched in around the perimeter of your house. You shouldn't disturb the soil after it's applied. Anyway, if termites are in your area, it's more of a when than an if. I don't know about you, but our house is our only significant asset, and I wish I'd known more and done a preventive application to save all this damage, heartbreak, and money.

Sunday afternoon my husband rushed in the house to tell me that one of the neighbors' houses was on fire. We'd both heard the sirens. He thought it sounded close and saw all the little kids running to one yard, so went to look. Thankfully the house was mostly fine. The fire was outside and burned the siding, OSB, a light, the garage door, and fascia. The fire department said it was due to "discarded materials". We talked to the neighbors the other evening. He'd been working on staining their hardwood floor and had the used rags spread out over a tow-behind yard trailer. 

My husband has been lecturing me about how rags with chemicals (stain, acetone, lacquer thinner, WD-40, etc.) can ignite and you need to spread them out and let them dry. Well, here's proof they really can go up in minutes if they get a little too close and/or it's really hot out. Thankfully a young girl who lives a few houses away noticed the smoke coming from their house, got her dad, and then they went and alerted the neighbors so they could get to safety. 
From this angle, you can't even tell they had a fire. The rainbow was pretty vivid, but didn't show up well in the picture. 

When I went out to be a nosy person, I noticed that I had a lot of pears that look nearly ripe. I'd totally forgotten that we had a good amount of fruit on the trees this year. I looked it up and should probably wait a few more weeks to harvest. 
Over in the garden I have harvested three zucchinis. I can harvest a few green beans, but there is not enough to feed three of us. My asparagus has tent worms/army worms. 🤮 Two thirds of the pumpkins are growing well on the outside of the perimeter and have stretched inside the fencing. The deer keep eating my sunflowers. 
So that's some of my week. I'd call it the highlights, but most was not a highlight. Things can just calm down for a while. I'd like to find some time for sewing and I have many chores still to do. School starts in one week. 

Stop back Friday and join me in setting a One Monthly Goal. 

Linking with Alycia Quilts and Quiltery.

June PHD Report

It's time to share my PHD progress for June. Spoiler...not much got done. 

Linking with Ms. P Designs

I added one more border on project 11, the race car quilt. One more inner border and a pieced outer border remain.

I have most of a custom quilting plan worked out for project 4, Lone Starburst, but not enough of one yet to put it on the machine. 

I made a small amount of progress on 2025 Start #2, the Forever Neverland quilt. I've prepped 11 blocks. After that, it's just assembling lots of different borders around the panel.

I made, from start to finish, a table runner from a kit I purchased in 2022. I put this as a 2025 start, but I seriously considered replacing the alligator quilt in my UFOs list with this project because I could have used a win this month. Also, I think I need to find a print copy of that alligator pattern. I purchased a PDF years ago and it is a really bad scanned copy of hand-drawn appliqué patterns--the pieces are kind off off-kilter. I'm fairly certain I bought it from the designer, but it is not up to current standards. Anyway. Here is the runner. It's currently at the fair, so this is the best photo I have for now.

My sewing time over the past week was devoted to working on my Cashmerette Sloper. I did a 3/4" narrow shoulder adjustment and a 3/8" round back adjustment. I also had to size up the skirt. 😒 Things look a lot better now. I still need to shorten the stomach curve, move the elbow and bust darts, and add length to the adjustment line on the skirt. And something with the underarm area. I'm not sure what else I have left after that, but we are very near the end of the class. 



I also worked on my secret project for my small guild. I'm about 1/3 of the way done with that project.

I worked on two quilts for others. The first one belongs to Shirley and is quilted with Cosmos. It took me two days to complete.

This Circle City Sampler belongs to Haley. She requested Baptist Fan and a light peach thread. I used Sunkissed Peach. I do still need to make the binding and apply it to the front. Something fun about this quilt is that I have a kit to make the same one! I collected mine from a 2023 shop hop. The pattern is now available from the designer here.

I harvested a few more peas from the garden. The plants are looking pretty bad now, but the other things I've planted are finally starting to have some good growth. Oh, note about the peas: I selected the purple peas because they are easier to see for harvest. I can't really remember, but I might have also originally picked this variety because I thought my picky son would be willing to try something that looked exotic. Not every pea the plant produces is purple. The leaves look very different than that of the more standard Burpee peas I also planted this year. The purple peas (and green beans) turn green when cooked. Look at last week's post for more info.

This used to be a hosta. 🦌 Surprisingly, they left all the transplanted day lilies in the front garden alone. They did eat all the lily buds in this side garden.

Besides that, I am blessed with an abundance of work and a pile of chores and some stress over a very large, unexpected medical bill. The second longarm is put back together again and most of the intelliQuilter is installed. The cable that runs to the handles is not compatible with my machine and we've ordered what we hope is the correct thing. If not, I'm gonna be out a lot more money. Fingers crossed it works out. My husband is about ready to start tearing off the front porch. I'm a little stressed right now. 

May PHD Report

May was a challenging month. I didn't think I'd have any progress to share for this month's PHD update, but I pulled off a finish at the last minute.

I added one project, a Forever Neverland panel quilt. 

I have made no progress on items 4, 6, 7, 8, and 10. 

I added two sets of borders to project 11, the race car quilt. It still needs two more sets of plain borders and a pieced block outer border. 
I did finish item 9, one clothing item. I made the Caprice Skirt from Love Notions. This pattern has lot of options. I made view D, the tiered skirt (center skirt in bottom row).
My fabric ended up being more challenging to work with than I'd anticipated--it is a poly/cotton poplin blend. I keep thinking of Maria making the kids clothes from the curtains in The Sound of Music. 😆 Part way through construction, I actually thought that the skirt wouldn't fit at all and I was not feeling happy about it. My measurements easily fit in the size I made and the finished measurements were adequate, but it looked small. To be sure, I basted the sides and tried it on and it fit. So I continued. 

This skirt has pockets. I found the pocket position and the finished area a bit weird. Love Notions patterns are tested pretty extensively, so maybe I misunderstood or missed something? I don't know. Something isn't right.
There is a gap in the waistband above the pocket on each side. You can stick your finger in there. I'll need to hand-sew these openings shut.
I also added a partial slip using rayon challis and Sew Mary Mac's instructions. I found the challis hard to cut out. It's pretty stretchy. It held a press really well though. 


The skirt fits. It's not the most flattering thing. I need to make the elastic in the waistband smaller; it's way too loose right now. That might help. I think I would look better in a skirt that doesn't have a seam right at my hips. I also wonder if the challis slip is adding to the bulk in my already pudgy tummy area. Maybe it's just my body. LOL. The length feels nice--not too revealing--but I think a shorter skirt might suit my build better. I have a denim jacket and some navy shoes I could add to this outfit. I'm still dealing with the foot issues, so I can only wear my tennis shoes with a carbon fiber plate added in at the moment. 
So what else have I been up to? This arrived. 

My husband found me a used intelliQuilter at an amazing price, so once we get past our last-ever robotics event this weekend (which I think we are woefully unprepared for, particularly since our team is hosting the event), hopefully we can get the second machine and the iQ hooked up and into service. 

I'm slowly making progress on client quilts. I quilted Calder on Terry's Harmony quilt. She left it up to me and I thought the curves and angles played well with the piecing and fabric. 

I quilted Cakewalk on Marilyn's Star Pop (by Quilty Love) quilt. 

She picked Midsummer Dream and requested thread to match her dark green fabric on her Knitted Star quilt. Have you ever pieced one of Lo and Behold's patterns? I haven't, but I've quilted several. They look challenging!
Jae decided on In the Swirls for this bargello quilt. 

My daughter has recently picked up crochet after we bought her a Woobles kit in the Jo-Ann's clearance sale. Here is her first project.

She bought a second clearance kit and successfully finished that. 

I sent her several Amazon knock-off kits and those aren't going as well. The thread snips that were included in one of the kits look nice but don't actually cut. The instructions aren't as good as the Woobles kits. Oh well, gives her something to complain about. 

Anyway, she inspired me to get out my knitting bag and start working on this baby blanket again. We all laugh about this project any time it resurfaces because it was originally intended to be a gift for a co-worker's first child. I saw there was no way I'd get it done in time and made a quilt to gift instead. We think the child is eight or nine now! 😂
I did end up going to the orthopedic walk-in clinic to get my foot check out last week. The provider I saw thought it was a repetitive motion injury. I have to wear the carbon fiber insert I mentioned above in my tennis shoe to stabilize my foot (and wear shoes all day). They referred me to podiatry. I took the next available appointment, which is in late August. 😒 I really hope this thing heals up well before that. I'm trying to take it easy, but I am really missing my nightly walks. I walked 7.64 miles less than normal last week. It will be worse this week.