Flower Patch Quilt Top

I have completed my Flower Patch top! I made block 16 and joined it into the top over the weekend. I'm so thankful that I removed the foundation papers as I went along.


I have been sewing as fast as I can, which is admittedly pretty slow, to get the border done. I finished it around 8:30 last night and luckily we had just enough light left to get a photo.

My next goal is to get the backing made. I will need to press eight yards of fabric and then get it seamed. I shared the backing fabric in last week's post.

My small guild is working on a charity quilt. We are making Crimson Tate's Letters From Home since we all have a copy of the pattern from our last retreat. Here are my contributions. Note that the corner triangles are missing since I haven't received the fabric yet. I tried to make use of fabric from my scrap bins. I swear, no matter how much fabric I use from the scrap bins, they never seem to get any emptier.  I've seen pictures of blocks that several others have made, and they are amazing. Mine are...eclectic?

I've completed another group of quilts. This first one belongs to Elle and I used Terral on it. Salmon Glide thread is the perfect neutral for brightly colored quilts.

Then another of Elle's, quilted with Sugar & Spice. I used Glide Calico thread on this, which seems fitting for a quilt that has quilting-themed fabrics.

Next is another of Elle's, quilted with Stacked Snails.

I quilted Connie's quilt, assembled by Sue, with Triplet.

One more of Elle's, quilted with Knit 1, Purl 2.

If you felt my anguish last week about the horrendous basement carpet and were wondering what happened, they are now planning to order more of the original carpet we selected. They are going to run the seams perpendicular to how they were before, though I'm not sure that's going to make much difference if they still can't make an invisible join. In the meantime, I broke down and vacuumed the entire  carpet because I was tired of us tracking carpet fuzz everywhere. I see why they said the round 2 carpet is defective, because there are really strange lines all over it. One large swath looks like crumpled up fabric--you know that wrinkled look cotton gets after you wash it. The installation is sub-par, but yeah, the carpet isn't right either. So we will see. Not sure what quality installation I'll get for round three, but at least this butt-ugly, horrible carpet from round two will be gone.

We have transitioned into summer here. Just like the last few years, we have gone from pleasant spring weather directly into summer's heat and humidity with no transition. Just spring one day and evil summer the next. The flowers are looking nice. We spent Saturday evening pulling more spearmint. The irises are starting to bloom. This one is called Flying Circus. Photo courtesy of my daughter.

I am always amazed by how different the blooms of Iris Batik look on the same plant. The white one in the back is Immortality.

Columbine and a volunteer iris--we evidently missed a few rhizomes when we pulled them all two years ago. At least this one is pretty.


The strawberry beds are covered in blossoms and fruit. I cannot wait for the strawberries to ripen! There is no comparison between them and store-bought strawberries. 

The peas and lettuce are visible, but not any outstanding growth. We weeded Saturday and you can't even tell. We planted the rest of our crops too--green beans, beets, chives, zucchini, and cucumbers. We tried throwing an overripe tomato in the garden; we'll see if it grows. We have volunteer dill, so we are waiting to see what else comes up before sowing more. We have some thyme my husband planted a few years ago that has somehow survived for several years in the top wooden box pictured below and we actually harvested it and used it in dinner this past week.

I am very excited because my Bartlett pear tree has lots of fruit! And my other pear tree, which has never had any, has a few! We weren't sure what we'd have this year since we sustained so much cicada damage last year and did a very heavy pruning on both (we originally thought we had fire blight before realizing it was cicadas boring in). I wonder if we will be able to harvest any. Last year we had a few pears growing, but they disappeared before they got big enough. Squirrels? Birds? Raccoons? Anyone have growing tips?

First fruit on this tree, though it doesn't look healthy.

Look at all the cute baby pears!

I also learned this week that rabbits eat dandelion stems and dandelion fluff. I had a hard time capturing it with my phone, but I enjoyed watching this one eat. If you look really closely, that stupid walnut is still hanging in the shrub behind the rabbit. 
We still have the grosbeaks, lots of grackles, two hummingbirds, lots of orioles, and all the regular birds. I was excited to see an indigo bunting Saturday while we were weeding the lower garden. I saw one again the other night. They have such amazing color, particularly near sunset when the light hits just right. We used to have lots of buntings, but as we got more houses and development in the neighborhood, we got less buntings. We used to have tons of goldfinches and now there are only a few. I have been seeing meadowlarks around more frequently, so that is nice. The red headed woodpecker population seems to be growing as well, but I'm not seeing as many of the other woodpecker varieties as we used to. At least I always have my flamingoes. 😁

Have a wonderful week.


May OMG

My goal for May is to finish my Flower Patch SAL top and make time for myself to get it quilted.

I need to make the final block, sew the last row on, and add some borders. I bought backing fabric, so I will need to press it and seam it. 

Speaking of irons, my iron died the other day. This wasn't a surprise; I'd thought it was getting close. I have gone through three of the same iron, the red Shark one, in the past five or six years. The last one lasted about 2.5 years. I was going to run to Target to grab another, but they no longer sell it. I looked at Amazon and found it, but the price had gone up. So I ended up getting this one. It had tons of good reviews, so we'll see how it goes. It weighs more than the Shark model, which I wasn't expecting after reading the listings. It's not as heavy as my back-up iron though, and the cord is long. I'm hoping to try it today.

Last week I'd mentioned that we were getting the new carpet in the basement replaced. I loved our original pick, but the seams were very visible. They couldn't improve on the appearance and the carpet place decided that the carpet wasn't meant to go in such large spaces. 🙄 So they offered us a replacement, which they said was of similar quality. Well. It wasn't. The replacement ripples when you walk on it, it's wavy and puckered around all the edges, it's so thin that when you step on the thresholds, the tack strips poke you in the foot. Not pleasant. Additionally, they were not to drill into the floor because we have radiant floor heat tubing. Guess what he did? To say I was upset would be an understatement. The installer knew it was bad too, because he snuck out of here without telling us he was finished and he'd already sent pictures to the owner. I sent pictures and videos. Now they are saying that the replacement carpet was defective 🙄🙄 and they want to replace it with the same stuff and have the Mohawk training installer, the owner, and the same darn installer who's already botched two installations put in round three. This is not acceptable to me because I don't want this cruddy carpet that clearly is not of the same value and quality as what we paid for and I don't want the installer back either. My husband is discussing it with the owner today. So I lost three days of working time last week and got 💩 carpet in return. Total nightmare.

I was happy to be back quilting Thursday, though I struggled a lot with having to see that carpet continually. I've now moved from utter despair to rage and am moving a bit towards acceptance.

The first quilt I did was one of Elle's, quilted with Tia's Daisies. I'd been looking forward to this one.

Next up was Maria's cute hexie quilt. I added the borders, quilted, and partially bound this one. Quilted with Stipple.

Then I did Charlene's Macaron mystery quilt. She made fancy centers and added borders to hers. Quilted with Sea of Stars.

I also bound this one. I even did that fancy trick where you sew an entire side with no bobbin thread!

The next one I did was Maryellen's Macaron mystery quilt. She won free quilting from me through Cheryl's quilt-along. We went with Windswept. It looks amazing!

Next up is another of Elle's, quilted with Christmas. 

I kept looking at this quilt, wondering why the fabric seemed familiar. I finally realized that I had made a purse years ago with the same fabric! 😄

And one more of Elle's, quilted with Persephone 3. I love how the thread really pops with the batiks.

We went to the art museum yesterday to see the immersive Van Gogh experience. It was surprisingly busy for a Tuesday. A bit too people-y for me, but I enjoyed the exhibit.

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They have beautiful gardens outside.

We also have done two trips to IKEA, one last week without the kids and another yesterday, to pick up parts for our planned upgrade to our master closet. Most of it has been out of stock forever. We now have all of the frames and rods for two walls. No drawers and no shelves yet, and nothing for the stand-alone cabinet on the side, but it's a start. 

Our weather is warming up and we've had a lot of rain. I think my husband has mowed twice in the last week. The peas and lettuce are starting to grow. The rose-breasted grosbeaks have arrived. They usually stay for around two weeks. A pair of bluebirds has decided to attack their reflections all along the back of the house. I'm not sure why they've suddenly decided to do this. We've been here 10 years and it's never happened before. {We have had cardinals attack their reflections plenty.}

Here's to another productive week. Happy quilting, and May the 4th be with you.😉

Linking with For the Love of Geese and My Quilt Infatuation.