Firewheel Meadow Finished in Time

Firewheel Meadow wall hanging

I wish September began with a P, so we could use it in this catchy name: Productive Peptember. Okay, I’m laughing, because it looks so funny in print. Microsoft Word doesn’t have a synonym for “productive” that begins with S, so I’m off to the true synonym master, Roget.

No joy from Roget’s Thesaurus, either. So let’s say that I got a lot done in September: two magazine articles and one magazine design, which I’ll tell you about when they appear.

AND the Firewheel Meadow wall hanging, which I have been posting about in progress. I sewed the last stitch on September 30, the day before it was due at the Threads of Texas Quilt Show.

And I’m so glad it was done in time, because it won third place in the Mixed Media, Small Quilt division.

A Good Day at the Quilt Show

Iced Water at the Café Rouge knitted, quilted wall hanging

My mom and I went to the Threads of Texas Quilt Show on October 3 to see all the beautiful quilts made mostly by members of the Town & Country Quilt Guild of Stephenville, Texas.

We hadn’t even made our way to the quilt exhibit, before my friend Hazel saw us. “Have you looked at the quilts yet?” she said.

No, we hadn’t.

“Then I’m not going to say a word,” she said, “because I don’t want to spoil anything for you.”

How tantalizing.

Shards 2: Sometimes, a knitted, quilted wall hanging

Four and a half long rows of quilts greeted us as we walked into the exhibition hall—hours of lovely, colorful entertainment. The skill and talent in that big room, the time invested in making those quilts, the effort of putting together a show, were mind-boggling.

We turned to the right, toward the first row of quilts, to take them in one by one. We soon came upon the Mixed Media division, where my quilts were hung.

Here’s what we saw. You can imagine the happy texts to my husband and daughter, and the big smiles that lasted well into the weekend.

Shards 2: Sometimes, a knitted, quilted wall hanging Iced Water at the Café Rouge, a knitted, quilted wall hanging

The black and yellow ribbon is from National Quilting Association Certified Judge Marilyn Hardy, who judged the show and awarded all the ribbons. Usually one NQA CJ ribbon is awarded in a show, and the recipient’s quilt is posted on the NQA CJ ribbon website. I hope you’ll go look—there are lots of great quilts on the page.

A good day for a knitter and crocheter who also quilts

Memories Monday, Recycled Sweater Vest

TextileFusion vest made from recycled sweater

I placed a darkly colorful man’s sweater on the thrift-shop counter. The cashier looked at me apprehensively. “Do you realize this sweater is 100 percent wool?” she asked.

Yes, I did. That’s why I bought it. Frankly I was amazed that such a wonderful sweater was still on the shelf, but apparently the wool content wasn’t as attractive to other people. The price was right, too. It was about five dollars.

Wool is perfect for TextileFusion projects. It takes heat well, which is important because I stabilize the knitted fabrics with fusible interfacing. Since wool threads tend to cling to each other, wool is good for cutting into pieces.

For this vest, I cut the facings and hems off of a commercial sewing pattern, and used it to cut vest pieces from the sweater. I stabilized with fusible interfacing and machine stitching. My current favorite mother-of-pearl buttons were perfectly subtle embellishment for the vest. I added other buttons and trims, too.

Four Flowers a Day

Crocheted Firewheel Wall Hanging

The Firewheel Meadows quilt is due at the 2014 Threads of Texas Quilt Show on October 1. So far, I’m making steady progress toward the finish line by appliqueing four flowers a day onto the quilt. See the flowers at the left of the picture, with the petals curling up slightly? Those are the ones sewed today.

At four a day, I’ll finish with the flowers on Tuesday, September 16, which gives me plenty of time to do more embellishment, sew on the label, and finish the hanging sleeve, AND finish two other projects by the end of September!

Oh, but some days it’s difficult to sit down and sew four flowers. I’d rather be doing something else, like reading stuff on the internet or sneaking a game of 2048 on my daughter’s iPad.

The process is character-building. Yes, that’s what it is.

Guest Hand Towels Foreshadow Future Books

Can you make something prettier by adding a little crochet or knitting here and there? With little time to knit or crochet a large project, how can you customize a gift or put your individual stamp on a purchased item?

crocheted starfish, knitted fish on towels

These applique towels were my answer to that question early in the 2000s. They foreshadowed my books, Crochet Bouquet, Crochet Garden, and Cute Crochet World, which are full of motifs for customizing and decorating fashions, home decor, and gifts.

I machine-stitched the felt sand and seaweed onto the towels. The fish are knitted, a pattern I borrowed from one of my early designs in print: “Tropical Fish Cardigan,” Christmas Year-Round Needlework and Craft Ideas, p. 14 ff., March 1994.

Eventually an English magazine published my crocheted basket starfish towel design: “Star Bright” (crocheted starfish on towels), Popular Crafts, p. 62, July 2002.

Firewheels and Buttons

Oh, those challenging firewheel centers! The dark, bloomed-out flowerets are around the outside of the center, while the yellow, currently-blooming flowerets are toward the center. Clearly this called for homemade buttons.

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<p>Ella has wanted to play with polymer clay for a long time now, so we gathered materials and got to work. She even researched polymer techniques in the classic <em>Polymer Clay for Everyone,</em> by her mom. Woo hoo!</p>
<p>She made a jellyroll cane with turquoise and white and wrapped it in purple. Slicing the cane is the most exciting part! We both love how it reveals the design inside the cane.</p>
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“I’m going to put them in the button jar until I find a good project to use them for,” she said. Like mother, like daughter!

Ella's handmade jellyroll button slices

My buttons were a little different. I made a Skinner Blend, a very clever technique which shades two or more colors into each other.

Skinner blend buttons

You start with two colors of clay fitted together diagonally like this:

Skinner blend buttons

Skinner blend buttons

Skinner blend buttons

*Fold the piece in half as shown in the picture, and run it through the pasta machine.*
Repeat between *s until the blend is even.

Skinner blend buttons

I rolled the resulting blend starting at the yellow end. This made a roll or a cane that shaded from yellow on the inside to burgundy on the outside. Thinking the buttons needed an even darker border, I blended some burgundy with black and made a dark burgundy border around the cane.

Handmade buttons for crocheted Firewheel, Indian Blanket, Gaillardia flowers

They look good! The best part: I cut buttons for the large flowers, then reduced the cane and cut button slices for the medium-sized flowers, then reduced it some more and cut button slices for the small flowers!

Ella and I used the scraps to make miracle beads and scrappy buttons.

“What are you going to do with all those scrappy buttons, Mom?”

“I’m going to put them in the button jar until I find a good project to use them for,” I said. Like daughter, like mother!

The History of Dream Home

Dream Home

Originally, Dream Home was going to be mounted onto a piece of felted wool and then made into a quilted wall hanging. The blue felt looked so good with the motifs of the picture. I was prearranging the pieces in this photo. That was when I realized just how many motifs still left to crochet—lots and lots of blue circles for the sky, lots and lots of green petals and pink flowers for the lawn.

Finally the crochet charm lace was all done, meaning the motifs were sewn together to form the picture. I couldn’t quite visualize the finished piece, so I rolled the picture inside the felt and thought about it for months.

With the deadline coming nearer, I bought a small quilting hoop to hold the piece while I hand-quilted it. Still, I couldn’t see it finished.

One day Ella and I were wandering around Michaels. In the painting section, I saw canvasses and thought, “What about sewing the picture to a canvas?” Artist’s canvas comes stretched and stapled to a wooden frame. It’s easy to hang. Right or wrong, a picture on canvas looks more like art than the same picture on a quilt. Now that, I could see.

I bought a canvas and prepared it by spraying it with a clear acrylic coating.

crocheted wall hanging crocheted wall hanging

Should I use the pretty, blue, felted wool in the background, or not? After canvassing family members for their opinions, I chose to put the picture on the canvas without blue wool.

The sewing began. To keep the picture from sagging, I sewed around every single motif, attaching it to the canvas. Ignoring the large number of motifs, I just sewed one at a time. Eventually they were all sewn down.

crocheted butterflies

The picture looked lonely, floating around on that big, white canvas. It needed the button frame, which didn’t take very long to sew in place. I love button frames.

Here’s the scoop on the motifs:

From Crochet Garden:

Butterflies (left, in the sky), “Sulfur Butterfly & Friends,” pp. 31-33
Curlicues that form the water (lower left), “Curlicue Sprays,” pp. 62-63
Purple anemone with white and black center (right, under owl’s wing), “Anemone & Friend,” pp. 120-121

crocheted curlicues, water, and turtle crocheted owl, anemone, mushroom, ladybug, bullion rose

From Crochet Bouquet:

Big green leaf (lower right, between toadstools and red rose), “Small One-Row Leaf,” pp. 120-121
Pink flowers in lawn, “Millefiori,” Tiny Petals, p. 26
Grass tufts in lawn, “Millefiori,” Rounded Petals, p. 25
Smallest trees in background, “Veined Leaf,” Plain Vein, pp. 123-124

crocheted house, tree, turtle, grass, bunny, flowers crocheted rocket, star

From Cute Crochet World:

Mushrooms, “Storybook Mushroom,” pp. 59-61
Bullion rose, “Valentine Roses,” pp. 92-93
Ladybug, “Ladybug, Ladybug,” pp. 20-21
Rabbit, “Bunny,” pp. 38-39
“Turtle,” pp. 27-29
House, “Cozy Home,” pp. 133-136
Medium sized trees to the right of the house, “Cherry Blossom,” pp. 76-77
Owl, “Oval Owl,” pp. 36-37
Stars, “Starry Night,” pp. 98-99
Moon, “Winter Moon,” pp. 96-97
Rocket ship, “Vacation Transportation,” pp. 116-119
Clouds, “Cutely Cloudy,” pp. 86-87
Airplane, “Vacation Transportation,” pp. 116-119
“Bluebird of Happiness,” pp. 24-26
Sun, “Summer Sun,” pp. 94-95

crocheted bluebird, sun, cloud, butterfly crocheted airplane, cloud, star

Next year’s entry into the CGOA Design Competition is already underway. It’s a. . .oops, can’t talk about it yet.

Dream Home, A Crochet Picture

Keeping a crochet secret is very difficult! I wanted to blog about the Dream Home project many times. But I also wanted to enter it into the Crochet Guild of America Design Competition. One of the rules is that an entry cannot have been published in print or online prior to the competition.

Dream Home, by Suzann Thompson

Now that the CGOA Design Competition is over for the year, I’m free, freeeeeeeeeeee! I’m free to tell the story of Dream Home. Finally!

I love fairy tales and similar stories. The illustrations I remember from childhood were rich in color and imagery from nature. Fairy tale homes had no modern machinery or complex technology.

Crocheted rabbit, ladybug, mushrooms

In a dream, a rabbit can fit under a toadstool, day and night can share the sky over your house.

Dream Home combines my childhood and dream images. The subject is pretty simple—a house, trees, some animals. As you come closer, you see more complexity—images in the sky, and the many small pieces that make up the whole.

I keep peeking around the doorway to look at Dream Home hanging in my livingroom. Seeing it makes me happy.

Sign Up Soon for Taos Wool Festival Workshops in October

Polymer clay buttons

The Taos Wool Festival is always the first full weekend of October, with workshops starting a couple of days ahead. This is a great time to be in the mountains of New Mexico. The autumn colors and crisp weather are just wonderful.

This year I’m offering three classes at Taos:

Polymer Clay Button Boutique, all day Friday, October 3. You’ll go home with lots of colorful, pretty buttons, ready to use. They’re machine washable and dryable.

See the blue and orange buttons in the lower right corner of the photo above? We’ll make those as a group project. So fun!

Mosaic knit saguaro cactus

How to Knit Mosaic Patterns and Design Your Own, Saturday afternoon, October 4. After this class, you’ll be able to knit any of Barbara Walker’s many mosaic patterns, and you can design your own!

This mosaic cactus motif is one of my earliest original mosaic designs. I still like it a lot!

Knit Cables, Bobbles, and Braids workshop

Cables, Bobbles, and Braids, Sunday morning, October 5. You’ll learn how to do these stunning knitting techniques, but more importantly, you’ll develop a deeper understanding of these textural wonders. You’ll go away ready to twist and shout!

Please sign up for classes before September 1, 2014, at www.taoswoolfestival.org/workshops.