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Archive for scraps

Making scraps useful

By Liz · Comments (16) · September 8th, 2012

I keep a lot of scraps. It just feels wrong to throw this lovely (and not cheap) stuff away. However, my scrap bins overfloweth. Recently, I’ve started throwing away more, simply because it feels like I have nowhere to put it. Worst of all, with the exception of Triangle Madness, I seldom seem to actually USE my scraps.

Scrap management

What it comes down to is that I’m relatively impatient when working on a sewing project. I don’t want to dig through the mess of my scrap bins to find something that might work, only to find that the piece I have isn’t quite big enough, anyways. And I’m too addicted to efficiency – I love to stack up three fat quarters and cut them all at once, I love to chain piece.  Scraps don’t lend themselves to such things.

I had read about people who organize their scraps by size, rather than color. Or who cut all of their scraps into uniform sizes. For a long time, that sounded too restricting to me. What if I wanted a long strip instead of a square? Oh, the “what-ifs” can paralyze you. But the truth is that the scraps simply aren’t getting used in their current state.  So I decided to undertake a rather ridiculous project.

I am chopping up all of my scraps.

Scrap management

I have my own list of sizes that I want. I cut the biggest pieces I can get from any given piece of fabric, and then work my way down. The very biggest pieces get cut into 10×10″ squares. After that is 5×5″, both of those because at least then I don’t have to cut down any leftover pieces of charm packs or layer cakes.  I then move to 3.5″ squares, which is a little random. But when I sew hexagons, I most often use 1.5″ hexie templates, which work well with 3.5″ squares, so there you have it.  After that are 2.5″ squares, at least in part because those are good for remaining pieces of binding or jelly rolls. Really, I think 2.5″ squares are always useful.  A last-minute addition to the list is that I will cut a 2″ strip if there’s a long-but-narrow piece that seems like too much to throw away. But mostly it’s all squares, since I’m more of a patchwork person than a log-cabin lover, so these seem more useful to me than long strips.

Scrap management

But that’s as small as I go. Anything smaller, and I just… throw it away. I know! Gasp! Alright, I’ve made a couple of exceptions, mainly for Heather Ross fabrics. I’ve kept a few itty-bitty pieces of those. I’m not made of stone, people.

Scrap management

The yellow-and-orange bin was the first one I grabbed, and certainly isn’t the most full of my scrap bins. I set up my cutting mat and box of fabric on the kitchen table or in front of the TV. Working off and on while watching the DNC, I’d say this moderately-full box took me four or five days of cutting. It’s really tedious, as it’s nearly all done one little piece at a time. But I’m hoping the end payoff will be that it’s much easier to make scrappy quilts without having to dig around. And, ultimately, it felt almost liberating. The what-ifs still threaten to creep in, but I really think this is going to be a better way for me. And the end result is so nice and neat, I really do feel like I could just pick a color, grab a stack, and start sewing. Ahhh.

Scrap management

Only five more boxes to go.

Anyone else organize their scraps this way? What are, or would be, your go-to sizes to cut? Have I inspired you to take the plunge and bust out the rotary cutter?

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Comments (16)
Categories : Fabric
Tags : scraps, sort by color, sort by size

Triangle Madness – Finished

By Liz · Comments (24) · January 19th, 2012

Oh, am I excited to use that word. FINISHED!

Triangle Madness, Finished

For those who might be newer to my little blog, this quilt started as something of an experiment way back in October of 2010. I went through my scrap bins one at a time, and cut one 5″ square from as many different fabrics as I could dig out. I had a goal of making 14 sets of half-square triangles each week, and would stop when I made it through the scrap bins.  Turns out, that netted me over 400 blocks from more than 200 fabrics. DANG.

Triangle Madness, Finished

And while there were a lot of starts and stops (and major life events) along the way, it is finally done.  I assembled the HSTs into 20 of these blocks, and then had enough left over that I added another ring around the entire quilt, just continuing the pattern. It ended up being approximately 72″ x 88″, or a pretty generous twin-sized quilt. If it’s not the largest I’ve ever made, then it’s close.

Triangle Madness, Finished

When assembling the blocks and, subsequently, the quilt top, I will tell you that I put as little thought into fabric placement as I could. I didn’t lay a single thing out ahead of time, I just grabbed the next HSTs out of the box and sewed them together. I only vetoed if the two fabrics were too similar to one another. That was it.

Triangle Madness, Finished

For the back, I had a handful of HSTs remaining, and damn if I wasn’t going to use all of them.  For the rest, I ended up pulling a rainbow of solids from my stash.  I meant it too look more “color wheel” than “pride flag,” but hey, it’s pretty whatever you want to call it.

Triangle Madness, Finished

 

The binding is solid medium gray. Given the complete randomness of the front, I could easily have used just about any fabric. But to narrow it down, I decided to go for something that would compliment the back, and the gray just kind of spoke to me.  In my haste to have this thing finally done, I decided to give machine binding a go. I am happy to say that it was pretty darn successful. I attached it to the back, first, and then sewed it down from the front.  The front, I think, looks really good. The back is a little iffy, but not terrible. Not too shabby for a first effort on a big quilt.

Triangle Madness, Finished

Triangle Madness, Finished

I am really, really happy with this quilt.  But while I’m perfectly pleased with the way it looks, I’m even more satisfied with it in the abstract. This was a departure for me – it was a process quilt. It was always about the process that got me to the end product, not the end product, itself.  I love that the whole thing is like my own personal I-Spy quilt, with bits and pieces from lots of old favorites. I love that the whole thing came from stash and scraps (aside from having to order more Kona Bone), and yet barely put a visible dent in either.

I would definitely like to do another process quilt. Something that pulls from scraps, something that is maybe a little daunting to think of in its entirety, but that I can do pieces here and there over time. String blocks, maybe? A warm-cool HST quilt? Log cabins or improv blocks? I don’t know. I’ve got other projects already started, so I’m going to turn this one over in my head for a while, but I do think I’ll do it again.

What would YOU do for a “process” quilt?

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Comments (24)
Categories : Finished Objects, Quilt-Along
Tags : half-square triangles, scraps, triangle madness, twin size

Triangle Madness, Week 1 – Strategery

By Liz · Comments (9) · October 4th, 2010

Well hi, everyone!  Welcome to those who are playing along with our triangle insanity.  Never too late to join in if you’re so inclined!  A few folks are already drinking my kool-aid:

  • Greta
  • Tara
  • Anne
  • Susan
  • Nancy
  • Meg

Some people are going to do this with a couple of charm packs, which of course would be super cute, you might just end up wanting borders to make it a nice generous lap size.

Me? I’m staying scrappy.  But just because I’m going for a random look doesn’t mean it’s a total free-for-all around here.  I’ve got to come up with some strategery to this thing. (heh)

I like to create rules and procedures for myself. So here they are:

1. I will go through each of my scrap bins, one at a time, and pull out all pieces large enough to cut into a 5″ square.  My red-and-pink bin was first.  I am trying NOT to be very selective and just use whatever I have, not trying to make any sense of it just yet.

2. I will cut only one square from each print (or solid – I’m using solids, too).  Once I make it through all of my scrap bins, I’ll see where I am. If I still need more, I will probably hit my stash boxes and cut from smaller pieces in there. We’ll see how it goes.

Red & Pink scrap bin

3. After I’ve got a scrap-box-worth of fabrics pulled, I’ll iron a whole bunch at a time and then watch some TV while I cut.  One of the things that bothers me the most about scrap quilting is cutting things one at a time – I’m a chain-piece, stack-and-whack kind of a girl, I hate inefficiency.  So I try to carefully stack several of my similar-sized or similar-shaped scraps on top of one another so that I can end up cutting 4 or 5 squares at a time.

Red & pink big pieces

4. Finally, I chain-piece.  Frankly, if I’m going to sit down and sew some triangles, I’d just as soon sew eight of them in a row. It’s not all that much more work than two. More on my preferred method of HST-making soon.

Truth be told, I sewed 11 pairs (22 total squares, since you’re making two at a time when you do half-square triangles) last Monday, the very first day.  In part because I was on a roll, and in part because I knew my mom was coming and my sewing time would be dramatically limited for the rest of the week.  True to my prediction, I did very little sewing again until Sunday night, when I knocked out 6 more pairs to end up slightly ahead for the week.  That made it through all of my red scraps, and got a start on my large pile of pinks.

Week 1 - red and pink

This week looks like it will be all pink, all the time.  Apparently, I have a lot of pink.

pink squares in waiting

If you’re keeping up with my initial idea of a pace, you should have 14 pairs, or 28 individual squares, done.  I am slightly ahead with 32, which will hopefully provide a buffer for when I inevitably fall behind.

So, what about you? Do you have a strategy going into this project? Are you choosing only certain colors, eliminating some from consideration, or are you just pulling at random?

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Comments (9)
Categories : Piecing, Quilt-Along
Tags : half-square triangles, scraps, triangle madness

Triangle Madness

By Liz · Comments (18) · September 26th, 2010

I’ve had this idea kicking around in my head for a while. Yes, of course, I need a new project like I need a hole in my head. And the timing isn’t perfect, but is it going to get any better with a new baby coming? Hardly.  So, here we go.

I want to make a half-square triangle quilt.  I want to just go through all of my scrap bins and use as much of it as I can to make a super-scrappy triangle quilt.

Scrap/Stash Management

But, of course, to make a reasonably-sized quilt, that’s a whole lot of little triangles.  I thought I might go about it in the vein of Amanda Jean‘s nine-patch-a-day quilt-along from last year.  A couple of triangles a day are manageable.  Thinking of them in sum total (I figure I’d need nearly 200 for a lap quilt) is too overwhelming.  But a bit at a time, I can do.

Anyone want to join in and do this madness with me?  Here’s my plan:

1. I am starting with 5″ squares, in part so that I’ll be able to use leftover pieces of charm packs.  That will leave me with 4″ (finished) blocks.

White squares cut

2. I will use a print and a white solid for each block.  I pulled out a big length of white I already had in my stash (might be Kona Bone?), and have cut it into 96 5″ squares so they’re ready to go (it was a little less than 2 yards).  You could, of course, use ONLY scraps and no white for double the scrappy goodness, but then I’d try to make sure there was some consistent contrast in the two fabrics you put together: light vs. dark, warm vs. cool, etc.

3. I will make it my goal to make two sets of triangle blocks per day (i.e. two pairs of a white and a print), which would give me 28 blocks a week.  If I can keep up that pace, I would make it through my 96 white squares in seven weeks, or almost mid-November. If I can’t keep it up, well, I’ll do my best.  This is a hobby, after all, not an obligation!

If you’re interested in joining in, let me know.  I’ll try to post links to folks playing along, and if there’s sufficient interest, I may create a Flickr group or something.  Obviously, it’s your quilt, so if you want to make the blocks bigger or smaller to suit your own interest and pace, go for it!

What will the quilt look like in the end? Well, there’s only about a million possibilities. We’ll cross that bridge later, but feel free to browse the Half-Square Triangle Quilts pool on Flickr if you’re in need of inspiration!

So, you in?

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Comments (18)
Categories : Piecing, Quilt-Along
Tags : half-square triangles, scrappy, scraps, triangle madness

Scrap management

By Liz · Comments (22) · April 12th, 2010

As I have mentioned before, I currently use our guest room as my sewing space.  It’s a little cramped with a big bed in there, but it works OK.

When I got my new sewing machine, though, I forced myself to do a major clean and re-organize to make it “worthy” of my fancy new purchase.

The bulk of my stash was previously in some open wire shelves, and while it was an OK solution, it was becoming a little too messy. The stacks were precarious, and larger pieces of yardage were stuck in the back until I practically forgot they were there.  Scraps were in a set of plastic drawers, organized by color.

Now, I’ve got my stash (basically anything from a scant fat quarter on up to several yards) nicely folded and in those drawers, organized by color.

Scrap/Stash Management

Aaahh, it makes me so happy.  I like that it is both easily visible and completely contained.  One drawer for reds and pinks, one for oranges and yellows, one green, one (stuffed to the brim) blue, one purple and white/multicolored prints, one brown/black/gray, and even a separate drawer for colored solids. (And yes, I had fun with my label-maker.)

Scrap/Stash Management

I used a 5.5″ wide piece of cardboard to fold everything from the scant fat quarters up to about 1/2 to maybe 3/4 yard.  The template was just the right size so that the fabric can be two-across, and is just shorter than the depth of the drawer.  Larger pieces were folded around my 6″ ruler and then folded in half, and tucked in the back. As you can see, the drawer itself is easy to pull completely out of the shelf and look at an entire color group, which is nice.

The old wire shelves have moved to the other side of the room, and now hold works in progress, and stacks of fabric that I have pulled for a particular project, as well as batting and other miscellaneous things.  Hopefully the “miscellaneous” category won’t get too out of control and the shelves won’t become a catch-all for everything I don’t feel like putting away.

Scrap/Stash Management

But my question for you, fellow fabric fiends, is how you organize your scraps (basically from maybe half of a fat quarter down to 2″ squares).  For the moment, I have moved mine into latching clear plastic boxes, also organized by color.  And it’s certainly a good start: again both visible and contained at the same time.

Scrap/Stash Management

But in talking to someone a week or two ago, I found that she actually cuts all of her scraps into uniform sizes and stores them that way.  Some 10″ squares, some 6″ squares, and on down the line.  On the one hand, the organization and neatness of it certainly has some appeal to me, over my tangled mass shoved in a box.  But it also makes me weirdly nervous. Cutting is just so… final. The one thing you really can’t un-do.  What would be the “right” sizes to cut?  What would simultaneously most useful and least wasteful?

So, an informal poll of my handful of readers: how do you store your scraps?  Are they in a big mess in a plastic bag? Sorted by color? Organized by size?  Do you cut them before storing, or just toss them in a box and figure it out later?

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Categories : Fabric
Tags : scraps, stash, storage

Charlie

By Liz · Comments (15) · February 2nd, 2010

That’s right, it’s madness up in here! Two finishes in less than a week! Well, it makes sense, as these two babies were born less than a week apart.

My nephew, Charlie. My very first nephew. My brother’s son.  He was born last Wednesday, about 10 days ahead of schedule. I was already working on the quilt when I got the call, but obviously his arrival sped things up a bit.  I hope they like his quilt. Because if they don’t, I’m taking it back. Because I am in love with it.  It feels so “boy” without beating you over the head with BLUE and TRUCKS and STEREOTYPES!

Charlie

It all started with a fat quarter bundle of Robert Kaufmann’s Animal Party prints that I bought from an Etsy seller, ages ago. I bought it on a whim, thinking it would be great for a baby boy at some point. Lo and behold, the ultrasound revealed that my brother’s first child was, in fact, a boy. And my sister-in-law mentioned something about a jungle/animal/explorer theme.  Golden!

I was undecided on what to do with these prints for a long, long time. I toyed with a whole bunch of different ideas, and couldn’t settle on one that I liked. And then Ashley posted about the Spotted Squares quilt she’s working on, and I had my inspiration.

Charlie

I felt compelled to be somewhat organized about it, not totally improvisational. (Because, seriously, improvising takes time! I like to chain-piece, people!)  They are all 8″ (finished) blocks. There are two different sized center squares (2″ and 4″, finished). There are two different layouts (centered and off-center). And there are two styles (print/color borders and white borders).  I picked fabrics from my stash to coordinate with the prints I already had, sticking mostly with brown, green, blue, and orange.

Oh, and the back. I kind of love the back. As much, if not more, than the front. I have to remember to do an actual quilt like this. Maybe for my kids…

Charlie

I was also torn as to how to quilt it, as I seem to be on almost every quilt I make.  I didn’t want to quilt it too densely, that much I knew.  But I’m psyched with what I went with: straight horizontal and vertical lines at random intervals.  I love that it kind of works with the square-but-wonky style of the front. I marked the lines with a washable pen and my ruler to keep them as straight as I could.

Charlie

Binding is from Connecting Threads, their Riviera line, which is now discontinued and on major clearance (those circle/dots are still available in three different colors).

Charlie

Anyways, I’m thrilled that this one is done. And I can’t wait to deliver it in person on Saturday, when I fly to Chicago to meet my sweet new nephew. Hooray!

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Categories : Finished Objects, Quilts
Tags : animal party, baby boy, baby quilt, gifts, robert kaufmann, scraps

Scrappy gifts, Part 2

By Liz · Comments (2) · December 26th, 2009

Oh. Um. Hi there!

Holidays, travel, craziness. You know how it goes.

Anyways, I realized I never showed the other scrappy gift I made.  This one was a birthday gift for my husband, who tends to get tension headaches and loves heat packs on the back of his neck.

ricebag1

It’s a rice heat therapy bag with washable cover, and I found the tutorial at Sew, Mama, Sew.  Super easy, and I added an extra round of topstitching around the edges of the rice bag for a little more security.

ricebag2

Of course, when I made the second one, I realized that topstitching was a lot easier if I did the first three sides before I put the rice in the bag. Genius, here. And, speaking of being an idiot, I didn’t take a picture of the second one before I gave it to my aunt. But it was cream with green and purple scraps and really matched her decor. I swear.

Anyways, throw together a few today! It takes no time at all. Chuck that bag in the microwave for two minutes and you’ve got nice, toasty weight to put on that knot in your shoulder or tuck under the covers to keep your toes warm.

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Categories : Crafts, Finished Objects
Tags : gifts, rice heat therapy bag, scraps, sew mama sew

No, really, I NEEDED it.

By Liz · Comments (8) · April 30th, 2009

Clearly, I’m in a bit of an obsessive phase with my sewing right now.  I’m constantly doing it, thinking about it, reading about it, and dreaming up new projects before I finish any of the old ones.  I’m hoping I can mellow it out into just a steady habit, instead of burning out and not touching my sewing machine for months on end (it has happened before).  In the meantime, I guess I’ll just try to be as productive as I can!

Take last night, for instance.  When I should have been in bed, I was having a little too much fun with an empty oatmeal can, some glue, and leftover fabric.

Pincushion and pin cup

Inspired by crazy mom quilts‘ tutorial involving an empty tuna can, I decided I wanted to make a pincushion. I was annoyed at my magnetic one, which didn’t keep a hold on the pins the way I would have hoped.  I didn’t make it exactly as the tutorial suggests, but I mostly just remembered the rough idea and improvised.

I used a rubber band to guide where I wanted to cut the box, so it was about 2″ deep.  I cut some fabric about 5″ wide and 13.5″ long, a bit more than the circumference of the box.  Sewed it lengthwise with right sides together, turned it right side out and pressed it so it was around 2.5″ wide and two layers of fabric (so the Quaker logo wouldn’t show through.  I sewed the ends together, put a little glue on the box to help hold things in place, and slipped my little fabric ring over the outside.  I then took a 9″ square of fabric for the actual cushion part, but a big handful of polyfil in the middle, and pulled the corners around to the bottom.  I sewed a button in the middle, which had the added benefit of securing the corners on the bottom.  A little more glue, stuffed it into the box, and voila!

Pincushion and pin cup

Oh. Ahem.  That second thing next to the pincushion… well… obviously I needed somewhere to put my safety pins, too. Right? That’s normal…

Cut out the other end of the box, took another scrap of the red fabric, sewed a button in the middle to secure it to the bottom of the cut-out box. [With the pins in the box, of course, you can't see the button. But it's cute, trust me.]  Glued down the inside corners, the sides, and folded it over the top of the cut box.  Then same deal with the outside sleeve to cover it.

Pincushion and pin cup

Obsessive, much?  Yeah, probably.  Do I wish I had gone to bed earlier last night?  Definitely.  But they’re super cute, and now I have a better containment solution for my pins.

Sigh. I’m going over the deep end, aren’t I?

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Categories : Crafts
Tags : pincushion, safety pins, scraps
     

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Wish List

Ideas swirling around in my head that haven't gotten going yet...
  • Modified Bento tutorial from Film in the Fridge
  • Aqua and off-white (and green?)... something
  • Half-hexagons
  • Picnic quilt
  • Citrus (orange, yellow, green, pink?)
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  • Forest Lake, Part II
  • Triangle Madness
  • Avian Therapy
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  • Bee Addicted 2 Quilt
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  • One Block Over Modern Meadow

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