A Snow Crystal Done and one Begun

This one was started and finished last week, but has just now been pressed. I love how each one of these pink and white blocks is just a little different.

The centre star and four partial stars for the corners are ready for the next block.

There are still some leaves on the roof garden trees but a lot have fallen — and the boys are spending a lot of time watching them floating by the window. They’re saying we may get lake effect snow today. If we get large enough snowflakes, they’ll be chasing them!


Leaf Watching, Kitty Style

The leaves are falling off the trees on the roof garden and when it’s windy they fly by the windows. The kitties are spending a lot of time on the window sill watching those leaves!

We got this shot after they had both been wide-eyed watching leaves fly by. Lester was heading off to a snooze in a favourite kitty spot.


Smudge, on the other hand, was not quite finished. Of course, he had to pose for the camera before going back to the leaf chasing.

I guess it’s no big surprise we can’t stop taking pictures of him! Look at this face!


Sunday was an odd day — very windy, heavy rain at times and then, around dinner hour, it got very dark. The sky was an odd colour, which didn’t really get picked up too well in this shot, and about ten minutes after this was taken there was incredibly bright lightning and then a very loud sound of thunder. No rain though — the rain all fell earlier in the afternoon. Apparently the wind this afternoon was so strong that it knocked over a fairly large tree somewhere in the city.

On a quilt-related note, I do have the fifth snow crystal block finished but haven’t pressed it yet so no pictures till that’s done. Have begun the sixth block. I just cannot stop making these!!

Block 4

These pink and white Snow Crystal blocks are going together amazingly quickly. I finished this one off last night.

Every time I press one of these blocks, I’m thrilled with how the little seam intersections all work out and the block lies so flat. This is a very good reminder to myself to do the blocks as I go rather than save them up and do a bunch at once. That becomes tedious. Doing a block at a time is quick and, when all the blocks are done, I’ll be ready to stitch the rows together rather than having to press endlessly.

I think, if I add 2 or 3 more sets of large hexagons surrounded by stars to this candle mat/table runner/ whatever it is that I had started, this would be a nice size and perhaps a good Christmas gift. Binding this may be an adventure but I love the look of it and think some pretty quilting could be done in the centre of the large plain hexagons.

The gardener has been out on the roof garden taking the flowers out of the flower beds and from around the trees. It is now really starting to look like the grey days of fall have arrived. Looking out and not seeing those brilliant colours means, I guess, that winter really is coming. I hope every year that somehow it might give us a miss but …

Lester is definitely getting his winter coat. Some serious combing/brushing will be going on around here now.


Another Snow Crystal on a …

… day on which we saw snowflakes!?? How can this be? It’s only October! It has been very windy and quite cool all day and around 4:00 this afternoon I looked out and oh, no!!! Little white flakes were flying by the window. I am NOT ready to deal with the idea of snow. No way. Not yet. It’s much too early. Sheesh, I haven’t even taken my winter coat in for cleaning. Guess I’d better do that sooner rather than later.

The only good thing about having the flu is that I had prepped all these pieces beforehand so I can curl up on the couch and stitch. This Snow Crystal block is now finished and the next one is about to be started. Definite silver lining to not feeling great.

I’ve found a trick that makes pressing the back a whole lot faster. As I join each round, as I do these in rounds, so to speak (which I’ll explain in a minute), I finger press the seam intersections in that round. That way, when I get the whole block finished and head for the iron it’s really a matter of quickly pressing each little seam intersection.

I was asked in an e-mail by Cheryl about the method I use to make these blocks. Sorry, Cheryl — I did try to respond by e-mail but AOL seems to be bouncing e-mails from our ISP. So here goes. I’m hand piecing these, using the templates in the free Inklingo downloadable collection which has all the shapes for this block. The block finishes at 9″.

I had no pattern but had seen a picture of a quilt made of these blocks and as soon as the Inklingo collection with these shapes was available, I knew I had to make my pink and white quilt with this block.

The shapes are printed on to the back of your fabric and you end up with perfect precise shapes every time. If you’re curious about it, there’s a video you can watch here and the free downloadable collection can be found here. Downloading the collection is dead easy, especially if one takes the time to read through the download instructions found in the drop-down support menu — one could even print them before starting the download.

My method for constructing the block is simple. I make the 8-point centre star and the four corner 6-point partial stars. Then add the 8 squares around the centre star, then add the four 6-point partial corner stars and finally add the remaining 12 squares and 8 triangles to finish the block off. Each block is composed of 32 diamonds, 20 squares and 8 triangles. Printing the pieces I need for each block takes seconds. Because the lines are so precise, cutting the shapes apart takes very little time and I’m stitching almost immediately. No basting, no whip stitching, no papers to remove.

I love this picture of Smudge — he’s so alert and wide-eyed in it!

If today is any indication, I don’t think Lester will be sitting on the windowsill too much for a few months. It’s getting too chilly by the window!!

Those silly little white flakes are still drifting by. This is not good — not good at all. I am really having trouble accepting that there is snow, however short-lived, so early. Yuck!

Wednesday Bits and Pieces

We’ve had a lot of rain the last 24/36 hours and a wonderful thunderstorm last night — lots of light and sound. Unfortunately, a migraine for me is almost always the result of this kind of weather and I’ve now had this one for 2 days.

To cheer myself up, I’ve been playing with a secret project with these fabrics:

I hope to be able to show what I’ve been working on sometime next week.

There have been a lot of swaps on the Inklingo list and one of the things we’ve swapped have been one-inch hexagons. I don’t know why, but I went through and picked out all the mauve/purple hexagons and started putting this together. Not sure where this is going, although I’m tempted to applique a stem with a couple of leaves and have a big purple hexagon flower wallhanging.


I have a question for those of you who have had your quilts quilted by long-arm quilters. Is there a secret to softening up those quilts once they come back and you’ve bound them? My king-size quilt is as stiff as a surfboard! I figure there has to be some trick that I just don’t know about, as this quilt is not something under which I think anyone would want to sleep. It’s pretty and the quilting is quite nice, but it’s stiff! I think it could stand up by itself. Any suggestions?

Rainy overcast days make for sleepy kitties. Smudge, in a half-awake state:


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A Blue and White Finish

The last stitch was taken at about 11:15 Friday night and the top is completed, made with shapes from Inklingo Collection 1. The backing fabric has now been chosen and I will wash and iron it today. I’d really like to get this basted and quilted before the end of the month.

It’s definitely being machine quilted. That painted-on white on white fabric is just too tough to needle. Hand piecing with it was enough for me!

We had more freaky thunderstorms Sunday afternoon/evening. The wind was intense at points and the rain came down in buckets. But it was the noise of the thunder during one of the storms that really was rather odd. It sounded more like a low-flying airplane or a train going at warp speed than a normal thunder clap. Odd. So far this year the weather has seemed odd a lot!

This is one of my favourite pictures of Smudge. I’m not altogether sure what the look says, though. Perhaps I don’t want to know!


A Riot of Colour

The climbing flowering plant out on the roof garden is really displaying some gorgeous blossoms! Today we we asked and the gardener told us it’s allamanda. We have had one of those on the roof garden every year for the past 3 or 4 years and they seem to last well into the fall. The colour is amazingly vibrant!

Here’s a close-up of some of the flowers.

These lobelia have now been planted along the edges of the flower beds and under the trees.
The blue and white star top is getting very close to finished. A few more half stars need to be added along the edges and then it will be done. The decision now is whether to put a border on it or not. At the size it is now it’s quite acceptable as a lap quilt. With a border it will also be fine as a lap quilt. If I do add a border it will be in the same blue fabric.

I’m leaning towards no border as I love the look of old quilts that just seem to stop at the binding but, on the other hand, I also love the finished look of those with borders! Decisions!! Any input??

The heat has broken. Monday night we had the most incredible thunderstorm. I like thunderstorms but this one had me a bit nervous. The lightning was almost non-stop and the thunder was unbelievably loud. Incredibly loud. It actually woke us up. The claps of thunder were so huge that one could feel the vibration. The kitties? The kitties weren’t the least bit perturbed.

It’s moderate today, with a high around 75. They say the heat and humidity will be back on Friday.

Lester doesn’t seem to mind what the weather does. He finds spots to curl up and have a snooze.


A Lily Pad for Froggie

On the weekend I thought I’d make another of these needle cases. This time I decided to use some green fabrics, thinking it would look marvelously spring-like and fresh.

Once again, I tried sewing it by machine. Wrong decision. The curves turned out very irregular and rather odd. However, when it was finished DH said it looked like a lily pad. And it does. So our little frog — we have a few of these along with the teddy bears — now has a lily pad.

Here is he floating along on the water on his new lily pad. 🙂


There was a bit of a current and the lily pad got turned over, but he’s just fine!

Our weather on the weekend was incredible. Hot as can be with humidex values in the 42C range. Yesterday we even had a tornado watch! A tornado watch in Toronto?? Unbelievable. The sky got rather odd looking at points but all we got was a bit of rain. However, areas to the west and north of us got some substantial storms and there were sightings of funnel clouds.

I’m definitely not wishing for a tornado, but a thunderstorm would have been nice. We love thunderstorms. The cats aren’t the least bit upset by thunderstorms either — and are often found sitting on the windowsill during a storm.

What does Smudge do during a hot, hot weekend? He hangs out on windowsills or anywhere else and just enjoys! I sometimes wonder if it takes a week or so of this for us all to thaw out after the winter!

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An Almost Finished Top

The blue and white star top is almost finished. I just need to add the partial stars along the edges so that I have straight edges and one quick border and it will be finished!! I was contemplating appliqueing the top on to the borders and keeping the uneven edges, as I rather like that look, but the heat wave that’s starting promptly made me reassess! It will be too hot to even have a small quilt top draped over my lap while I applique. They’re saying today we may even hit 43C with the humidex.

I am NOT complaining about the heat! I love the heat. Particularly after the extremely long winter and awfully cool spring we’ve had. I wish there was a way to bottle the heat and save it for the winter! I will enjoy every minute of this. Of course I say that knowing full well we have air conditioning that I can turn on in a second if it gets too warm. I do feel terribly sorry for those in the city who don’t have a/c as this weekend promises to be a real scorcher!

I have had a few comments about Lester getting the lion’s share of the spotlight lately (fitting, right — the lion’s share for a kitty we call our house lion?) so figured I’d better explain a bit. Lester has a heart condition, hypertropic cardiomyopathy, as a result of which he has had two small strokes, the first just over a year ago. Given that, we are thrilled when we see him so active and interested in things. We have been incredibly fortunate that he has responded so well to the meds and is as active as one could hope an adult kitty would be.

Never fear, Smudge gets an equal amount of attention. Unfortunately, most of the photos of Smudge are when he’s sleeping or half asleep as when he’s awake he’s quite active and the photos would be incredibly blurry.

This photo cracks me up — the two paws draped ever so casually over the edge of the kitty bed and that look on his face!

Smudge is our cuddle cat. He loves to curl up on your lap or in your arms and have a nice long snooze. Of course, a 20+ pound cat in this heat on one’s lap is going to be rather uncomfortable — but that’s what air conditioning is for!

I hope everyone has a super weekend. I’m going to soak up some heat!

Progress Report

I’m happy this week with the progress I’ve made on the blue and white stars. One more row along the sides, the finishing bits and a border and this top will be done! I absolutely adore working with this blue fabric. Am already thinking about the next blue and white quilt I might make using it!

I’ve also been thinking that a technicolour one of these would be fun — using all sorts of brights for the stars with a “nice” white like Kona Snow or something along those lines. I am now classifying white on whites as nice and not nice. LOL All because of trying to needle through that painted-on stuff!

They finally released a long-term summer forecast for us and I love it! A hotter and drier than normal summer. Okay — well, the drier isn’t so great, particularly for farmers, but the hotter? I can’t wait for the first heatwave! After the winter and horribly cold spring we have had, even days of 110+ with the humidex readings will be just fine with me. I remember my mother saying, whenever someone complained it was too hot and humid in the summer, “It’s a long winter, don’t complain!” She was right!

Lester — we almost caught him with his ruff in his mouth. Almost. He looks so goofy when he does that!

Smudge looking as though he has just woken up. I don’t think he was thrilled to be having his photo taken this time.