Hello Hive 2 Friends. Allow me to
introduce myself, I am Lisa Stahl,
know on Instagram as doxiesandturtlesandscottiesomy and on flickr as
lisasu1988, and I live with my family in Milford, Connecticut. Milford is a
"little city with a big heart" of about 50,000 on the coast of Long
Island Sound nestled between Bridgeport and New Haven, with 13 miles of
beaches, with part of that being a state park. There are so many beautiful
places to take pictures and enjoy wildlife both land and sea. We moved here
from Pennsylvania about 15 years ago and I am still in awe of the beauty here.
I have two children, Hannah who will be 21 in the Fall and Peter who just
turned 17 and have been married to my best friend, Jake, for almost 26 years.
From left to right: Myself, Peter, Jake, and Hannah. |
Our
home is know as "The Ark" by our families because we have so many
animals. We currently have two Dachshunds, Bugsy and Tucker, a Scottish Terrier
named Angus, our Felines in Residence
Miss Taffy, Khaleesi and Julius, Carmen is a Senegal parrot and then
there are Clyde and Thurston, the Chinese Fighting fish. They're all adoptees,
we wouldn't have it any other way.
I have always loved crafting and have always
had my fingers in the pot (literally at times) all of my life, be it sewing,
rug making, scrapbooking, painting, drawing, different forms of pottery or
stained glass. Over the last year I rediscovered my passion for fabric and
other textiles and decided I wanted to quilt for real instead of from my head
and that brings me to this point.
My
stash...my stash suddenly went from several thrifted vintage sheets that I have
collected over the years, to all,of these beautiful collections from all of
these hip, imaginative designers. I am busting at the seams right now with
fabric and am TRYING to organize it so that I know what I have. I'm using comic
book boards to wrap it around and baskets to corral it in. My sewing table is
an old library table that I thrifted last summer. I was able to thrift some shelving to slide under my table that are short and longish that I can put some of my
baskets of fabric on by color. I'm keeping the fabric I purchased in
collections together though, that way I don't have to attempt to match it up
again. It's very time consuming, but I guess if I would stop taking time out to
pet the fabric, it wouldn't take as long.
My sewing room is our great room which I
share with my daughter who is a painter and draws along with being a college
student. The Great Room lives up to its name in size and for the benefits it
provides an artist. It overlooks the
woods, which we are fortunate enough to have on two sides of our property. It
goes back for several hundred acres and can never be built on because there are
wetlands within it. There are three eight foot long picture windows lining the
back of the house so that we can enjoy the morning and mid-afternoon sunlight,
perfect for seeing all of the colors in the fabric rainbow, and also the
variety of wildlife that inhabit the woods. We are fortunate to have a fox and
her kits out there right now along with some turkeys. Last summer we had a
family of owls living in the high trees and it was so neat to hear them calling
to one another. I hope they're back this year. You would think we lived in the
country, but we are smack dab in the middle of suburbia. I love where I live
and my family very much, I am very blessed to be where I am in life at this
moment.
My favorite designers include but are not
limited to Tula Pink, Kate Spain, Alison Glass, Valori Wells, Dear Stella and
Anna Maria Horner. I'm also waiting with baited breath for the new Cotton and
Steel line to be released in the next couple of months. These designers are so
innovative and hip in their designs and ideas, and their color coordination is
impeccable. They are always on the cutting edge and coming out with the next
"big thing", and I love it. I would love to spend a day with each one
of them and see each ones process and ask questions, find out what makes them
tick, pick their brains and get an ideal of how they became so successful. That
would be soo cool!
The one thing that I have learned since I
started quilting that I wish I knew before I started is how much of a binge
shopper I can be. I can go for a month
or two or more without spending any money on fabric or supplies. But get me
started and baby this girl doesn't want to stop! I put money aside each month and when I don't
spend it, the money rolls over so it adds up. Right now I'm saving my Sheckles
for anything new from Quilt Market I might NEED! Enough about me, let's move on to the
quilting!!
The block we are doing this month is The block that makes up
The Road to Tennessee quilt as seen here to the left. A little bit more about
this lovely quilt and block at the end of the tutorial.
Now on with the show!!
**ALL SEAMS ¼” UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED!**
Step #1-
Cut four 5” squares (here by called “Charm Squares”), they can come from a Charm Pack or you may cut them
yourself. All I ask is that they be colorful!!
I prefer a print but a solid is okay. All the colors can all match, you
can do two pairs of solids or one solid and one print, or two sets of two
different prints. The choice is up to you , I just want it to ooze bright
colors and happiness!!
Step #2- Cut
eight 2”
background squares in white (may be slightly off-white, but NO beige or tan
please unless it's totally unavoidable).
Step #3- Take
your ruler or straight edge and draw a diagonal line down the WRONG SIDE of each of the white
2" blocks.
Step #4- Take a charm square and place it face up on
your work surface. Take two of the newly marked 2" squares and place them
marked side up at corners across from each other, so that the diagonal line is perpendicular
with the edge of the charm square (see photo).
Now pin each
one in place (see photo below). Repeat this with all of your Charms and 2"
squares.
Move Charm
Squares to the ironing board and clip your hanging threads. Sorry my ironing
board cover is so busy. If I'm going to be ironing something other than fun
stuff, I might just as well have something fun to look at!
Step #6- Take the point of one white square that is
pointing in and bring it to the outside point
diagonally
across from it. Finger press it (if you need to, add a little heat from your
iron, then finger press it), then press it with your iron so that the corners
are "on point" (this will be three thicknesses).
Step #7-
Pull back the top white flap. On the bottom one, still in the up facing
position, from the seam you just sewed toward the corner, measure out
1/4". Make a couple dots perpendicular to your seam at 1/4".
Now connect
those dots so you have a straight line perpendicular to your seam. Repeat on
the other side and on the remaining Charm Squares.
Step #8-
Cut along the line, cutting off the two bottom layers. Only the top white one
will remain (the one you originally finger pressed).
Flip the charm over and press the remaining
1/4" of the white down toward the MIDDLE of the charm square. Press both
sides of the remaining corner. Depending
on your fabric you may want to use starch on this step to give your fabric some
body. In future steps it comes in very handy, so you can kill two birds with
one stone here instead of coming back to do it later. Press (and starch) your remaining Charm
Squares. At this point it MAY look like you should clean the edges of the
squares up, to square them off. BUT
PLEASE DON'T. Please resist the urge to square up these blocks at any time . If
you abide by the seam allowance (1/4") there shouldn't be an issue.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
INFORMAL LITTLE
SURVEY
How many of
you use starch in your quilting regularly and if so when did you first start
using it? Leave me your experiences
with it in the comments section attached to this blog post if you would. Thank
you for your help. I just discovered it about a month or so ago on a blog, but
I didn't actually buy any until I was doing test blocks for this project. I
find it's very nice especially if you are doing scant seams, or in my case,
actually trying to come in at the 1/4" seam because the fabric seems to
have "less of a mind of its own" and goes where I actually want it to
a bit easier. Also, it's not your
grandmother's or even your mother's starch anymore. I used to hate it when
either one of them would press my good clothes because they ended up hurting
because the formulation was too stiff. I remember when I was little pulling at
my dress saying "it's pointy Mama!"
As soon as we got back from wherever we had to wear the hot
uncomfortable things, we stripped and we're in our play clothes before Uncle
Bud and his passel were out of the driveway! NO more kids getting half naked
running from the car to the house anymore, it's made much differently. It keeps
your collars, cuffs and more where they should be, without all of the agony
they caused in the past. And it doesn't
build up on your iron or in your fabrics like it used to either.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Step #9-
Choosing your own destiny. There are two possible configurations if you chose
to use two different fabrics in the beginning and I'm going to cover how to set
those blocks up in this step.
Below is one
of the possible configurations that you can have when dealing with two
different colors. Using 2 matching quarters on the top (side or bottom, however
you want to position it once it's complete) and two matching quarters on the
bottom with both of them coming together to form a V shape. If you have
followed the 1/4" seam allowance throughout all of the steps till now, the
centers should come together and fit like a glove. Once your comfortable with the placement, pin
your first seam, good side to good side for the first half of the block and again for the second half of the block.
If this is the set up you chose, sit
tight while I explain the other configuration.
Half and Half Configuration. + (Name created especially for this tutorial) |
Below is the
second possible configuration you can have when using two sets of different
fabric. This time, every other quarter
will be a different fabric, as shown in the photo below. It's very important that your fabric fit
together being very mindful of the pattern here. If you want to change anything
to make it fit better you HAVE to do it corner instead of side to side like the
formation above. Again and especially on this pattern, seam allowance is
key. Once you are happy with how you
have everything fitting together, flip them so they are good side to good side
and pin them on the line you will need to sew to make them fit in a side to side fashion (this is important
for finishing the construction of the block in the next step. Don't stray on
this. ) Follow this for both halves and
sew your seams. Now the people from the first configuration can join us for the
rest of the instructions.
Corner to corner configuration. + |
Step #10- Press
the seams open. If that isn't possible them press them to the darkest side. Now
it's time to line the block up for the last seam. This is where the perfect
1/4" seam comes in. If you have succeeded doing this, when laying the two
pieces good side to good side, the white seams in the middle (especially the
white triangles in the middle) should line up perfectly. Pin and you're ready
to sew your last seam. If one side is off and the ends don't match up like they
should you are going to have to finagle it a bit. Put the half with the longest
white triangles right side up on your surface. Take the other half, right side
down, and work the white triangles until the seams fit properly (this will make
the edges out of line, with one side of the seam being longer than another.
This is the result of the seams are off. Once you have the seams fit properly
pin your fabric where you will need to sew your seam.
Lining up seams.
Finagling a seam that wasn't sewn with a perfect 1/4"
seam.
Step #11-
Sew the two remaining halves together.
And there you
have it, your Road to Tennessee Block:
And this is
what your block should look like when you are finished!
If yours
doesn't look like this, go back through, as you may have missed something. If you are
still having problems please contact me at (blueturtle19 at gmail dot com) and
I will walk you through and we can figure out what's going on.
Referring to
the history of this beautiful block, when you sew two of these blocks side by
side or one upon the other it resembles converging roads, off handedly, you are also creating a modern day
symbol "X" or a kiss.
And what we
created here, with our actual block, is the "O" or the hug and/or
what Modern Quilters call the "snowball". The combination that the quilt produces are
the modern day Hugs and Kisses symbols that we all love to add when we sign a
card or letter to a loved one.
I wasn't able to find a concrete reason as to
why they call it "The Road to Tennessee" quilt, but the State of
Tennessee is rich with quilt history and is part of the Appalachian Quilt
Trail, a plethora of our country's rich middle American quilt history.
Thanks for the tutorial, I take the ferry from Port Jefferson to Bridgeport. Miss the ocean, live in the midwest now. I also lived in PA in the mountains, miss my mountains.
ReplyDeletega447,
ReplyDeleteSuch a small world! Where bouts did you live in PA? We livedin Danielsville, at the base of the Blue Mountains where the Appalachian Trail crosses, on the opposite side, and could see the lights from the Blue Mountain Ski Resort from our front windows in the winter time. We were out in the country and there was no other light pollution and the stars were so bright.
I have never lived anywhere other than the east. I was actually born and raised in Syracuse, NY and went to Syracuse University, GO ORANGE!! Then I got married and we moved to PA where my DH was from. Where are you currently in the Midwest? I'm hoping to travel a little more once my son is out of high school and I hope to see at least one place in every state before I die.
I consider Connecticut my "home home" now because this is where my kids have gone to school and where we have made to most memories as a family. It's a great place to raise kids and with the directions that they are both going in, I think that they will be here for a good portion of their lives too.
This is my first Bee and therefore my first tutorial and I find it very exciting!!
Lisa
I might have to make a few of these before getting it right, but I'm looking forward to the challenge! :)
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteVee,
ReplyDeleteI'm sure you will do fine just relax and take your time, enjoy it. It seems more technical than it really is. Once I did my first,one I was able to do five more in an hour (not counting cutting time). Believe me, I'm not a pro quilter so I wouldn't pick something I couldn't do myself. If you get stuck drop me a note here and I will help you out!
Lisa
Very good explanations on this tutorial ...love the colours of your projects :-))
ReplyDeleteMargarita
Thank you Margarita. I'm a very visual learner and I guess I'm passing that along in my tutorials. My hope is that everyone ends up on the same page in the end. As for the colors, I love any shade of purple!
ReplyDelete