What is
your name? My name
is Willa Downes. This has been my first
Stash Bee experience and Hive 12 has been fabulous!!! Thank you all so much for great narratives,
photos and tutorials!!!!
Where
do you live?
I live in Fairfax, Virginia, a Washington D.C. suburb.
Tell us
about your family (Spouse, kids, grandkids, pets, etc.)
I have an amazing husband of 43 years; we met as Peace Corps
trainees on our way to the Fiji Islands to be teachers. We courted on and off as Volunteers, went our
separate ways at the end of service but got back together and married eighteen
months later. We have two fantastic grown children. Our son lives nearby and our daughter lives
in a Boston suburb. She has an amazing 3
½ year old son, a newborn daughter and a fantastic husband! We had pets when the kids were growing up;
now we travel and enjoy feeding the many goldfinches that live in the trees
around our house. It is a real challenge
to feed the birds in northern Virginia and not have the squirrels beat them to
the food. After many feeders, we finally
have two that are really squirrel-proof.
Tell us
about how you got interested in quilting.
I went to a quilt show with my sister-in-law and her cousin the
winter before our daughter’s August wedding.
I saw a quilt there that seemed a perfect wedding present. I told myself I shouldn’t get started
quilting because it would be the opening of a dam! All day I resisted getting the pattern and
fabric. However, I went back the next
day and got both! It’s now many quilts
later and I have so much fabric which I have great plans for. I retired from my beloved teaching career
(preschool special ed, Head Start, and kindergarten through second grade) two
summers ago to have time to sew and be a grandmother. It is wonderful to have time to be “Nana” and
to sew.
How do
you organize your fabric stash?
Our FAMILY ROOM doubles as my QUILT STUDIO!
The first fabrics were stored in an upstairs bedroom
closet. Everything else was done
downstairs. I cut fabric on the dining
room table, sewed on the kitchen table, and ironed in the family room. This continued for about four years. Then I realized I should use the family room
as a quilting studio with the ability to return it to family room status when
we have company. My husband often reads
in the living room and works on projects in the dining room table. I didn’t want to make him into a “quilter’s
widow”; I wanted our activities to be near enough together we could easily talk
to each other which is why I didn’t decide on a bedroom for a studio.
Fabric is now stored in a desk (mostly yard pieces), a dresser
(mostly fat quarters) that is the right height for cutting and an old chest
(mostly multiple yard pieces). Novelty
fabrics are behind some doors on a bookcase.
I sew on an old kitchen table that looks out on our backyard which is
woods. What a treat it is to watch the
seasons come and go as I sew!
When we have company, the sewing machine gets packed up, the ironing board put away, the cutting mats get stored, and the desk gets closed. The Studio now looks like a Family Room!!
Who
is/are your favorite fabric designers?
I shop for fabrics I like, not looking for designers. The result is I often unknowingly choose
Hoffman, Kaufman, Fasse. I often find
flowery fabrics and Asian fabrics irresistible.
I love bright colors. This year I
began been using solids and am also really enjoy them.
What is
one thing you have learned that you wish you knew when you first started
quilting?
I have come to realize that I have no desire to make anything
larger than a lap quilt. My largest
quilt was 62 inches square. I really
like making baby quilts about 48 inches square.
This year I began making NICU quilts for the nearby hospital. These can be as small as 24 inches
square! I also realize I really don’t
want to struggle making points match/losing points; I like to do easy paper
piecing.
What is
your favorite sewing/quilting tool and why should we all go out and buy it?
My stitch ripper outer with its own light is really helpful.
Who is
your favorite fictional character and why? (Could be from a book, movie, TV
show, etc.)
Working with young children for so many years I believe in the
adage, one learns all the important things in kindergarten. Books I loved reading to the children include
Along Comes Ping, Ferdinand, Mike Mulligan and the Steam Engine, The Little
Red Hen, Abiyoyo, The Lorax, Bartholomew and the Ooblick, The Giving Tree,
Charlotte’s Web, Ruby Bridges and any of the books about Harriet Tubman and
George Washington Carver.
THE TUTORIAL
Hopefully this will be an easy block for everyone. Please use colorful floral fabrics if you
have them. If you don’t bright colors
will work too!
Cut sixteen inch long strips, anywhere between 1 ½ inches wide to 2 ½ inches wide.
Sew the lengths together with ¼ inch seams. Sew together enough strips so you have a 16
inch square block. Press all the seams
going in the same direction. You are
finished!!!!
I will probably cut all the blocks into four large triangles
and reassemble them; though I may also
just assemble them by alternating the direction of the strips. I will decide when I get the blocks.
A quilt I made by cutting
strips into triangles and reassembling them as squares (from a Craftsy Course,
Strip Your Stash by Nancy Smith,)
Two blocks sewn together by
alternating direction of the strips.
Thanks in advance!!! Have fun!!!
1 comment:
Wow, I love your QUILT studio. Those creations are so pretty. Thanks for the photos dear. I am also going to participate in the quilting event at one of the local venues in San Francisco. It will be my first presentation so I am quite nervous!
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