I need to get these smaller pot sorted out and moved as they look a mess here and need organizing more stylistically. On the left is the Magnolia stellata, flowering beautifully now it has minimal pruning. The gardener here before we bought the house always pruned in autumn, regardless of whether that was right for the particular shrub or not. The two Pieris are looking lovely too.
Below: reads 5 1/4" and 4 1/4", then 4 7/8" and 3 7/8" for the two different sized blocks. Again, this is cutting tiny little triangles out and yet Morning's Minion advised against doing the quarter square triangles that way with the last abandoned quilt.
Then this afternoon, MORE expense. L. Whale had to go to the vet with his sore paw, and as I suspected, the nail WAS split/broken and causing infection again (why didn't they spot that first time round?) Anyway, he has antibiotics and painkillers, and we managed to break the cat carrier trying to get him reluctantly back in. So on top of the operation he has to have next week (£91), I have to pay for today's treatment AND a new cat carrier (just ordered). April is proving to be a hellishly expensive month. Oh, and the new navy sheet I ordered was delivered today, and is black - and I checked and had ordered black (by mistake obviously). So am keeping it to go on my bed and have had to order another. Sigh. I had to pay for the Antiques Fair too (just short of £200) . . . I hope it will be a good one. Then it's Malvern Flea next Monday . . . I need an outing!
I was very glad this morning when I didn't have to be up at 6 a.m. in order to drive to Tam's to babysit (have to be there before 8.45). Rosie has had a nasty cold and is teething and it's been so hard getting her to sleep. Yesterday I had to take her out in the car (I have the spare car seat) and get her to sleep that way. I was very relieved when Tam got back early from work (4 p.m.)
She sent me home via Devil's Bridge on a new route, which takes you along the cycle route beside the River Wye and it was SO beautiful, as it's shallow and stony there, and there are little islands covered in Gorse in full bloom. I wish I'd taken a photo. The road goes on through Pontrhydfendigaid, so not far from Strata Florida. The road takes you through beautiful upland scenery too, looking across dun hillsides of moor grass, interspersed with upland grazing and conifer plantations. The road is VERY bendy - doubling back on itself at times. Slow and steady is the order of the day. Devil's Bridge had opened for the season and there were still quite a few cars in the car park as I drove past.
Right, apologies for lack of brain and once again NOT being able to work the block out - made two but they are not 8 1/2" blocks and they are too bad to share.
So glad I made my meal at breakfast time (meatballs in tomato/onion/peppers/courgette sauce) and there's enough for 3 meals, so will freeze one portion.
I'm trying to see what the problem is....I'd make paper shapes to work out the pattern, get that right...then make templates of those shapes with ¼" seam allowance added all round....not sure if that helps...
ReplyDeleteI'll try that tomorrow, thanks gz. Sure it's my brain that's addled, but hey, another bit of Desperation Technology as I have gotten rid of the MOST annoying pretend-McAffee popup in the right hand bottom corner which would NOT get lost, so I did a search on the name that appeared on it and found out how to zap the blardy thing in settings!
ReplyDeleteYour primroses look fabulous and as you say the photos don't do them justice. I don't quilt so can't help I'm afraid and maths was never my strong point. We had rain overnight which has perked the garden up and even the 'lawn' has revived a bit. Iris used to fall asleep in the car, so I always kept a couple of magazines in it, so I'd have something to read until she woke up. Hugs Xx
ReplyDeleteI was dropped from the main maths class at school - could never see the point of Algebra or Geometry - have a right hand brain - and was quite happy just to do ordinary Arithmetic! Rosie will wake up the moment the car has stopped - unless you leave the engine running. FOMO - Fear of Missing Out I think!!
DeleteI agree w GZ above, tho I d prob also make a graph paper drawn out pattern, then make individual patterns. Also cut one size block at a time, do the larger ones first.
ReplyDeleteMassive rotary cutting directions are always confusing, it isn't you!
I hope Rosie feels better! She is not an easy child, is she, tho so adorable and smart.
lovely spring scenery.
PS your writing must be very evocative! I had a vivid dream last night that I was at the desert castles, seeing the view! Bad news, the only toilet was at the top of the very step stone stairs. Thank goodness I woke up!
I am about to go and do it MY way and see if my hunch works. I thought I must be having a really bad brainless day yesterday so didn't even dare to take the Stanley knife (finger cutting off sharp as it's brand new!) to trim the wallpaper but today I must woman-up to that job and believe in myself!
DeleteRosie's not easy, but an absolute delight when not upset over teething.
Oh gosh, that was a wild dream - I dreamed of kittens, and which one to choose!
PS the try out blocks that are too small can be trimmed down to be the border blocks.
ReplyDeleteProb w very dark/ black sheets is pet hair shows. Also they always must be washed separately or the bleeding/ fading will ruin your lighter clothes.
Oh dark anything will show the cat hairs - I will put a throw across the bed when not in use. I do wash the dark colours separately, which is a bit of a pain but hey ho . . .
DeleteI've just done two little practice blocks and of course they didn't line up properly because wrongly sized. I did exactly what the pattern said too.
The primroses are gorgeous! They never grow as well over here ,I don’t think that the winters are cold enough. I have made a few quilts, always all by hand as I don’t own a sewing machine, and of course always seem to have a couple of unfinished ones in the cupboard. I’m hopeless at the cutting out bit and found having a couple of friends over for the afternoon, plentifully fuelled with tea and cake, and much more talented than me, has been the best way to get them started.It’s also fun.Best of luck, I love your quilt and gardening photos x JennyP from Southern Australia
ReplyDeleteNo I guess they need cool spells to grow well. I have to say I am not a good quilt maker - I easily get distracted, am hopeless at Maths, and my stitchripper is my best friend! Hand piecing is more my thing, though I enjoy hand quilting most. I'm glad it's not just me that's hopeless at the cutting out part.
DeleteGlad that you enjoy my photos.
The primroses are gorgeous. I just sew squares and triangles or rectangles together to make my quilts. The math necessary to accomplish some patterns would drive me crazy.
ReplyDeleteIt is so green where you are. Still pretty brown here, though there are traces of green grass in some areas.
God bless.
Aren't they? I'm beginning to think it's easier to do your own thing when it comes to quilts and not be tied to instructions (esp. when perhaps wrong). I am NOT good at maths - I'm a right brain person.
DeleteIt's always green here in Wales, as we get a lot of rain!
Those primroses are just beautiful. I've only seen them in clumps...never just spread out like that. What a sight!
ReplyDeleteYes. This has been a pretty 'spendy' month for us as well. Ugh!!!
They have grown year on year here - last people used to cut the grassed area of the bank low all year round. I let it grow, and we have Slow-worms - not sure if they did. Along the lanes they grow sporadically in clumps. I've never seen a display like my garden either . Aren't I lucky?
DeleteI'm leaving the header up a bit longer for you to enjoy!
As mentioned I do have that pattern saved from an older quilting magazine. I don't know why instructions are written that way when small bias pieces are a nightmare, so fiddly that it spoils the joy of making a quilt. At this point when I encounter that 'slicing' method, I calculate the cutting to do the more accurate way that I have learned.
ReplyDeleteIts been at least two weeks since I've worked at my sewing machine! I got bogged down in cutting scrappy fabrics--the cutting part being my least favorite.
Time outdoors is precious just now, although I can't say I've created a tidy area, merely tweaking out weeds here and there, wandering about seeing all that needs doing.
I'm going to go upstairs, enlarge the cut-into-four block to 5 1/2" and see how we go - and also piece it your way - no fiddly blardy bits!
DeleteSorry you have been spending so much time cutting. You must be climbing the wall getting it all sorted. After several weeks of unending sunshine and dry weather, we now have rain all over the Easter break. Still, I have made good progress so far.
Hi It's Shirley here, I'm sitting here with paper ruler and scissors, I've cut a 5 1/4 square and cut it in a X corner to corner, with 2 of our friends the triangles I've folded the 1/4" seam in which brings it to 4 7/8" then when you attach the large triangles that you cut from the 4 7/8" squares it brings it to 4 1/2". Hope this helps. Greetings from Perth OZ
ReplyDeleteThanks Shirley. Will go and see what I can manage this morning. I will trim the wallpaper first, before I get frustrated I think! Sharp knives and all that . . .
DeleteI wish I lived closer to you. You would have instant access to all my quilting books of which there are many. lots of patterns instructions and history. Many out of print now too. It's so frustrating when you can't get a pattern to work out, isn't it? I'm sure you'll get on top of it.
ReplyDeleteI have plenty of quilting books myself, but I will plod on and do it somehow.
DeleteI am not sure if a hobby was so complicated that I would continue with it. I take the easy way out and work in squares in my patchwork. I am glad you are enjoying Grannyhood and that bank of primroses is stunning, can you make wine out of the flowers?
ReplyDeleteThe thing is it's not that complicated - just my brain these days! Grannyhood has bought me a cold now - hardly surprising as she stuck her finger up her snotty nose and then shoved it in my nostril! Little darling! You can make Primrose Wine, but I would rather just enjoy looking at them I think.
DeleteLovely to see all the beautiful primroses. It seems to have been a good year for them. It is horrid when an expensive month comes along.
ReplyDeleteYes, will have to hit my savings a little bit as SO much gone out. Hoping I have a good Fair at Builth though, but with the way things are going, only jewellery will sell (and I don't sell that).
DeleteYou're not stupid in any shape or form, it just sounds like you need to step away from the quilt for a few days and then comes back to it nice and fresh and follow the other commenters suggestions to get you back on track. The primroses look lovely, things that look beautiful in real life sometimes just don't come out anywhere near as good in a photo do they, it's so frustrating.
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness..all those primroses! Lovely! I just split one of my large plants and potted about 15 small plants as my son wants some to naturalise in his lawn. I also love Oxlips and Cowslips.
ReplyDeleteI hope that the antiques fair is good for you as well as the Malvern Flea. 😁