Showing posts with label pattern testing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pattern testing. Show all posts

Saturday, December 29, 2018

Quilt #119:: One Giant Stitch for D


Like most people, December is the busiest month of all. Between the holidays and end-of-year activities, time is tight. In our house, December also brings Sinterklaas (Dutch Santa) and our son's birthday (my baby is 10). Once my son's birthday has been celebrated, I usually feel like the rest of the year is a breeze. This year has been even more chaotic because our son only has one semester left at the amazing school he has attended since pre-school. So in addition to everything else, we have been applying to schools, touring, and considering our options. 

All this to say, I haven't blogged much this month. 

I have been trying to do some sewing each day for my sanity, but even that has had to be given up some days. 

But today, I get to share my latest finish: One Giant Stitch for D. I made it for my son and as you can see, he is over the moon with joy!

I haven't made a quilt for D since he started preschool and needed a blanket for nap time. I was a new quilter and figured I could make him a nap quilt. 


I made the quilt in the spring of 2013, just after our trip to Florida when D fell in love with NASA. Six and half years later, his passion hasn't waned and he still wants to be a rocket scientist when he grows up.

D has slept with this quilt pretty much every day for the last six years and it is showing its wear. I've been wanting to make him another one, but it wasn't until I saw Kelli Fannin's pattern, One Giant Stitch, that I moved his quilt up to the top of my queue.

I first saw the quilt when several friends sent me Kelli's picture knowing that D would love it.


I immediately messaged her and begged to be a pattern tester. Luckily for me, she said yes!

I was at the big Houston Quilt Festival when she sent me the pattern. When we got home, D helped me pick out the prints he wanted me to use.


I have only pattern tested a few times, and only for patterns I'm really excited to make. I'm a visual quilter, so when I'm following a pattern, I usually look for the list of prints and cutting information. Once everything is cut, I just look at the pictures. When I'm testing a pattern, I take a little more time to make sure to read the pattern carefully--putting on my former-life-as-an-editor-hat--to make sure that each piece of information is clear and correct.

Because I was working on a pattern that had not yet been released, I was careful not to post anything on social media that would give away piecing instructions, though it was fun to offer peeks at my progress. I was working on Saturn on the day that the Mars Rover Insight landed. I only had a little bit of the wavy gold and black print, but it was just enough.


I picked up some glow-in-the-dark white a while back (Fairy Frost by Michael Miller). It is perfect for the shuttle. I did have to rip out a few pieces before I learned to double and then triple check for the right side of the print.


I was also able to use a little of the NASA print I bought in bulk at Joann recently. 


 It was a bit ambitious to take on another project, particularly, to test during our crazy time, but I couldn't help it. I'm so grateful for Kelli's patience with me as I battled my schedule and bad brain days. I only found a few errors in her pattern. Most of the mistakes and changes were all me. Like realizing that D's choice of a galaxy print fro the stars didn't have enough contrast. 

Out with the old...


In with the new...


I have been trying not to buy more fabric this year unless it is for a specific project, usually just backing. I did pretty well on this quilt, except I did by a jelly roll for my Jupiter prints. It turned out okay because I was able to use the leftovers from my Good Fortune mystery quilt that Bonnie Hunter is slowly revealing. 


One of my favorite parts, which has D's prints all over it, is the flame print for the thrust. (By the way, why is it that mistakes show up so much better in photos. Don't mind that blue flying goose. I fixed it).


I wasn't completely done with the quilt by Christmas Day, but he still wanted to snuggle with it when he went to bed, with one of his new books.


It was a pretty big surprise when he noticed that it glowed in the dark!


We had a lot of fun taking pictures with the quilt. I thought it would be fun if D wore (one of his) NASA spacesuits for the picture.


But he had the idea to defy gravity by jumping. 


I'd say we make a pretty good team!

Whenever D sees the phrase "I love you to the moon," he says, "That's not that much. The universe is so much bigger than that." He wants to design rockets and habitats for the Mars mission when he grows up. So this is what I came up with for the label.


To see more photos of this quilt in progress, look for #OneGiantStitchForD on Instagram. To see what I'm currently working on, follow me on Instagram at deJongDreamHouse

To buy the pattern, visit Kelli Fannin's Etsy Page.

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Sunday 

Thursday, March 9, 2017

Quilt #77: Intertwined


Back in 2014, as a new quilter and mom of a space-obsessed kiddo, I was excited to learn that astronaut Karen Nyberg was quilting in space! To celebrate her out-of-this-world sewing, NASA and the International Quilt Festival invited quilters to submit star-themed quilt blocks. I had so much fun making mine with the help of my then-five-year-old. But the real highlight was when we went to the Quilt Festival and discovered that my block was pieced onto the same quilt as Karen's!


The other really cool thing that came out of the challenge is that I got to meet Sarah Ruiz, first through our blogs, and then in real life. In addition to being an active blogger and talented quilter, she also works at NASA, making her a rock(et) star in my son's eyes--see what I did there? When we were in Houston, she treated us to a private tour of Johnson Space Center and made all my son's dreams come true.

At the historic flight director console for the Apollo missions.
Reading an authentic mission manual.
Me (L) with Sarah after our fun day
Which brings us back to the quilt I'm sharing today. As you may have guessed, Sarah designed this beauty, which she aptly named, Intertwined. When I saw the mini she created in January, I fell in love.

Source
When she put out the call for pattern testers I was happy to volunteer. It was my first time pattern testing, but it's something I've wanted to do as I'm starting to consider writing up some of my own patterns. When I showed the top to a local quilt shop, they asked if I would be interested in sewing samples for them. I'm excited to see where that leads.

As a pattern tester, my job is follow the draft version of the pattern exactly to make sure that the fabric requirements and cutting instructions are correct, that the piecing instructions are clear, and generally helping the designer make the best version of their pattern. In my pre-TBI days, I was a writer, copywriter, and editor. I didn't realize until I started how my past work made this work so appealing to me.

Since this is just a draft, I won't give away too much about how the quilt was actually made, but I will show a bit about the process. I loved that Sarah included a chart to keep my fabrics straight. I rarely use the same colorway as a pattern I'm making, so I appreciated having this to keep a complicated-looking colorway straight!


One way in which I messed up is that I pulled fabric from my stash and didn't follow the fabric requirements exactly. This was all on me. I kept track of where I was short and Sarah's pattern was spot on. As for me, I had to work a little magic for some of the pieces.


Like all good pattern makers, Sarah is offering more than one size option with her pattern. I volunteered to make the lap size version, which is 60"x60".  But I couldn't resist making the mini, too.


I decided to put the mini into the back of my quilt. But now I think I want to make another to put up on my craft room wall.

I purposely changed the way the lines were woven to make a cross on the back because this quilt is going to someone in our small group at church.


I did straight line quilting. I'm always experimenting with different ways to make my lines. I often use masking time, but this time I used my ruler and a Clover hera marker. I found this too be much faster. The hera maker makes an indentation on the fabric which you then sew over. No tape to adhere and remove!


The real game changer for me with this quilt came when I tried out my new Dritz magnetic seam guide. It kept my stitching much more even as I attached the binding and for the first time in 77 quilts, all of my binding was caught with my initial stitches and I didn't have to go back and attach little parts that didn't attach.


Look how pretty! (Disclaimer: it's not all this even, but much more than usual!)


This quilt was made for Melissa and Paul, friends from church who have led our small group since we joined last year. They are taking a break to deal with some stuff. When I started working on this quilt, I knew it was made for them as a reminder that we are all in this life together and we love and support them whether we see them each week or not.


To see more pictures of this quilt in progress, look for #HadnettIntertwined on Instagram. If you search the hashtag #IntertwinedQuilt, you'll find projects from the other four pattern testers.  If you'd like to see what I'm currently working on, follow me at de Jong Dream House.


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