Showing posts with label wedding quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding quilt. Show all posts

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Quilt #48 :: Love Burds


Recently I shared the baby quilt I made for my new niece. The little stinker hasn't arrived yet--I was hoping she would be my little birthday twin. While I wait for her grand entrance, I thought I'd share the wedding quilt I made for her mom and dad.


When my sister and brother-in-love were married in September 2012, I was not yet a quilter. That would come about six months later when my 3-year-old son ask for a Thomas the Train "blanket."

It took another two years before I felt confident enough to make them a wedding quilt. Since there last name is Burd, birds are a common theme in their house. 

My inspiration was this fabric I bought at Joann shortly after they got married. As it turned out, I only used it on the back. 


This quilt marked my first time paper piecing. The LOVE pattern is from Kelly Sews. I knew I wanted to do something with love birds, so when I saw her pattern, I knew how to get started.


I put the letters together with a white background.


For the tree, my inspiration came from this adorable guestbook from Custom By Bernolli on Etsy.

Credit

I'm sure there was an easier way to make my tree so I won't revisit my process here. Once I finally was happy with how it looked, I appliqued it down.


My favorite part was adding their initials in the tree trunk. So tiny!


Then I added the two love birds on the branch. I used my Silhouette Cameo a lot on this quilt! 


Finally,  I added heart shaped leaves.


After placing the leaves, I got really comfortable with applique!



Finally, I added borders in colors matching the original bird print that inspired the project.


For the back I used extra fabric from the borders, and the bird fabric.


The label is one of my favorites. 


We had a few days after I finished the quilt before we delivered it, so D had some time to test it out.


The impetus for finishing this quilt was that our family was headed from our home in Ohio to northern Minnesota to fulfill a childhood dream of mine to attend camp at Concordia Language Villages. On our way to camp, we made a quick stop at my sister Carisa's house. Liz came over and I was able to deliver my quilt in person. (I also made a quilt for Carisa, which I still need to share). 


It's hard to live so far from family. It makes me happy to know that there is something of me with them.

One of my goals this year is to finish writing posts for each of my quilts. This quilt was finished in 2015. You can see what I'm currently working on by following me on Instagram at deJongDreamHouse.

Linked to:

Sunday
BOMs Away @ What a Hoot Quilts
Oh Scrap! @ Quilting is More Fun than Homework 

Monday
Design Wall Monday @ Doll Quilts & Small Quilts
Main Crush Monday @ Cooking Up Quilts
Monday Making @ Love Laugh Quilt
Moving it Forward @ Em's Scrap Bag
What I Made Monday @ Pretty Piney

Tuesday
Color & Inspiration Tuesday @ The Clever Chameleon
Linky Tuesday @ Free Motion By the River
To Do Tuesday @ Stitch All the Things

Tuesday
Color & Inspiration Tuesday @ The Clever Chameleon
Linky Tuesday @ Free Motion By the River
To Do Tuesday @ Stitch All the Things
WIP Linky Party @ Silly Mama Quilts


Monday, August 27, 2018

Quilt #112: Lots of Love Wedding Quilt


They say good things come to those who wait. That's true not only for those who are on my quilt list, but also for so many of us wanting to find someone with whom to share our life. 

True story: Niels and I got married when I was 35. When we bought Niels' wedding band, we asked the jeweler to inscribe it with "worth the wait." At the time, I was a bit self-conscious about my weight because my new head meds had caused me to gain 50 pounds in pretty short period of time and I was struggling with the fact that I would be at my all time high weight for my wedding, with pictures that would be around forever. Can you see where this is going? Two days before our wedding, I picked up the ring and read the writing, "worth the weight." That was my only true bridezilla moment of wedding planning! The owner of the store was mortified and overnighted a new ring to us. All is well. 

My friend Jamie also waited longer than average to meet her Mr. Right. Their story is complicated and beautiful and theirs to tell. Jamie and I have been friends for nearly 20 years and was one of my first friendsd when I moved to Michigan in 1999. We worked together at not one, but two companies. When I brought my Shih Tzu Bailey home from Minneapolis, Jamie was there with a camera at the airport to take pictures and welcome us home. After my brain injury, Jamie remained a friend and loved me despite the changes to my personality. She definitely deserved a place on my quilt list!


As I thought about what kind of quilt to make Jamie (and Toben) for their wedding quilt, the thing that kept coming to mind is love. That sounds clique, I realize, for a wedding quilt, but the love I think of when I think of Jamie goes beyond the gooey wedding love. Jamie knows how to love when it's hard--when it's a friend whose life is changed by brain injury, when it's watching her brother fight and then fade away from cancer, when it's engaging with the kids of her friends and family even when she longs to have children of  her own, when it's speaking up for those on the margins. Jamie embodies love. 


For the third time, I used the wonky alphabet by Kelby Sews for my letters. I used her paper pieced alphabet on Papa Steve's It Is Well quilt.


And I used her love letters on my sister Liz's wedding quilt. (I modified the "E").


I don't usually tell someone I am making a quilt for them, because I rarely hit my deadlines, and because it's really fun for me to see if someone figures it out from progress posts on Instagram. But I did tell Jamie I would make her a wedding quilt and asked her what colors she would like me to use. She said she would want the quilt for their bed and that they were using beach colors. 


I started making blocks in between other projects a few months before they got married. This spring we went on a cruise and I was reminded of the beauty of the ocean. It also gave me the sew-jo I needed to finish Jamie's quilt!


I made the quilt top my April One Monthly Goal for Elm Street Quilts monthly challenge. I finished the top on their 1st anniversary. I put two surprises into the quilt that I didn't want to reveal before Jamie and Toben saw the quilt in person, so I had to be a little sneaky with my OMG update post


The first surprise is that one of the LOVE blocks was made in Michigan State colors in honor of her brother Tony.


Tony passed away a few months after their wedding after a brave battle with cancer. Jamie's first year of marriage has been bittersweet as her joy is mingled with grief. Tony's memory is near to Jamie's heart so I knew he needed to be a part of her quilt, too.

Tony at Jamie's wedding, with Jamie's husband Toben to the right. Photo Credit: Jamie Heim
The other surprise was a block made of rainbow prints. This block has  significance to both Jamie and Toben and also needed a place on their quilt. 


Label. 


Cheers to you, Jamie & Toben. Here's wishing you many years of joy and lots of love!
Credit: Northern Exposure Photography
To see more pictures of this quilt, check the hashtag #lotsofloveweddingquilton Instagram. To see what I'm currently working on, please follow me at deJongDreamHouse.


My Quilt Infatuation FeatureFinished or Not Friday at Busy Hands Quilts

Saturday, April 28, 2018

One Monthly Goal :: April 2018 update


It's that time again, the end of the month means time to post an update on my One Monthly Goal. 


When I set my One Monthly Goal for April, I was sailing the Caribbean. As I write this update back home in Ohio, it is overcast and rainy. Fortunately, the colors of the quilt reminded me of the warmth and beauty of our trip.


At the start of the month, I only had a few blocks done. I made them over a year ago after my friend Jamie got engaged. I knew I wanted to make her a scrappy, beachy quilt for her wedding to Toben, but I didn't have the actual design figured out.


The "love" letters are paper pieced using the Wonky Alphabet pattern I bought from Kelby Sews. For the "HEIM" in the middle, I made my own templates in the same style as Kelby's lowercase letters. Here they are in reverse because I love the stained glass look of a quilt top in the sun.


Today is actually Jamie & Toben's first anniversary. I didn't quite finish the quilt, but the top is done and should be headed their way soon.

And it's DONE! 

Here's a recap of other One Monthly Goals I have made. 




Thursday, August 25, 2016

Quilt #66: Ang & Sergio's Trinity Celtic Knot


The story of this quilt began sixteen year ago. It was 2000. I was 28, single, and new to Grand Rapids, Michigan. I loved my new job in the marketing department of a Christian publisher, but was lonely and praying for friends. I found a singles group through a local church and decided to attend the spring retreat.


Turns out, there were four other women praying for friends, and by the end of the weekend, I had my new forever friends. We based our friendship on Hebrews 12:1.


Over the past sixteen years, we have shared our lives together as we navigated moves across state lines and national borders, boys who broke our hearts and men who became ours husbands,jobs that taxed our minds and babes who stole our hearts, weight losses and gains, brain injuries and other health issues, and ages that moved from 20s to 30s to 40s. Despite our differences and differences of opinion, we have found a way to stay close through it all, and even still gather together every year or
so.


On July 29, 2007, I married Niels, leaving Ang the last one of  us to meet her match. As much as she wanted to be married, she didn't sit around waiting. She is an OB-GYN who loves babies and helping mamas deliver their little ones. Her dad passed away about a decade ago, so she gathered up her mom and sisters, who both live with Downs, and settled them close to her practice.  


About eight years ago, her heart still longed for a family of her own. She prayerfully made plans to be a foster mom. Shortly after being approved, a sweet little girl was placed in her home and in her heart. She adopted that girl. And a few years later, she adopted that girl's biological brother, bringing him home shortly after delivering him. 

Ang's life was pretty busy with her family and practice. She came to a peace about marriage. If it was meant to be, then God would bring the right guy, who would be willing to take on her whole family with open arms. And if he could be tall, that would be really nice, because Ang is very tall. So she was content but open as she went on with her life until one day a woman at church asked if she could introduce her to her widowed dad. And the rest, as they say, is history. (And yes, Sergio is even taller than Ang!)



When Ang and Sergio got engaged, I knew I would make her a quilt, a big king-size one because she has the biggest heart of anyone I know. The way she cares and sacrifices for her family, her friends, her patients, and the babies she delivers is such an inspiration to me. I’m not always great with telling people how I feel about them, and since my brain injury, my words don’t always convey my heart. So now I speak through fabric!


In March, we COWs threw Ang a surprised wedding shower on the weekend we gathered to meet her Sergio. I hadn't started her quilt, so I needed ideas! I tried to pepper her with questions, but the only leads I had as we were driving home was "blue" (the color they planned to paint their bedroom) and "braid" because another important verse to each of us as we have hoped and prayed and waited to meet our spouses has been Ecclesiastes 4:12.

Credit: Robin Dance
When I found Deborah Cohen's Trinity Celtic Knot, I knew I found the perfect pattern because as much as we have all loved the imagery of a braid for marriage, the symbolism is even more powerful for Ang as she brings not only her own life, but also that of Sergio's family, her mom, sweet sisters, and her own children into the beauty of a new everyday life. Many parts coming together in one big beautiful family.


Because this is not my pattern, I won't share too much of the process. I did map out the squares in Excel because my brain sees patterns better than way. Even still, I made a couple mistakes along the way. 

Because there are so.many.squares (2025 to be exact!), this was the perfect project to use Elizabeth Hartman's method of using lightweight fusible interfacing to sew squares. She admits that she's not the only one who has discovered this method, but I used her method to start and gradually modified to make it work for me. First I made a template with freezer paper.


But later on, I just drew my template on each cut of interfacing because my freezer paper got pretty wrinkled after a few uses. I'm totally sold on this method for square block quilts. It took me an average of an hour per block, and these are big blocks. To compare, I'm working on a much smaller charity quilt with squares I've pieced the standard way, and it took me a full day to make two blocks. I will be finishing that quilt next...with this method!


Each print I chose has metallic silver in it. It's a reference to part of Malachi 3:3, "He will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver." My favorite book on marriage is Sacred Marriage by Gary Thomas. The subtitle is "What if the purpose of marriage is to make us holy, more than to make us happy?" The silver in the quilt are reminders of both the illustration of the silversmith who holds the precious metal over intense heat and Gary's book about how marriage uses each spouse's imperfections to draw them closer to God.
Source with story.
Because I used the postage stamp method to make this quilt. I found that the process was quicker when I cut strips as I needed them and cut them to different sizes I needed (2.5" x 2.5", 2.5" x 5", etc.) Whenever I saw that I was getting low, I would cut a few more strips. 


Because I modified the center to applique the couple's name, I ended up 49 blocks of varying sizes. I found my highlighter to be a essential in keeping track of each block. Even still I made errors of 4 of the blocks, 3 of which I noticed before I finished binding. More on that in a minute...


One of the biggest challenges with a quilt this size--102" x 102"!--is finding a design wall big enough. My sweet hubby took down the full size batting I had been using for a design wall in our laundry room, and put up the king size batting.


Overall, this worked out really well, except for the fact that our laundry room is narrow, and therefore, I could never get a photo of the entire quilt at once. Does anyone else find that mistakes and patterns are easier to see with a photo over real life? This photo will give a hint on which block I messed up.


The last block I made was the appliqued center block. Even after 66 quilts, I rarely tell someone I'm making a quilt until I'm nearly done in case I decide I can't finish it for some reason. It's become a bit of a game for some of my friends to guess the recipient of my quilts. One of my very favorite things is when someone realizes it's for them. The font is Beyond the Mountains


Because of the interfacing and size of the quilt blocks, this turned into a very heavy quilt. I nicknamed it The Beast as I was piecing the blocks and quilting it on my domestic machine, but I love a heavy quilt to snuggle and sleep with at night.


I sewed the blocks into rows and hung them on my IKEA Gruntal towel bars as I worked. 


Once I had all the rows pieced together, I could finally get my first look at the whole quilt together with the quilt display in my craft room. A new lesson for me after making this quilt is to take photos from both sides of the craft table. 


The quilt hung for a few days while I figured out the borders. I had a bit of a heart attack when I thought I was short on the white fabric and it was no longer available at Joann. Fortunately, my hoarding fabric stash came through for me and I found an extra yard in another project box. Niels thought the quilt looked even more impressive from the back, so he took this picture. That's when I figured out that the quilt is made up of 2,025 little squares!


This is the second king size quilt I've made. (I've also made 3 queens). After the last one, I said "Never Again!" But Ang is special to me, so I made an exception. When I put it on our king bed to get a look, I realized I will probably make at leas one more.


For this quilt, I had bought a wide back with blue tumbling blocks, but when it arrived, the colors weren't quite right. Instead I found this one at Joann and bought 3 lengths to sew together for the back. 


And this is why big quilts get called beasts. I like the clean look of straight line quilting. Plus it's much easier to navigate. But straight lines didn't work with this design so I got quite a work out pulling the quilt through my Pfaff. 


After many hours of tugging the quilt through the throat space, I had the idea to use some baby links to roll up the sides. I used about 7 on each side. They worked pretty well, although I did have to reset them a few times when I was making diagonal stitches. 


I made the label by designing it in PowerPoint and printing it on printable fabric


I finished the binding the night before we left for the wedding. After 100 hours, I lost track of how many hours it took to make this quilt, but I started it on July 25, and finished on August 18. We had two students from Taiwan staying with us before moving into their apartment at the University of Akron, so I recruited them to hold up the quilt for a photo at the McKinley Monument. 


There is an adage in the quilting community that says, “Finished is better than perfect.” It is the mantra that carries us through when a quilt challenges us. The more we quilt, the more our eyes are trained to look for imperfections. It’s how we improve our craft. However, in our desire for an error-free project, we can deny ourselves the satisfaction of admiring the beautiful art we have created. The Amish are said to make a purposeful mistake in every quilt as a reminder that only God is perfect. But still, my heart sank when I looked at the photo above and saw what is, to me, a glaring mistake. 


The perfectionist in me is still irked that I made the mistake. The artist and friend in me sees the lesson in a wedding quilt with an imperfection. As I wrote to Angela and Sergio, "I hope it will serve as a reminder that despite our imperfections, which others may or not even notice, we are each beautiful.


One of the best pieces of advice Niels and I received about marriage is to always see our problems as being “us” against the problem, and not me v. him. As an extension, you can choose to look for the good in each other or nitpick each other’s shortcomings. I hope you look for the beauty in the whole of this quilt, and of the marriage you create together with both the good and not-so-good you each bring into it."


Congrats Angela & Sergio! I hope you two lovebirds enjoy many, many happy years together. And as for my girls, I'm looking forward to our Spring getaway!


Linked to:
Creativity Unleashed @ Practically Functional
Design Wall Monday @ Patchwork Times
Fabric Frenzy Friday @ Fort Worth Fabric
Fabric Tuesday @ Quilt Story
Link Tuesday @ Freemotion by the River
Made by You Monday @ Skip to My Lou
Main Crush Monday @ Cooking up Quilts
Midweek Makers @ Quilt Fabrication
Needle & Thread Thursday @ My Quilt Infatuation
Oh Scrap! @ Quilting is More Fun that Housework
Show Off Saturday @ Sew Can She
Too Cute Tuesday @ Funky Polka Dot Giraffe
Whoop Whoop Friday @ Confessions of a Fabric Addict

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