Next Meeting
*** Tuesday, June 30 at Helen's house ***
(Fifth Tuesday)
Queen Bee: Peggy
Food: Main salad - Peggy; Bread - Helen; Dessert - Linda
(Fifth Tuesday)
Queen Bee: Peggy
Food: Main salad - Peggy; Bread - Helen; Dessert - Linda
Business Meeting
Linda was Queen Bee for this meeting. No one had anything new to report in the world of quilting.
Randi told us about a Facebook site she really likes called Folt Bolt. Its focus is the "Colourful Art Palette."
Ugly Fabric Projects
What a shame Margie and Rita couldn't come to the meeting. They would have enjoyed seeing our creative efforts; hopefully the photos will do our projects justice. Margie, Rita, and Helen -- we hope you will bring your "ugly projects" to the June meeting.
Dawn made a cute school house wall hanging, and Linda made a sweet and perky pin.
Randi made place mats, and notice how what we thought was the ugliest of the ugly fabrics actually looks really nice as a backing. Peggy made a cute Christmas wall hanging, which she is giving to Tricia to hang on her front porch.
Show & Tell
Peggy finished a beautiful Christmas redwork quilt done with machine embroidery. She isn't sure what she will do with it but might donate it for raffling to the Women's Society at St. Gall Church in Gardnerville.
Linda showed us some totes she made from feedsacks. What a great idea. Not only are these bags cute because of the colorful feedsack designs, they are an excellent way to "reduce, reuse, recycle."
Demonstration
Queen Bee Linda then did a demonstration of freezer-paper paper piecing. Linda says she enjoys paper piecing and likes the precision of the blocks, but she finds it tedious to remove all the paper. So, she demonstrated a folding method using freezer paper where you don't have to remove the paper and the freezer paper foundations are reusable for about 3-4 times.
Here are some photos. First the pattern gets copied onto the dull side of freezer paper. There is sheet-sized paper available that will run through a printer, but the kind of paper that comes on a roll is fine for hand tracing. It's not all that easy to see through freezer paper, so Linda recommends just making dots on the corners of the design and then drawing lines with a ruler.
Placement of fabric on the numbers is the same as for regular paper piecing. The main difference is that the paper gets folded back, and then the seam is stitched very close to the fold. Linda recommends using a stitch-in-the-ditch foot because the blade will run along the edge of the paper nicely. The seam will get trimmed later, so the size of the seam doesn't matter at this point.
For those of us who are spatially challenged, paper piecing can be hard to conceptualize, so I tried to find a YouTube video that would demonstrate this technique as succinctly and clearly as Linda did. Unfortunately, I was not able to find one that gets right to the point, but I did find a two-part series that covers the technique thoroughly: Freezer Paper Foundation Piecing - Part 1 and Part 2. Enjoy!
Ugly Fabric Projects
What a shame Margie and Rita couldn't come to the meeting. They would have enjoyed seeing our creative efforts; hopefully the photos will do our projects justice. Margie, Rita, and Helen -- we hope you will bring your "ugly projects" to the June meeting.
Dawn made a cute school house wall hanging, and Linda made a sweet and perky pin.
Tricia made a table runner for a small table in her entry hall. She added few extra fabrics.
Show & Tell
Peggy finished a beautiful Christmas redwork quilt done with machine embroidery. She isn't sure what she will do with it but might donate it for raffling to the Women's Society at St. Gall Church in Gardnerville.
Linda showed us some totes she made from feedsacks. What a great idea. Not only are these bags cute because of the colorful feedsack designs, they are an excellent way to "reduce, reuse, recycle."
Demonstration
Queen Bee Linda then did a demonstration of freezer-paper paper piecing. Linda says she enjoys paper piecing and likes the precision of the blocks, but she finds it tedious to remove all the paper. So, she demonstrated a folding method using freezer paper where you don't have to remove the paper and the freezer paper foundations are reusable for about 3-4 times.
Here are some photos. First the pattern gets copied onto the dull side of freezer paper. There is sheet-sized paper available that will run through a printer, but the kind of paper that comes on a roll is fine for hand tracing. It's not all that easy to see through freezer paper, so Linda recommends just making dots on the corners of the design and then drawing lines with a ruler.
Placement of fabric on the numbers is the same as for regular paper piecing. The main difference is that the paper gets folded back, and then the seam is stitched very close to the fold. Linda recommends using a stitch-in-the-ditch foot because the blade will run along the edge of the paper nicely. The seam will get trimmed later, so the size of the seam doesn't matter at this point.
After placing, folding, trimming, and ironing, a finished block will emerge. Notice the perfect points!
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