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Wednesday, April 08, 2026

In The Machine


Let the quilting begin!

I'm so excited to get this one quilted - and it was a perfect day for some time in the studio to load it all up.

Housekeeper Susan was next door at the inn, excited about the ew vacuum we replaced the old one with.  It was time.  The beater bar on the old one was worn out and there were no replacement parts available.  New vacuum it is. )Hooray for the small improvements!)

Son Jeff was on hand working in the yard - I turned on some music to energize my morning and got down to the nitty gritty of  loading everything up.


I've had folks ask me before what I did to measure out my batting.

I take the easy route.  Once the backing and top are on their respective rollers and athe backing is attacked to the take up roller I just plop the whole roll of patting on top of the rollers and roll it out.

I leave myself about 3'' margin on either side and just cut it off where I need to. 

No measuring tapes, no rolling out on the floor - I find this to be the easiest way possible.


From here I set my channel lock and run a line of basting across the batting and backing so I know where to align the top to. It's 3 to 5'' down from where the backing is pinned to the leader to avoid the machine's needle plate from catching on pins.

I baste the top of the top with the top aligned to the line and I'm ready to start quilting.



I still can't remember what this is called! But I'll get it.


The baby pink thread is blending through everything just fine.


I love how all of these scraps are playing together.


Some really old ones - with some new-to-me new ones gifted by friends!


And I even like how the backing is looking as it rolls up on the take up roller bar. I haven't figured yet how many yards of scraps I've used up in this quilt - smaller pieces like this mean a lot more seam allowances  - so I'm guessing there is likely 8 to 9 yards of fabric in the front, Maybe 8 in the back (bigger pieces, fewer seams) so all in all, a good amount of scrap reduction in this one!


I tried to ask my assistant but she was caught snoozing on the job.


Oh, Hazel - you crazy floof!


We had a little "NO!" moment yesterday when she got on the string bins beneath the machine and was playing with the batting as it was hanging over the roller toward the floor. 

She thought it was a game.  I had to swat her to get her to stop, and she didn't like that - but she stayed further away while I was quilting from that point on.

However - not sure what she would do in the studio overnight I did what I have done for other quilting studio cats in the past - I unrolled the pokey-backed clear rug runner upside down on top of the quilt in the machine to deter her from turning the whole thing into a hammock overnight.


I'm hoping this does the trick.  It has in the past for other cats.

But who knows? Maybe she'll like it?

At any rate - I made it about half-way and I should be able to finish today. Let's hope so.

And I have to apologize about my unclear wording of yesterday's post stating that Jeff and Ashlyn had gone to her sister's house to see their new baby.  It's the sister's baby! Not Jeff & Ashly's.


Casden with his wee little cousin.


He is enamored with him!

Cousin relationships are so important.  Welcome, little one!

Also today - Debbie's Bitter Bees arrive this afternoon.  We will be having a Scrappy Mountain Majesties workshop. Pattern from the Free Patterns tab.

If you've started one (and not finished) or would like to start one - maybe this week/weekend is a good time to dig in! I'll be sharing photos of what's going on in our workshop over the next several days.  Join on in!


Quiltville Quote of the Day -

I will never confirm nor deny the implications of this statement!

Have a wonderful Wednesday, everyone -

 

15 comments:

Shari Tavaras said...

How have I never thought of measuring batting that way?! You’re a genius!
And thank you for all of the Hazel pictures. She’s absolutely gorgeous and obviously very loved 🩷🩷

Jessieth said...

I love the way light colored threads of multiple colors can almost magically become neutrals. Your pink, my light yellow on a navy and cream Quilt of Valor with a cream back. It looks cream once it is off the spool and onto cream fabric, which was good, because I was out of cream thread. Much less noticeable than ash gray, which would have been my other option.

Anonymous said...

I would never have chosen pink thread to quilt but you mentioned it in Lupines and Laughter and I used it there with my colors and loved it. It’s more versatile a thread color than I ever would have thought! Thanks. Jane from DC

Mary said...

Sweet cousins! Glad you have a system to get the quilting started. I'm quilting a cute baby Quilt for a great-granddaughter today. Quilt on Forever! I have plenty, and I'll be shop hopping soon.

Debra said...

Hazel is such a beautiful cat...her eyes are mesmerizing..
This quilt is gorgeous Bonnie. Honestly, I don't know if I love the border or the quilt more!! It's a close race.
My back hasn't allowed me to sew for awhile so I'm knitting..
Welcome 🌼🌱 Spring. bulbs are all in bloom and smelling heavenly.
Have a Sparkling day
Blessings πŸ™πŸ’ž

Anonymous said...

I love the tip on measuring the batting! I wish my longarm bars were level so I could do that. It is so hard to get down in the floor….or maybe it’s the getting up!

Lynn from Australia said...

Hi Bonnie,
Thanks for answering my question about the baby. I was so excited for you for a while, then told myself that if it was your first grandchild
(no offence to Casden) that you'd be hard pressed to keep such excitement under wraps
I love Fetchin' Gretchen so much & I would love to make it, but as you say, lots of extra fabric in the seams & here in Queensland, Australia the weather is too warm to tolerate quilts for more than a couple of months at best so heavier ones are kicked off sooner. Maybe I will make a wall hanging.

Anonymous said...

Casden and that baby sure are good looking kids, and they even look a bit alike.

Tracey Honig said...

Such a fun quote for today! I always love hearing about your long arm days. Thank you for sharing your batting wrestles! Have fun with the new group and hopefully that supuuurrrrvisor doesn't disturb the work in progress too terribly! Two more days until the weekend. It sounds like the Mister will be away on some trips so I have the time to play! Although I do have that binding party to contend with first! HA! Happy quilting! :-)

Kathy Rockey said...

I think the design is Nemesh feathers. You shared it once before and I bought it and now it’s one of my favorite patterns, I think it looks great on everything!

Anonymous said...

Hazel is such a gem. And the cousins pic is wonderful.

Karen Wolf said...

Hazel is a real gem. You hit the jackpot with her! The pic of the cousins is wonderful.

Charlotte K said...

Thanks for clarifying about the baby. I was thinking I've been very out of the loop if I missed hearing about a pregnancy. Love the quilt!

Anonymous said...

The pictures of Casten and the new baby cousin are just precious! Bonnie, I must say your border on your Gretchen quilt is beautiful! I think it absolutely makes the quilt! And what a lovely pieced backing! Your use of baby pink thread has me considering using it on a baby quilt I'm quilting for a new baby girl from church! Thanks for mentioning that, I've used lavender thread before & loved it.
Alice

Emma said...

If Hazel decides to keep trying to get on your longarm, sheets of aluminum foil can stop that. Cats do NOT like the way that aluminum foil sounds/feels and it should deter her. (I used it for my cats with my longarm before I had to sell it to downsize the house)

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