Sunday, February 27, 2022

Paper Crafting with Cricut

About a year ago, I decided to use my Christmas money and treat myself to a Cricut machine. I had been considering one for a number of years, but always considered it a pipe-dream. However, I found myself with a little extra cash and decided it was time :).

First project they have you make.

I decided to go with an Explore Air 2. The maker was significantly more and I decided the features it included weren't ones I would really take advantage of.

Pre-designed card with beautiful water colour
background painted by my friend

So far, I have focused mostly on paper crafting - mostly cards. I already had a lot of paper from my years of scrapbooking (that I will probably never get back to) and card-making.

Another pre-designed card

I had Cricut Access for the first month, so I cut out a number of cards and things while I could, and set them aside for gluing later. If I'm being honest, there's still some I cut a year ago that I still haven't glued, but I've also put a number of them together and given them out :).

This was made using the foil tool
I got for my birthday.

Hard to tell, but I used my
glitter gel pens here.

After that first month, I've been on my own in terms of designing, which has worked out fairly well, but can be difficult. Sometimes I'm able to mostly use something from the free library, such as some of the ones below (and the thank yous above).

This is a card I've been able
to make too many times.

I find it easy enough to write
on the outside of the card

But I often stick to gluing
an extra paper on the inside
Pre-designed outside

With custom-designed inside
based on the invitations

One of my favourites.
Foil background design.
A little custom work for the
two colour butterfly.

But sometimes I'm completely on my own. I have done some digital visual design work as part of my job, but this has definitely stretched me out of my comfort zone. 

One of my first solo designs.
Had better visions for it, but you have
to start somewhere
in the learning process :)

Baby card for an Eric Carle and bird
themed baby gift


I also took some time to make myself a sign for my laundry room as it saw a lot more outside use over covid :D.


I also have a number of cards I've made but have forgotten to photograph. I still have lots to learn, but I'm also very happy with what I've been able to do with it so far.

Monday, February 21, 2022

Reemergence (Napkins)

Catching up some more on things I've missed posting about, this is a birthday gift I made for my friend this past summer.

I had bought some linen napkins quite a while ago with the intention of doing something with them for my friend, but I hadn't quite figured out what. This year I decided that I would make her some Harry Potter themed napkins. The next trick was to figure out what to do for a design.

I decided that since I had four napkins, I would do the four houses. It was tricky to find a design that was simple enough to embroider in the time frame I had (I mean I would never leave a project until the last minute 😄).


I found a design I liked, that I traced from my computer. I looked tonight to try to find them again so I could credit where they came from, but I wasn't able to. I found them in use other places, but not the original that I used. I also changed the design a bit. I didn't love the design for of the lion, so I ended up changing that out for a different one.

Next up was to pick out the house colours. I have some embroidery floss, but not a whole lot. I ended up needing to borrow embroidery floss from my friend in order to make her gift 😂.


I did a simple running stitch around the design and then back the other way. I believe I used two strands of thread for the stitching. Here you can see some of my work and some of the designs.


 


Originally I was planning on doing the four napkins as one for each house, but then as I got thinking I decided that if I did it that way then people using the napkins would have to pick a house and might not get the one they wanted. Instead, I chose to do the houses one in each corner of each napkin, so each person could decide which one they wanted independent of everyone else.


I also wasn't sure which way I wanted to stitch the two colours into each house design, so I decided to do two of the napkins one way, and then invert the colours for the other two napkins. You might be able to see that if you zoom in really closely on the picture with all four napkins in it.


One of the tricky things about working on the napkins was that you can see the back of the project, so I had to be careful as I worked that I didn't make things too messy.

So now you know a little more of what I was working on last summer :).
 

Saturday, February 19, 2022

Covid Quilt Challenge #18: Improv Piecing—Lines

Well, it's been a long time, and we actually created these a long time ago, but I'm just now getting around to posting—better late than never, right?

We completed our last covid quilt challenge pieces in July of 2021. The technique we drew was "improv piecing", but since we had already done improv piecing with letters, we decided that we needed a bit more focus. We didn't want anything too limiting, so we ended up picking "lines". We both ended up doing a couple of projects.

My first one was inspired by our trip to the strawberry patch that weekend. As we were leaving, we could see the heavens opening up and rain pouring down on countryside ahead of us. There was a big patch of rain, and then a gap and a then another small patch that looked like it was directly raining on two people :D. As we drove back to town there was a clear line of where it had rained and where it hadn't. It was quite fascinating.

As soon as I heard lines, I thought about the rows of strawberries at the strawberry patch, and also about the lines of rain coming down. I dug out my green scraps, and worked some red bits in to them. However, because improv piecing is less planned, and I was working with really small pieces, I ended up either cutting out or losing most of my red bits to seams.


I dug out my blue and grey scraps for the sky, along with the rain clouds and the rain. I wanted to give the illusion of movement, so I alternated the light and dark greys for the rain.


Figuring out how to quilt it was another story. I wanted to do more than just stitch in the ditch with the lines, but also add to the piece rather than take away from it. I ended up doing matchstick quilting in the light parts of the rain—again to help create movement.


I quilted the cloud with loop-de-loops, and the strawberry rows with leaf motifs. I also added in some more strawberries with thread, since most of mine had disappeared. Plus I had the perfect fabric for the back.

I didn't quite have enough of it, so I had to piece it together with some other fabric as well, but I was happy to dig it out of my stash and give it a good home.

For my second piece, I dug out my solids and went for something colourful. I also decided to add some curves into my line—give it some interest.


However, yet again, my eyes were bigger than my stomach, or whatever the sewing equivalent of that is. Because of the size restrictions on the covid quilt challenge quilts, and my non-wasteful nature, I decided to turn it into two projects. I cut it into two distinct dimensions and decide to treat them slightly differently, but as part of a series.



For the first one, I decided to keep it simple. I got out all my fun, colourful threads (and a few of my friends) to go with the fun, colourful fabrics I had. I did simple curved lines to go with the curves of the design. I really like how it turned out. I think it it complements the piece really nicely and adds some more fun. I had decided not to do the left side of the piece because there really wasn't much fabric and I didn't think it needed it. If I had it to do it over, I would have probably put a bit more fabric on the other side so I could do some lines on the other side as well. But the point of these challenges was to get us outside of our comfort-zones and our over thinking, so it is what it is.


For the second piece, I decided to get fancier with the quilting. I split the piece into sections and then decided how I would quilt each section. The quilting was very tiny and required a lot of precision. I did the checkerboard pattern in the middle with small lines back and forth. It was tricky to not go too far. It was not a design I had tried before, but I enjoyed doing it and the look it gave. On the outside of that, I did pebbling. That was something I had experience with, and I enjoyed doing something familiar. In the last slots I did stippling. Stippling is a design that scares me—there's so little planning and I feel like I would back myself into a corner a million times. I decided I could conquer it in that small of a space where I also had an edge to go off of and come back in if I needed to. And I did survive.

One of the downsides of the covid quilt challenges, is that I got used to working on such small pieces. Nothing I tried took too much fabric. It was easy to start over or back up if needed. I didn't have to drag a whole quilt through my machine. And I only had to fill a small area with quilting. As much as I loved these designs and feel like they really added to this piece, they took a million years to do just on this tiny piece. I can't imagine trying to do this on any bigger of a piece, and I'm not sure I would be good at scaling them up. For now, I will keep them in my tool belt for smaller projects.


I chose to finish this one off with a blue binding.


The view from the back.





My friend chose to use this as a real scrap-buster opportunity. 


She dug out tiny leftovers from previous quilts and started piecing them together.


Because of the size and shape of her pieces, she ended up with some interesting seams. But once she put it all together and quilted on top of it, it all just blended right in.


She even used small scraps to piece together the back.


For her next piece, she dug out leftovers from another quilt she had done a number of years ago.


Again, interesting leftovers led to interesting shapes.


This time, she added in some black lines, to meet the line part of the design challenge, and also add some interest.


She quilted it with her walking foot.


And also pieced the back with leftovers.


Now that we're hanging out in person, it's less conducive to doing these challenges. We've also had our own larger projects to work on. However, I think we both enjoyed the process, adding to our list of techniques that we know how to do, and the stretching of our comfort levels with thing, so who knows, maybe we'll revisit it one day—there's still lots of ideas on the techniques list :).