Saturday, February 28, 2026

End of February, Hello March: One Monthly Goal + Carrie's 2024 Philadelphia Temperatures Quilt Finish

Good morning, my lovelies!  It's the last day of February, time to take stock of what I did and didn't accomplish last month and make plans for the fresh, clean month ahead of me.  First, I'd like to share the quilt that I longarm quilted for my client Carrie.  This is the one I was having issues with thread breaking and shredding, prompting me to spend three days ripping out stitches and then requilt with a different kind of thread and a different quilting design, so I'm extremely relieved that it's done, off my plate, out of my house, and returned to Carrie:


Carrie's 60 x 76 Philadelphia Temperatures Quilt


If you're not familiar with "temperature quilts," the concept is to select fabrics across the color spectrum and assign one fabric color to each temperature range in a particular location, from the coldest temperatures of the year (the blues in Carrie's quilt) to the hottest temperatures (represented by the reds in this example).  Carrie has also used white and a silvery gray to represent snow or rain.  The edge-to-edge quilting design I used on this quilt was Whitney's Pearls Simple, which yields a similar look to the Raindrops On Water design we had originally selected, but without any backtracking quilting stitches that needed to stitch precisely over previously stitched lines of quilting.  Quilters Dream Wool batting is creating that beautiful dimensional texture without weight, making this a soft and snuggly quilt for cuddling despite the density of the quilting.  I used So Fine thread in color Genoa Gray.


Carrie Machine Embroidered Her Temperature Key At the Bottom


Carrie used foundation paper piecing to create the top border titling her quilt and machine embroidered her temperature key on the bottom border.  The many thick, overlapping seam allowances in the FPP top border may have been a contributing factor to the thread breaking constantly, but it wasn't the only culprit as the issue continued throughout the quilt.  I'm going to have my Bernina dealer out to check my hook for burrs before I attempt to quilt anything else.  

Tuesday, February 17, 2026

A Colonoscopy Quilting Bee For One

In case you were wondering how many hexagon rosettes Rebecca can stitch together in the time it takes a skilled gastroenterologist to perform a routine colonoscopy, the answer is ONE.  Behold, the fruits of my labors:


The Cuteness of the Bunny Rabbit Hexie Rosette!

I will not be sharing the photos of what the GE surgeon accomplished whilst I was stitching, as that would be gross.  ðŸ˜‰

I suppose I should clarify that I was not the patient on the receiving end of today's colonoscopy.  I was the wife and designated driver of the patient, forced to endure 3 dreary hours in the hospital waiting room without benefit of any of the fun party drugs they gave to Bernie for his "procedure."  I estimate that it took me somewhere between 1 1/2 to 2 hours to stitch up my bunny rabbit surrounded by stars, and this activity put me in much better spirits than I was in after getting lost in the parking deck and struggling to find my way to the Endoscopy department of the hospital after dropping Bernie off at the front door.  Fun times.  Had I not brought a hand sewing project, I might have bit someone's head off.  Sewing really is a win for everyone.

My collection of hexagon rosettes is growing!  Fourteen completed, 154 more needing to be made.  I keep saying that I should get back to making the blocks for this quilt (or clean the bathroom, or start getting the tax documents ready for our accountant).  And then I decide that I shall definitely do all of those important things... Right after I make just one more cute little rosette.


14 Finished Hexie Rosettes!  154 More to Go


In other news, there is a quilt on my long arm frame.  It is a 2024 temperature quilt top made by one of my favorite clients, and it was impeccably pieced but it has been giving me some grief and forcing me to spend more alone time with my seam ripper than I would like.  ðŸ˜¬. 


Spiral Quilting on Carrie's Temperature Quilt

I am experiencing thread breaks and shredding when the quilting direction is traveling up and towards the back left corner of the frame.  I have tried all of the usual remedies, like new needle, larger needle, different type of needle, tension adjustments, looser tension on the quilt sandwich, silicone thread lubricant, changing to a different thread (hence four days of ripping out the first row of quilting using the other thread).  Then today I thought to have Bernie check the positioning of the leveling "dead bar" -- that's the bar in the photo above with the tape measure attached -- and it was mounted too high, but even after adjusting it my thread shredding issues persist.  Super annoying.  It's possible something needs tweaking with my longarm frame after transporting and reassembling it after the move, but when I had issues like this several years ago it was caused by a burr (tiny scratch) on my machine's hook and I needed my Bernina dealer to diagnose that and buff it out for me.