hexagons in progress
Mar. 5th, 2019 04:17 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

The only purple fabric I could easily find in my discards/scraps stash was stretch jersey, and I don't have to know a lot to know that's not really ideally suited to quilting.
So I decided to hand-sew it, along with some other tricky bits and scraps, to some non-stretch backing fabric, the lining of a skirt I deconstructed over the weekend.
I also seamed a too-small scrap of brocade to a strip of unrelated scrap fabric, and then tacked the seam allowance down in gold glitter thread.
So there's my little stash of over-elaborate hexagons for today.
(I remembered to find my scissors and thread, so.)
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Date: 2019-03-05 11:29 pm (UTC)Very excited to see how this turns out.
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Date: 2019-03-06 02:58 am (UTC)My Quilting Shit seems to be settling out to: making whole cloth quilts from big pieces of fabric, rag quilts from smaller but whole pieces of fabric, then appliques or pieced squares (this is the next stage which I haven't started yet) from smaller pieces but larger amounts of fabric, and then hexagons from appropriately-sized left over scraps, and then crumb or crazy quilts from the leftover fragments that don't work for hexies.
So I think I'll probably just be accumulating hexagons for a long time, and if I get enough in a color scheme I think I can make into something, then I'll do that.
I'm also going to try to make myself draw a line and finish things, because I don't want too many nebulous "someday" projects that I'm forever collecting things for-- but I feel like the hexagons will be one of those somedays, because they're just such a good smallish organized thing, and also you need so goddamn many of them to make anyfuckingthing at all.
(I should count how many I have, and put the finished ones safely into a space to store them until all are done, though.)
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Date: 2019-03-09 06:09 am (UTC)I hear that. I've got a small bin of granny squares made from sock yarn. (they're a great little thing to carry around at school that I can work on between classes when I'm not near the office. easy to just stop and drop it in the bag and pick it back up later. and the kids are fascinated by crochet. and knitting).... but I've been doing the squares on and off for... um... probably five years now. And I have yet to do *anything* with the squares beyond rounding them all up into one place.
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Date: 2019-03-09 01:47 pm (UTC)My problem is that I work on things like this and then lose all the things I made, so I'm like 'well somewhere in my house this thing exists but i don't know where'. I have entire completed embroidery projects that just... I don't know where they went. I did them, i took an in-progress picture, I remember that I finished them, I... don't know what I did then.
I'm trying to not do that, so if I have a reliable Here Is Where I Put Half-Completed Things spot, maybe it won't happen so much.
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Date: 2019-03-06 09:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-03-07 07:27 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-03-07 08:05 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2019-03-09 06:06 am (UTC)But I don't understand why you're attaching them to paper...
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Date: 2019-03-09 01:25 pm (UTC)If you just piece hexagonal bits of fabric together they tend not to keep their shape, according to basically all the tutorials I found when I searched for more information about it. So... the accepted practice is just to bind your fabric around paper templates, and then join them together, and then when you've got them all together you can go back and pop the paper back out.
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Date: 2019-03-09 02:00 pm (UTC)All your talk of patchwork has turned on some lights in my brain. I've got some fabric and a sewing machine and am hopefully going to start on *something* soon. ;) Nothing by hand, oh heck no.
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Date: 2019-03-09 02:17 pm (UTC)I have some plans to do some machine-sewing today, too. I just find the handwork satisfying, and my sewing machines are perpetually malfunctioning. I need to get me a solid garage-sale 70s metal machine that does straight stitch and zigzag and nothing else!
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Date: 2019-03-09 02:33 pm (UTC)I found out on my last trip home that my mom sold her ancient metal singer at some point. I was so upset. I still can't believe she didn't even ask if I wanted it! It's not like it took up that much space!
But yeah. Those old, solid machines can't be beat. The last sewing machine I had stateside was one I picked up used at a sewing machine/vacuum cleaner repair place. Do those even exist anymore, I wonder...
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Date: 2019-03-09 04:35 pm (UTC)My sister has a beautiful Featherweight that she got tuned up and it failed castatrophically afterward, so I might make one more attempt to figure out what's wrong with it but it's gonna have to go back to the shop.
I have an ancient straight-stitch machine that works, but I left it at the farm. I have two modern electronic machines and one does embroidery so I leave it set up for that but it does a shitty job and basically doesn't work, and the other doesn't do embroidery but also doesn't fucking work. I can do a straight-stitch on it if it's in a good mood. It needs reconditioning but it's been in the shop more than I've used it, for its entire life, and I'm super disillusioned with it. Oh well, it's a piece of shit.
There are still sewing machine repair and vacuum shops around! They're a dying breed though. I can't even strike up a good relationship with a local quilt shop, those come and go like summer leaves.
Dude's mom and sister, between them, own like fifteen sewing machines, and are garage sale champions, so I might just. Ask them to keep an eye out for me. I don't want an old straight-stitch only, I have one of those, I want one that does basic zig-zag because I do just enough stuff that requires it-- and that is the thing that my expensive broken electronic machine can't do. It's got 99 stitches, and zig-zag (number 3) doesn't work.