Thursday, September 18, 2025

Charitable Crafting Community Quilt Building #2 Quilt

 

This past weekend, the Charitable Crafting group put the finishing touches on the quilt we have been making in time donate it. Cruces Creatives is taking this quilt, and some others made by a couple different groups, the other quilt we made, and some donated sheet sets, pillows, and even some handy dandy tote bags to a group that help unhoused people get a new start in housing.

Sideways view of the quilt

Even though the first quilt that Charitable Crafting made was made along the same lines as this one, I wasn't as involved in all the steps I was in this quilt. It was quite the learning process for me! The blocks are made with a quilt as you go technique, and then sewn together. Because the backing of each block is bigger than the block, when you sew them together, with the backs together, you then fold the back over and finish the block.

You can see what I mean here, I think

It gave us a technique for letting many different people, with different sewing abilities, and who might never have helped make a quilt, participate in our project. And there isn't a wrong way to sew a block. OK, I'm sure if you tried, you could ruin one, but really, look how beautiful it turned out!

Even the back is beautiful!

In the first quilt we made, I did a lot of cutting out of backing fabric and batting into the squares that we needed, and I made a good many squares. I enjoyed making them! On this quilt, I didn't do as much cutting but I did work on many squares again. This time, we also included some orphan blocks, that had been donated one way or another, and then those were free motion quilted, or quilted by using a walking stitch and maybe even some decorative stitching. There was a lot of variety of blocks made and included.

Getting those last rows put on the quilt was definitely a challenge. The quilt took some wrangling to get that accomplished, so I'm sure glad I had help (or else I WAS the help!).

Next up? Would you believe another of these quilts? Look! someone has started blocks!

The first blocks! Loving them all ready!







Monday, September 8, 2025

Every Ending is a New Beginning

 

I finished a couple of projects this week, and I'm working towards another. 

First up is Lillian's hoodie. A nice fleecy hoody for snuggly soft warmth. It isn't my first time working with fleece, but it is the most complex fleecy make I've made. 

soft hoodie, snuggly hoodie

It wasn't a complex pattern, thankfully, and went together pretty easily. More trouble with my sewing machine, which doesn't like thick fabrics. But we managed. My serger also wanted to ruffle the fabric a bit, which means I should have tested it with the fabric left-overs (where the heck did we put those??), and adjusted the tension. But it wasn't too bad, anyway.

What? no pocket?

Lillian was very happy to take her hoodie home, turn up the air conditioning, and snuggle in.

Next, is that project challenge afghan, which I finished, then took off the border, and redid. I'm sooo much happier with the finish this time!!

Oh, yes!

What will happen to this afghan, you ask? I expect to donate it through Cruces Creatives and Charitable Crafting, very possibly to the Community of Hope/Jardin de los Ninos.

The final project I'm going to talk about ALSO will be donated there this month, if we can get it finished. A few of us in the Charitable Crafting group have been working on getting the beautiful, beautiful blocks sewn into rows, and then the rows sewn together. There's a decorative pillow, and a bag to hold the quilt as well. 

The most recent picture I have - beautiful blocks!

I'll try to take more pictures!

And of course, I can't forget the new beginnings part... Yep, some sewists started on blocks for the next Charitable Crafting quilt! So excited to see those beautiful blocks!  I'm working on setting up my next Vintage crafting project. Looks like crochet again, but a much smaller project. It is exciting to challenge myself and learn something! I'm also going to be working on another ripple afghan, but as a challenge bonus, not the challenge. Those bonus projects are going to be some of my favorites, I think. And I can see some happening for the next challenge Vintage crafting source.


Monday, September 1, 2025

On the Border of a Finished Afghan

 

I finished the challenge afghan, and it almost fabulous!

Notice I'm not showing the top or bottom edges.
Here is the sample from the crochet magazine, as a refresher:

Their version
I mean I thought my photo turned out pretty well... but then there's this one. Of the top and bottom. Sigh.

The gathered ends. Not great

Wow! I wish there was a reasonable way to undo the border on just the ends, but I think I'm taking off the border, and adding it again. My mistake? I tried to make the stitch count match the sides. It was a mistake. I just need to go back and let the ends be the number of stitches they are, and I can still keep the basic ripple technique while I do. THEN the dang thing will truly be finished. So this evening I ripped out the border, and started it again.

I'll just blog about it now, and maybe put an update picture in some other time, maybe when I'm on to my next challenge project.

Here are my challenge take-aways: It was very nice working with materials I don't usually work with. I liked the wool/silk mix of the variegated yarn. It felt nice, and it is beautiful. The solid yarn was on a spool (cone?) and I'm not sure what yarn it was, but the cone caused the yarn to fray in places along the bottom. Not a fan of that. I hadn't made a ripple quilt before and I liked this one. It went quickly, and I think someone will enjoy it. It will definitely be warm. I didn't follow the directions exactly, as I talked about in my other posts, but I learned from the process of making this afghan, and really, that was one of my goals! 

Would I recommend making this afghan to others? Actually, since it was mainly single crochet, it was pretty doable. I would say, yes, I would. I might include some instructions on a post-it note of the changes I made, if the person was interested. I might not suggest it as a first afghan you ever made, but maybe the second would be OK.

So what's next along the challenge line? I don't know yet. I haven't picked out the next crafting magazine yet. Not sure if I'll stick to a crochet magazine, or go for some other craft. I feel like doing a variety will keep my interest longer, and I have to admit I do like to trade them off. 

I also bought some yarn - a more conventional acrylic - to make the companion afghan. I don't think I'm going to consider that a challenge craft, though, but more of a bonus find. I went with some blues for that afghan, and I'm sure I'll post some pictures of it, and write about it at some point as well.

Here's the picture of that one from the magazine:

Now picture it in blues