Koyuki is a baby girl, born to a longtime Japanese friend. A few years ago, my friend and her family visited us in the summer, and I gifted her a quilt. She received it with more joy, wonder and gratitude than I have ever received- it filled my heart. So of course when she had another baby girl in December, I knew a quilt would be the perfect gift.
I really went to town with the pink. I love it- so soft and soothing. I did a bit of an I-spy combined with a scrappy wonky star, using the centers as a showcase for fun novelty fabrics (including munki sushi!).
On the back I used one of my favourite prints ever, by Megumi Sakakibara. Going through a bit of hoarder's separation anxiety about this but it is just too perfect a compliment to the top to doubt.
As my arms are still not very strong and pulling even a small quilt sandwich around to machine quilt was uncomfortable, I hand quilted it with Perle cotton. I love how it adds to the softness. Just one pass around each star and centre square, and one line dividing each block. I did a triple row around the outer sashing. Pretty. The binding is a print by Anna Griffith, hand bound.
This will be winging its way to Japan shortly along with this ruffled (and wrinkled!) onsie that I just adore. Oh, babies!
Showing posts with label baby quilts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label baby quilts. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 8, 2015
Wednesday, May 28, 2014
don't pass out: I finished a quilt
But I thought it was time to complete SOMETHING, so I dug out this one, meant for a baby girl born last fall, and basted it. I quilted it with cathedral windows.....
....and backed it with an adorable Alexander Henry Monkey Bizness fabric that had the perfect colours and style with its cute flea market scenes. Love it. Panicking and wishing I had stashed more ;)
I also had one of those blissful moments that only quilters can understand, when you look in you stash for binding and find the perfect match, not knowing where or when you bought it, or what the heck it even is, other than PERFECT. See? Stashing justified. I hand bound it while enjoying a quiet, rainy afternoon on the deck at the cottage.
A simple quilt, just perfect for a little baby girl with a French Canadian heritage. Baby Renee was named for her departed grandmother, who had an inspiring 4 year battle with inflammatory breast cancer, but did it all with grace. She passed away in 2010, but had a blog about her journey, which has since had some entries by her eldest daughter. Renee was an amazing writer. The link is here if you would like to read it- bring a tissue. A great quote that stuck with me:
"It's like getting into a boat that is just about to sail out to sea and sink. There are no life rafts, no floats and no one gets out alive. Rather than trying to ward off the inevitable, why not accept it and enjoy the trip?"
Pema Chodron
A Buddhist nun describing life
A lovely sentiment that fits in rather well with my less stress project, I think.
Have a great day and enjoy the trip, my friends!
K
Friday, November 22, 2013
a quilt for the plaid baby
One of my favourite quilty friends, Kaelin of The Plaid Scottie, welcomed a beautiful and healthy baby girl, Merida, into the world this past week! There are a group of us who chat daily on Facebook about quilting and basically every other issue known to man (and some I am sure no one else has ever dreamed up), and we have been excitedly awaiting this moment since the pee hit the stick ;) Even before Merida was conceived, Kaelin had put her order in for the Coolbreeze sweater I showed you here. But in addition to that, the group of us decided to, naturally, make her a quilt.
Angela quarterbacked the whole thing (and I pinched all the finished quilt pictures from her site, with her permission of course). After much discussion we opted on a paper pieced square in a square block that could showcase our collections of cute and precious fabrics, perfect for an I Spy quilt! Oh what fun watching this come together!
There were about 10 us making this quilt for Kaelin and her "plaid baby" as she is known to us; Angela, Cherie, Cara, Michelle, Kelly, Ali, Amy, Rene, Elena, Tracey and myself. Merida's nursery theme is "The Fabulous Mr. Fox" so there is definitely and abundance of fox-themed fabrics present. These are the blocks I contributed!
A big shout out to Angela for quilting and binding this baby to perfection!
We are all so thrilled for Kaelin, and wish her and her new little family all the best. And we hope Merida inherits her mother's appreciation and love of good fabric!! I am sure this is a good start ;)
Angela quarterbacked the whole thing (and I pinched all the finished quilt pictures from her site, with her permission of course). After much discussion we opted on a paper pieced square in a square block that could showcase our collections of cute and precious fabrics, perfect for an I Spy quilt! Oh what fun watching this come together!
There were about 10 us making this quilt for Kaelin and her "plaid baby" as she is known to us; Angela, Cherie, Cara, Michelle, Kelly, Ali, Amy, Rene, Elena, Tracey and myself. Merida's nursery theme is "The Fabulous Mr. Fox" so there is definitely and abundance of fox-themed fabrics present. These are the blocks I contributed!
A big shout out to Angela for quilting and binding this baby to perfection!
We are all so thrilled for Kaelin, and wish her and her new little family all the best. And we hope Merida inherits her mother's appreciation and love of good fabric!! I am sure this is a good start ;)
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Bloggers Quilt Festival: Heartstrings
Well, I finished up another quilt and decided to enter it in the hand quilting category in the Blogger's Quilt Festival! Welcome to any newcomers via Amy's blog, hope you are enjoying the festival!
Unfortunately, this quilt has a sad story. It was made for a co-worker and her husband who recently suffered a late miscarriage of their first baby. They had been trying to get pregnant for ages. They were devastated. I felt helpless. I made a quilt.
I called it Heartstrings because, the situation pulls at my heartstrings, and, it is literally a heart made out of strings. I decided to do a colorful heart, representing hope and love, against a dark, blank background.
For the quilting, I used a rainbow of Perle cotton. I chain stitched on the words "love lives forever in our hearts" and then did echo quilting around the heart perimeter in a variety of different stitches. It is simple, but effective (I think!) against the grey.
On the back, a cozy flannel that has been in my stash since before I officially HAD a stash! The binding is a grey polka dot from the LQS, hand stitched in place.
Simple, but I hope this quilt provides some comfort. Thanks for visiting!
Unfortunately, this quilt has a sad story. It was made for a co-worker and her husband who recently suffered a late miscarriage of their first baby. They had been trying to get pregnant for ages. They were devastated. I felt helpless. I made a quilt.
I called it Heartstrings because, the situation pulls at my heartstrings, and, it is literally a heart made out of strings. I decided to do a colorful heart, representing hope and love, against a dark, blank background.
For the quilting, I used a rainbow of Perle cotton. I chain stitched on the words "love lives forever in our hearts" and then did echo quilting around the heart perimeter in a variety of different stitches. It is simple, but effective (I think!) against the grey.
On the back, a cozy flannel that has been in my stash since before I officially HAD a stash! The binding is a grey polka dot from the LQS, hand stitched in place.
Simple, but I hope this quilt provides some comfort. Thanks for visiting!
Labels:
baby quilts,
hand stitching,
Perle,
quilt,
quilting,
quilts finished in 2013,
string quilt
Friday, October 25, 2013
Blogger's Quilt Festival: Spectacle quilt
It's that time again- the fall edition of the Blogger's Quilt Festival has begun over at Amy's Creative Side. I have mine listed in the baby quilt category! Can't wait to peruse the quilty goodness in Blogland! Welcome to any newbies to my blog, and thanks for stopping by :)
I knew the quilting should be unstructured as well, and decided on a wonky free flow grid, somewhat mimicking that in the Heath. I used a light blue cotton thread, which of course I ran out of half way through the vertical quilting. Le sigh.
A newly finished quilt to share with you today. Isn't it funny that when fall hits and everything around me starts to wilt and die, I always seem to get a surge of creativity? Lately I have been ON FIRE, people! Sewing this and that, knitting my brains out, and a bunch of quilts coming together. Lovin' it. Just wish there were more hours in a day!
And I THINK this may be my new favoritest quilt of all time!! (Yes, this is the part where I start to get all braggy. But seriously. Check this out. )
I can't think of a single thing I don't like on this quilt, or that I would do differently if I had the chance. Which is rare for me (overanalyze much?). I made this for a baby boy on his way into the world, but I am thinking that he may get a Gap gift certificate instead ;) It all started with inspiration from this quilt, by Blue Elephant Stitches. Now I am usually a girl who digs symmetry...total Type A personality, like to control everything, so on and so forth. But that said, my favorite quilts to make, or look at, for that matter, are often the ones that have very little rhyme or reason.
This one was just like that. I took some scraps in blues and greens out of the overflowing bin, cut them into triangles, and decided to use two tones of grey to piece them together randomly. I used Kona-something (charcoal?) and Alexander Henry Heath. I had no plan, just assembled the top row by row, and had so much fun in the process as I slashed and hacked and stitched away.
Well, as often is the case for me, unexpected mess ups stimulate creativity (i.e. being too lazy to go to the store to buy more matching thread, I came up with a Plan B). So, I decided to add some turquoise and goldenrod thread lines to the grid to fill in the spaces, and a small segment of hand quilting as well. In the end, I think this adds so much to the finished product, we are just going to pretend it was a product of genius instead of laziness, okay?
The binding- I used a Sunkissed Sweetwater texty print cut on the bias. I am normally one for hand stitched binding, but have dabbled in machine sewn too, with little success. But this time- total triumph! I used a WALKING FOOT, people...geez, whey haven't I tried that before?? Made all the difference. It turned out perfect.
Last but not least- the backing! How fun is this?
What is it? It's a piece of a sheet, bought at Winners (Canada's equivalent to TJ Maxx), made by Colin and Justin. What can I say? It makes me so happy. Perfect amount of funky fun for this quilt. And I have plenty left for another (or two!).
This quilt measures in at about 40" by 50". Annnnnnd I think that's all I have to say about that.
Thanks for stopping by and have a great day!
Kristie :)
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
A quilt for Ryker
A friend approached me to commission a quilt for her friend, who I haven't met. She is pregnant with their second child, a boy they have already named Ryker. However, they were recently given the devastating news that the fetus has a condition making it incompatible with life. Instead of terminating the pregnancy, the couple has decided to carry the baby to term, hoping to maybe have a few hours to hold their son before he passes.
They call Ryker their little sunshine, so I decided to base the quilt top on sun and sunbeams. The top is one big paper pieced block. I had never paper pieced before, but I did a few practice blocks, then sketched this out on freezer paper, roughly using this free tutorial on Craftsy as a guide. I gotta say, I see more paper piecing in my future!
The top piecing is really quilte simple, and my plan was to do some fancy free motion quilting along the beams to make it meaningful. I used a nylon "invisible thread" for the first time, this one by Connecting Threads, and was really pleased with the result. It blended well with all the bold colors here, letting the texture steal the show.
In the sunshine, I tried my hand at some curve-on-curve quilting.
In the orange, I did some "ribbon candy."
In the lighter blue beams, I quilted radiating waves, and put words in them. I stitched in "Ryker", "you are my sunshine," "love lasts forever," and a simple heart. The alternate navy beams are each a different pattern: a quilted plaid, a stipple, pebbles, radiating circles and clamshells. The result is a quilt filled with lots of lovely texture.
I am hoping this quilt provides some comfort to Ryker's parents; something to hold when he is gone.
Linking up to Fabric Tuesday at Quilt Story.
They call Ryker their little sunshine, so I decided to base the quilt top on sun and sunbeams. The top is one big paper pieced block. I had never paper pieced before, but I did a few practice blocks, then sketched this out on freezer paper, roughly using this free tutorial on Craftsy as a guide. I gotta say, I see more paper piecing in my future!
The top piecing is really quilte simple, and my plan was to do some fancy free motion quilting along the beams to make it meaningful. I used a nylon "invisible thread" for the first time, this one by Connecting Threads, and was really pleased with the result. It blended well with all the bold colors here, letting the texture steal the show.
In the sunshine, I tried my hand at some curve-on-curve quilting.
In the orange, I did some "ribbon candy."
In the lighter blue beams, I quilted radiating waves, and put words in them. I stitched in "Ryker", "you are my sunshine," "love lasts forever," and a simple heart. The alternate navy beams are each a different pattern: a quilted plaid, a stipple, pebbles, radiating circles and clamshells. The result is a quilt filled with lots of lovely texture.
I used a DS plaid for the back and Joel Dewberry herringbone in navy for the binding, which was machine stitched in place (getting better at that).
I am hoping this quilt provides some comfort to Ryker's parents; something to hold when he is gone.
Linking up to Fabric Tuesday at Quilt Story.
Sunday, May 19, 2013
Blogger's Quilt Festival: a quilt for my niece
Welcome, Bloggers! Hope you are enjoying the Festival, thanks for popping by!
I have a new niece! You can read more about her story here. She has stolen all of our hearts :)
This is a quilt that brings me so much joy. I have been waiting to make it forever. My sister is not a "pink" person, and, growing up, had her own room decorated in purple, blue and black. So, I used those colors as inspiration for my niece's baby quilt.
I don't often use patterns, but this time opted to crack out one of the MANY quilting books I buy (but rarely use!) for a simple pattern. I settled on Elizabeth Hartman's Fenced In, from her Practical Guide to Patchwork, and modified it to baby size. Though a generous baby size...it finished up at about 50"x50'.
I used and assortment of fabrics from my stash, choosing light and dark purples, navy and aqua blues, a splash of pink, and some yarn dyed Essex linen in black as my base. A new color palate for me, and I love how it turned out.
On the back, I made a patchwork heart, with the center being my label, with some words of love for my new sweet niece.
I quilted it with loopy hearts to add even more love!
My sister used the quilt in a newborn photoshoot with the amazing May Arason-Li. If you are in the Winnipeg area, I highly recommend her! She has taken photos of our family as well, and they are spectacular. Here are a couple of my favourites :)
And another on my New Wave quilt, pattern, by coincidence, also by Elizabeth Hartman.
And who doesn't melt at the sight of baby toes and puppies??
I have a new niece! You can read more about her story here. She has stolen all of our hearts :)
This is a quilt that brings me so much joy. I have been waiting to make it forever. My sister is not a "pink" person, and, growing up, had her own room decorated in purple, blue and black. So, I used those colors as inspiration for my niece's baby quilt.
I don't often use patterns, but this time opted to crack out one of the MANY quilting books I buy (but rarely use!) for a simple pattern. I settled on Elizabeth Hartman's Fenced In, from her Practical Guide to Patchwork, and modified it to baby size. Though a generous baby size...it finished up at about 50"x50'.
I used and assortment of fabrics from my stash, choosing light and dark purples, navy and aqua blues, a splash of pink, and some yarn dyed Essex linen in black as my base. A new color palate for me, and I love how it turned out.
On the back, I made a patchwork heart, with the center being my label, with some words of love for my new sweet niece.
I quilted it with loopy hearts to add even more love!
My sister used the quilt in a newborn photoshoot with the amazing May Arason-Li. If you are in the Winnipeg area, I highly recommend her! She has taken photos of our family as well, and they are spectacular. Here are a couple of my favourites :)
And another on my New Wave quilt, pattern, by coincidence, also by Elizabeth Hartman.
And who doesn't melt at the sight of baby toes and puppies??
Thanks again for stopping by, I am off to enjoy the Festival!
Thursday, April 11, 2013
a noteworthy quilt
I received a surprise package in the mail from Sew Sisters in thanks for participating in their Kona challenge- remember the pregnant doll tutorial? Included were some more Kona solids and a charm pack of Noteworthy by Sweetwater.
Now, normally when I get new fabric, it sits out on the kitchen counter awhile so I could look at it, then progresses to the desk in the craft room, eventually to be put away in the appropriate storage bin in the Closet of No Return. Then, much later, I find it, wondering why I have never USED it?
Not this time.
It was no sooner out of the envelope than I tore into it and sewed it into a patchwork baby quilt top. Just. Like. That. I kid you not, the top was sewn and pressed within 20 minutes.
While I was at it (and totally because I was too lazy to clean up and put away my machine), I grabbed a scrap of batting, my 505 spray and a piece of perfectly coordinating Nicey Jane dots (rescued from The Closet) and basted that baby. Continuing on, I decided to quilt it with some pretty free motion flowers, one in each square, to add a little something to the simple patchwork.
I especially love how the quilting looks against the backing.
The binding is a pink with loopy flowers as well, just made for this quilt. This stuff is from my local Fabricland, and has been hanging in The Closet since my very first quilt, almost 3 years ago! I attached it and finished hand sewing it on that night while catching up on trashy t.v.
Now, normally when I get new fabric, it sits out on the kitchen counter awhile so I could look at it, then progresses to the desk in the craft room, eventually to be put away in the appropriate storage bin in the Closet of No Return. Then, much later, I find it, wondering why I have never USED it?
Not this time.
It was no sooner out of the envelope than I tore into it and sewed it into a patchwork baby quilt top. Just. Like. That. I kid you not, the top was sewn and pressed within 20 minutes.
While I was at it (and totally because I was too lazy to clean up and put away my machine), I grabbed a scrap of batting, my 505 spray and a piece of perfectly coordinating Nicey Jane dots (rescued from The Closet) and basted that baby. Continuing on, I decided to quilt it with some pretty free motion flowers, one in each square, to add a little something to the simple patchwork.
I especially love how the quilting looks against the backing.
The binding is a pink with loopy flowers as well, just made for this quilt. This stuff is from my local Fabricland, and has been hanging in The Closet since my very first quilt, almost 3 years ago! I attached it and finished hand sewing it on that night while catching up on trashy t.v.
So there you have it, the story of a quilt, made in less than a day, completely unplanned. Noteworthy, I think :)
Friday, August 31, 2012
A quilt and sweater for Baby Kiera
Seeing as Last But Not Least snapped up the vajayjay quilt, I had to whip up a new one on the double for Baby Kiera!

Like the other, this quilt used the grey, yellow and pink colour scheme, to match Kiera's nursery. I love how the two quilts look so entirely different! I have to say this is one of my favourites. I loved every minute of making it, I completely improvised as I went, adding bits here and there. I started with the wonky log cabins, and as Kiera's mom likes strip quilts, I added a couple other different block styles in strips. My kids especially loved the strip of "ruler" fabric along the top, saying that would be perfect to help Kiera's mom measure her as she grows!

I quilted it with an all over loopy pattern, my first time trying this, and I honestly kinda sucked at it. But overall I still think it looks fine, and I love the crinkly effect. I used some Aurafil variegated yellow/white thread, another first, and liked the product. But I am just as happy with the performance of my Connecting Threads thread, which is much less expensive!

On the back I used a large piece of my new absolute favourite fabric by Heather Ross, the pin people, that my friend Angela was kind enough to pick up and send to me when it went on sale at Hancock's (I think??). I absolutely love the light grey colour with the pink and orange and lime accents, it is the perfect backing for this quilt, and I think I need to plan an entire other quilt around this fabric. Lovity love it!

On the back I included a label that I made using printer friendly fabric, and made it in the wonky log cabin style that I had on the front.

This quilt was a bit big for a baby quilt, about 40 by 50 inches. It will be good for Kiera to snuggle up with for some time, I hope!

Along with the quilt, I knit up a sweet little coat using the Baby Tiered Coat pattern by Lisa Chemery on Ravelry (see details on my Ravelry page here). Such a cute pattern! I made it in a nice neutral grey, using a Wool Ease worsted weight yarn held double for thickness, and added some cute yellow buttons as an accent.


Inside I added a label by Izzy and Ivy Designs that we got in our grab bags at Sewing Summit last fall. They are a great product with some really cute styles! I may just order some more of these.

The two were gifted at a nice casual baby shower the other day at my home, and seem to be well loved.
Welcome to the world, Kiera!

Like the other, this quilt used the grey, yellow and pink colour scheme, to match Kiera's nursery. I love how the two quilts look so entirely different! I have to say this is one of my favourites. I loved every minute of making it, I completely improvised as I went, adding bits here and there. I started with the wonky log cabins, and as Kiera's mom likes strip quilts, I added a couple other different block styles in strips. My kids especially loved the strip of "ruler" fabric along the top, saying that would be perfect to help Kiera's mom measure her as she grows!

I quilted it with an all over loopy pattern, my first time trying this, and I honestly kinda sucked at it. But overall I still think it looks fine, and I love the crinkly effect. I used some Aurafil variegated yellow/white thread, another first, and liked the product. But I am just as happy with the performance of my Connecting Threads thread, which is much less expensive!

On the back I used a large piece of my new absolute favourite fabric by Heather Ross, the pin people, that my friend Angela was kind enough to pick up and send to me when it went on sale at Hancock's (I think??). I absolutely love the light grey colour with the pink and orange and lime accents, it is the perfect backing for this quilt, and I think I need to plan an entire other quilt around this fabric. Lovity love it!

On the back I included a label that I made using printer friendly fabric, and made it in the wonky log cabin style that I had on the front.

This quilt was a bit big for a baby quilt, about 40 by 50 inches. It will be good for Kiera to snuggle up with for some time, I hope!

Along with the quilt, I knit up a sweet little coat using the Baby Tiered Coat pattern by Lisa Chemery on Ravelry (see details on my Ravelry page here). Such a cute pattern! I made it in a nice neutral grey, using a Wool Ease worsted weight yarn held double for thickness, and added some cute yellow buttons as an accent.


Inside I added a label by Izzy and Ivy Designs that we got in our grab bags at Sewing Summit last fall. They are a great product with some really cute styles! I may just order some more of these.

The two were gifted at a nice casual baby shower the other day at my home, and seem to be well loved.
Welcome to the world, Kiera!
Shared at Sew Modern Monday.
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