Another word about “Twelve by Twelve”

Oh, so I didn’t want the podcast to be extra long, and I wanted let Diane and Helen speak for themselves — so there was a lot that I didn’t say. I don’t think I gave the book an adequate enough review, nor gave you enough time to comment for the opportunity to win the book, because the podcast went up late.

So, the winner will be drawn at midnight tonight, april 9th. There’s also another reason… I’m going to do a special podcast that will be released tomorrow, Sunday with a new Give-Away.

about Twelve by Twelve

When I was scrambling to edit and do the intro to the podcast, I could not find my copy of the book!! How can I speak about it just from memory? Last evening, before hunkering down to knit, I found the book in a pile of other books for review. I sat down with the book instead of knitting and began reading it from cover to cover.

(I wish I could have super-imposed the cover of Twelve by Twelve here, but alas, I’m not that clever ; )

The thing about this book is that you MUST read it cover to cover.

It’s not just about the quilts…

(Quilts from top to bottom:

Dandelion by Terri, Chocolate by Diane, and Passion by Gerrie)

although it is a lot about the quilts.

But it’s also about the techniques, which is are wide and varied, as are the styles in which each of the Quilt Artists worked.

It’s also about their commitment to the project, their support systems at home that helped them accomplish their goals, but it’s most about:

The Art Quilters…

(Quilts from top to bottom:

Community by Terry, Twelve by Karen, and Twelve by Gerrie)

Incredible, ALL.

This is a coffee table book, I realized.

Deserving a viewing place so others who visit your home can see the beautiful photography, read the profiles and be inspired. And, you can pick it up and resume reading…

Here are some other photos:

Annie And Helen

Two clever quilters…

Annie and Diane

There are a couple of comments that I want to share with you that came in yesterday’s podcast:

“Nice interview ladies! And now we can add that in addition to being at Midsommer Quilting and then Festival of Quilts in Birmingham, England, our quilts will also be shown at Quilt Festival in Houston, USA! (Annie, no need to put me in a drawing for the book — I’ve already got one!)”     Kristin La Flamme

I have to say HOORAY!!! We’ll all be able to see them in October!!! And I can bet more than one of these ladies will be there, too. Hmmm, I can I suggest a meet-up, so the fans of the book can meet you all??!! I think that would be a stellar idea ; )

Then… this comment…

“Hi Annie — HAPPY BIRTHDAY to your podcast!! I think I read your home page correctly and your podcast is now 6 years old! Congratulations!”     Diane Loomis

Yes, it’s that time again….

April 9th was the day that I first started to podcast — 6 years ago today!

I’ve talked about a lot of quilty goodness since then and will continue to talk about quilting for a long time to come. Quilting has seen a renaissance in 1976, continued to ride the swell thanks to…

our Quilting Embassador, Alex Anderson, and her legacy of bringing quilting into homes everywhere and inspiring us to quilt, quilt, quilt…

and technology is giving us more ways to enjoy our craft. Quilting will continue to warm our hearts and our homes long after we are gone and our posterity continues to quilt.

Nonnie asked me, “Future podcast you might want to explore…. THE NEW MODERN QUILT GUILDS that are popping up all over the country. Young women coming together to learn how to quilt but with a different sense of style and sensiblity. Their projects are different, their colors are different, their patterns and the way they are learning to quilt is different… yes they are forming their own guilds but they are also learning form the internet.”

I heard ya! It’s on my list!

Ok, since you have til midnight tonight, I want to hear from you — and I’ll pick the winner after midnight tonight. Don’t forget!

Happy Quilting!!

©2011 Annie Smith   All Rights Reserved

 

 

Program 189 – Twelve by Twelve

Program #189 — Twelve by Twelve
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Running time: 00:46:16 Size: 42.5 MB

Quilters! I found an interview for the podcast that I thought was lost!! I interviewed Helen Conway and Diane Perin Hock at Pacific International Quilt Festival last October just before I left for Quilt Market. I am OVERJOYED to have found this interview, so I can share it with you!

Unfortunately, the pictures we took the day of the interview are gone with the wind, as they say – but you’ll find some great pictures of Diane and Helen and their quilts on the following links:

twelveby12.org

Helen Conway’s website

Helen’s blog

Diane’s blog

And, in keeping with the Give-Away-A-Day theme, here’s today’s Give-Away:

YOUR very own copy of the book, Twelve by Twelve!

So don’t forget to leave a comment, and please – when you leave a comment, please comment about the podcast/blog content, not simply that you’d love to win. I want your feedback ; )

And here is the winner of yesterday’s blog, for the Aurifil thread assortment:

Lucky you, Barb!! Email me your address so I can send your beautiful prize to you!

I really hope you’ll enjoy the interview.

©2011 Annie Smith   All Rights Reserved

It’s All About the Thread

Thread can make or (literally) break your quilt. Many antique quilts have fraying fabrics but the stitches are secure. Consider the picture below:

The fabric is disintegrated but the outline of the applique is held secure by the thread.

I’m so glad that we have choices for different types of threads! I remember sewing in the 1970’s and having one choice, Coats and Clarks. Not that it was bad thread, it was just the only choice in the fabric stores.

Today, I love to have beautiful threads to choose from for my quilts — and there’s really only one that I use anymore. Aurifil. Even the name is beautiful. Here’s a little sample of their colors:

Here’s a larger sample of their colors:

Molto Bene!! (Aurifil is located in Italy)

It comes in this tidy little package:

If you notice the fine print on the cover, you’ll see that Aurifil thread comes in a variety of thicknesses, 12, 28, 40 and 50. If you want to know what the difference is, hop over to Aurifil and they’ll tell you all about their threads. You’ll even see some cool videos featuring Pat Sloan ; )

This is what my Aurifil threads collection looks like:

You’ll notice that thread spool colors are orange — for 50 weight, and gray — for 28 weight. What’s the difference? 50 weight is finer and I use that for piecing, machine quilting and hand applique. 28 weight is thicker and more lustrous and I use that for fine machine applique and free motion thread play.

The colors of Aurifil thread are scrumptious, are they not?!

This is how I “tote” my threads when I teach. I can see all of the colors clearly from the outside. And, it’s double-sided! Each cubby will hold one large spool or three small spools. Seen this carrier before?

You may have at a Quilt Show, where they sell for $12 – $20.

Will you laugh if I tell you that this carrier is actually a generic Hot Wheels box?

Yeah, it really is. I talked about this box about 5 years ago on the podcast. It’s one of my favorite things, especially for quilty get-aways.

I noticed the functionality of this box after I bought one for the Boy Wonder when he was into Hot Wheels. He still has his collection is his box…

Now, Aurifil is doing this very cool thing… Designers of the Month

and guess what? I AM ONE! I will be designing the June Project, which will be previewed at Quilt Market in Salt Lake City in May, and will be released in June on the Aurifil website. I promise it will be fun and worth the wait. There will be threads given away as prizes and a super prize for those who make the project and enter it into the contest on the Aurifil website.

So… this is a Give-Away-A-Day, right?

So, what’s the prize?

First, I have to announce yesterday’s winner of Lyric Kinard’s Art+Quilt book…. drum roll please….

(I do things the old-fashioned way. It’s not very scientific but it takes a prettier picture.)

Congratulations, Debbie! Email me your address and I will get the book in the mail to you pronto, as they say in Italy.

Ok, enough waiting — here it is:

A sweet assortment of Aurifil threads, just for YOU! Three spools of 28 weight, three spools of 50 weight and a 5-pack of the assorted weights.

How cool is that?!

I love the label on the assorted weights, It says “Feeling the Thread of Your Passion”. That’s what it is alright!!

So, leave me a comment and the winner will be chosen at midnight, April 8th. Tomorrow there will be a new podcast and another chance to win a fabulous prize. And guess what, if you’ve already won, you can win again! I’m not taking winners names out of the drawing.

Here’s a little “Happy Spring!” picture that makes me happy, even though it’s a rainy day:

Beautiful flowers, inspiring colors

Here’s a photo of my hand applique quilt sample, finished and ready to be delivered to my LQS so quilters can sign up for class

It turned out pretty good — and it’s a super simple sample of hand applique

Just in case you want to see a close-up of the focus fabric, it IS a beauty!

and one last picture, because  the blog is telling me that it’s not quite done yet… and it’s raining, again, today…

better get prepared!!

Happy Quilting!!

Annie

 

©2011 Annie Smith  All Rights Reserved

Program #188 – The Quilt will tell you what it wants

Program #188 — The Quilt Will Tell You What It Wants
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Running time: 00:32:18 Size: 29.7 MB

And Give-Away-A-Day starts today!! Leave a comment for a chance to win your very own copy of Lyric Kinard’s book, Art+Quilt. The winner will be drawn and announced in tomorrow’s blog. Good luck!!

I learned a looooong time ago, and after a few painful lessons, that the Quilt will tell you what it wants. And I listen, even when I groan under the additional work that it’s going to cost me. But — I am never unhappy with the outcome. On the contrary, if I didn’t listen, I would look at that finished quilt and remember what I COULD have done with it – and that I just really wanted “good enough” after all, which never is.

Here is the quilt that I created for a beginning Hand Applique class at my LQS:

Pretty simple, yes?

Then, because I can never leave well-enoough alone, here is the additional way they can make their quilt:

Also very pretty. I actually really love the hearts on-point and to add a plain square to set off the hearts.

So the more I looked at this quilt on the design board, the more it kept calling me… “make this little change”

Oooh, look how the turquoise fabric I purchased for the other quilt sets off the coral hearts!

Then, and here’s the BIG then, I saw the possibility of this:

Which transformed into this:

And just sets off the hearts in the quilt in this very pretty little way:

So now, I’m embroidering those four squares and eight inset-triangles like there is no tomorrow. Man, it takes time. So I’m entertaining myself with this:

And oh my, how I love it! (available on Netflix instant streaming)

Lastly here is a recent picture of the “little peanut”, Cambria:

and now, don’t forget to leave a comment for a chance to win Art+Quilt… and then come back tomorrow to see if you’ve won, and what the next Give-Away will be!

©2011 Annie Smith   All Rights Reserved

Where did that fabric come from?!

Recently I was going through the closet by the front door, to find out where my projector was that I take with me when I do lectures. We couldn’t find the dang thing anywhere.

But this is not a coat closet, or a closet where we keep the vacuum or the Swiffer — it’s the closet where I keep my quilting stuff, silly. I hang quilt tops, pieces of quilt tops, lengths of yardage on hangers, along with bags with recent purchases that I want to hide. Usually they’re gifts for snoopy family members and they never think to look in there. Why would they — nothing in there belongs to them.  Ok, so after shopping for Kirsten’s birthday  — a really cool book of fashion trends from the turn of the century — I found the empty bag with tissue paper in it.

Pulled it out off the hanger, and as I was preparing to stuff it into the recycle bin, I spied something black in the bottom. Hmmm, what could this be?

This is what I found:

three fat quarters, all the same fabric.

none of them had the selvage labeling on them, so I have no idea what collection they’re from or who the manufacturer is.

Even more curious is WHY I bought them! and WHERE did I buy them? I have no recollection of these fabrics, although I remember that I was shopping in Pacific Grove two years ago, which is when I bought the book for Kirsten. (I even forgot to give it to her for THAT birthday, so she got it last year)

ok, so this is a cute little print, looks like fireworks, good colors for a focus fabric color palette…

So what to do with this fabric…?  hmmm….

I really like playing with a selection of fat quarters, like the quilts in the previous post (podcast #187), so I went to my studio and looked in my fat quarter shelves:

(My fat quarter shelves are recycled CD racks that we no longer use in our house. They’re from Mexico and we got them back before Y2k. If you fold your fabric just right, they are the size of a CD and fit perfectly on those shelves. I like re-purposing home items that we no longer care to use in the house. My studio is filled with items like this. They work really well)

And this is how I started:

I like this red with black… but I think I like the next one  better:

Yeah, I do like the second one better.

Then, I chose the rest:

Tone on tone white, black and white print, a splash of yellow for an eye-catcher, orange, red, green and blue. Those are all of the colors in the fireworks fabric, which I am going to use as the background fabric in all of the blocks so the colors can really come forward.

And here they are in value order:

So now I think I’ll have some fun playing with these fabrics. I busted my stash — no new fabric will be used. Even the fireworks fabric isn’t new — it’s two years old, for peet’s sake!

I’ll show you the blocks after I get all the fabrics cut and I start designing the blocks.

On another note, I want to congratulate Lyric Montgomery Kinard of Cary, NC for being selected as Teacher of the Year!!

To celebrate, I’m going to review her book in tomorrow’s podcast and then give it away to a lucky winner.

This is going to kick off a series of podcasts and blogs that have a give-away-a-day. I have a treasure box filled with the coolest give-away items and it’s about time to give them away, to YOU! So, starting tomorrow, there will be a give-away each day and you need to leave a comment before midnight each day because the lucky winners will be announced in the next day’s post.

Stay tuned!!

©2011  Annie Smith   All Rights Reserved

 

Program 187 — Counting the Losses…

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Running time: 00:41:30 Size: 40 MB

Yep, it really happened. No pictures, no saved emails, no email addresses — so that means I lost your’s. If you sent me a picture in an email in the past, please resend it to me so I have it.

My Boy Wonder, off to see the world:

and here he is in Cuernavaca, Mexico with his Mission President and Sister Spannaus:

He’s doing well, battling spiders and dogs — and is as happy as a clam. No quilts… it’s too hot there!

Exploring Fabric Choices Quilt series. All of the blocks in these quilts is the same — only one block design used. Only the layouts are different.

Red and Black Quilt

This one will be familiar to you. This is the first one that I did, where I learned how to use fork pins for perfectly butted seams and created batting boards. I love the drama of the red and black.

#2 – Metro Blue Summer

Created from Marcus Brothers’ Metro Blue fabric line and made the summer that I visited them in NYC. I love turquoise and chocolate!

#3 — Low Tide

Made with Marcus Brothers Surf and Sand collection. Low contrast, no real true dark fabric is used here. Perfect for a nap at a beach cottage.

#4 – The Quilt Show quilt

Here are the blocks that I used for Episode 209 of The Quilt Show. I had these blocks for the last three years and finally decided to make the quilt top. This is a very special quilt for me — a memento of a dream fulfilled. I made 6″ versions of the block for Alex And Ricky’s keepsake quilts that each of their guests make for them.

#5 — Picnic with Sue

I used Susan Branch’s Martha’s Vineyard fabric collection for this one. I got the fabric when I interviewed her. I love the bright colors and Sue’s style. I hand appliqued the Grandmother’s Flower Garden hexagon flowers.

#6 — Pink and Chocolate

Civil War reproduction fabrics. Loads of fun. Instead of using 10 fat quarters to make a 9-block quilt, I decided to make a bed-sized version and used 20 fabrics to make the 20-block quilt. It works! Kirsten has decided that she needs this one ; )

#7 — Black and Bright

It never fails when I teach this class that I end up finding another fat quarter collection to make a new version of the quilt. I love using solid black as a canvas and then allowing my quilter to create beautiful quilting detail.

#8 — Williamsburg quilt

I bought these fabulous Revolutionary War reproduction fabrics when I visited the Champlain Valley Quilt Guild just before Cambria was born and used them for the online class instruction. I love this collection of fabrics!

There are still more quilts in the series to come. I have two that are waiting to be sewn into a quilt top and one that will be cut up to sewn into blocks this week. There is just “something” about this block, this quilt, that I love to work on. Don’t know why — except maybe that it has something to do with the changing nature of ONE block and where you put the light- medium- and- dark that changes these quilts so dramatically.

And speaking of Cambria, here she is now — 16 months old and as precious as ever:

Some last minute, but not too late Christmas recipes

Here are some recipes that I do every year for our celebrations. tradition is a good thing and smells bring back powerful memories of wonderful family gatherings.

Enjoy — and Merry Christmas to you and your loved ones!!

Festive Baked Brie
1 wheel of Brie cheese
1 jar of apricot preserves
1 1/2 cups dried cranberries
1 package of sliced almonds

Preheat oven to 350

Lightly scrape/shave cheese with a steak knife to remove white outer shell. You won’t get all of it, just get most if it.

Place cheese in a shallow dish. Cover with the jar of preserves. Top that with dried cranberries, and almonds on top of that.

Bake in oven for 30minutes or until the cheese is very soft, but try not to overbake and make the cheese totally melted.

Serve with bread baguette slices cut at an angle.

Miniature Peanut Butter treats
1/2 c. butter, softened
1/2 c. sugar
1/2 c. brown sugar
1 egg
1/2 c. creamy peanut butter
1/2 t. vanilla
1 1/4 c. flour
1/4 t. baking soda
1/2 t. salt

42 miniature peanut butter cups

combine butter, sugars, egge, peanut butter and vanilla in mixing bowl, beat til smooth. in a separate bowl, combine dry ingredients and mix with a fork, then add to creamed mixture. cover dough and chill.

when cold enough to handle easily, roll in small walnit-sized balls, place each ball in a greased miniature muffin pan. bake at 375 for 8-9 minutes.

remove from oven, gently press on peanut butter cup into each cookie and make a depression.

cool in pan 10 minutes. remove from pan and cool on rack. store in cool place til serving.

makes 3 1/2 dozen

Breakfast Bake
1 1/2 lb. frozen hash browns
1.2 c. melted butter

9 x 13 dish  450 10 mins

1 c. diced ham
1 c. mozzarella
1 c. cheddar cheese
4 eggs
1/2 c. vaporated milk
salt 
pepper

add anything else — onion, peppers, olives, etc. You can also change out the meat to bacon or sausage or hamburger. or add broccoli, etc.
pour mixture over hash browns

bake 350 for 30-40 minutes

Macadamia Nut Fudge
12 oz. chocolate chips
10 oz. marshmallow creme
2 T. vanilla (mexican preferred)
2 c. macadamia nuts
1 cube of butter

dump ingredients in a big bowl

mix:
13 oz. evaporated milk
4 1/2 c. sugar

cook e-milk and sugar in a pot over medium heat, stirring constantly. bring to rolling boil. lower heat and cool 10-12 minutes.

pour mixture over contents in bowl and mix well. Add vanilla. turn into a greased pan. Allow fudge to cool completely. At room temperature, the fudge will be soft — my favorite way to eat it. If you like it harder, refrigerate.

I’m posting this from my iPad, because my computer’s hard drive is totally hosed. I wish I could post pictures for you, but if you go to Google and do an image search on the name of the recipe, you can see a picture.

©2010 Annie Smith All Rights Reserved

Program 185- on the road again, first stop- Oregon

Program #185 — on the road again, first stop – Oregon
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Running time: 00:21:11 Size: 19.5 MB

On my way to Houston, I made a stop at the Mid-Valley Quilt Guild in Salem, Oregon. Man, did I have a great time there with some fabulous quilter’s!!

One of my hostesses took me to the famous Powell’s Books AND VooDoo Donuts. What a treat!

the biggest treat of all was meeting Marie Warden, a 90 Year-old quilter who is actively a long-arm quilter and still drives. The audio on this one is a little sketchy because of Marie’s voice, but I hope you will enjoy the podcast.

Annie Smith. All Rights Reserved