Well….. Here are two more fabric collection ideas for Mother’s Day! We have Michael Millers Vintage Mom! Isn’t this fabric just the very best? One of a kind and now out of print. Purchase now while stock is still available.
Another playful collection for the cooks in all of us, is the Domestic Diva collection by Emily Taylor for Riley Blake Designs.
These fabrics would make great aprons, fabric boxes to store kitchen items in, quilts, hot pads, curtains and more! Exciting things to daydream about for yourself and loved ones….. Fabrics available on www.stitchesquilting.com
Below is a reversible apron that I made with some girlfriends. Â I made one for myself and my girlfriend made four to give as gifts. Â This apron would look great with any combination of the coordinates. Â I also trimmed the apron with Riley Blake’s 1/4 inch Velvet Brown Ric Rac! Â Doesn’t the apron look just delicious! Â The velvet RicRac is in stock and available online!
I am just itching to spend some time sewing and quilting in the quilt studio. I am resisting though as the kids are home for the weekend and it is time for an outdoor adventure downtown Salt Lake City.
Don’t forget my last weeks blog about more Mother’s Day Quilting Fabric Ideas and Gifts. Below are just a few of the photos….
Happy Stitching!
Deanna
Please let me know of ideas you have for these fabrics and for honoring mom or women important to you for Mother’s Day! Â Can’t wait to hear from all of YOU! Â Hash tag #stitchesquilting to show me some delightful photos of things you are making! Â Free Give Away coming soon!
Mother’s Day is a special day of the year to honor mothers and women important to you that have played a critical role in your life. Â It is an unique time to let all those special people out there know just how really important and valued they are. Â I love nothing more to receive homemade, handmade or personalized gifts or share ideas for Mothers Day gifts. Â For gift giving, I just love to make something personal for those I am trying to honor. Â Now I can only number on maybe two hands the handmade gifts given to me, but those gifts are certainly the gifts I cherish those above and beyond anything else.
At Stitches Quilting, we have some unique fabrics for you to use to honor those mother’s, grandmother’s and daughters our there everywhere. Â First we have these out of print toile fabrics from the collection “Watch Over Me” designed by J Roche & C Kramer for Chanteclaire fabric pattern 322 color navy blue 1 color red 7. Â The toile scene features a vintage mother and child carefully walking along with a beautiful angel watching over them from above. Â I love this fabric because as we are watching over our loved ones there are others watching over all of us. Â We are never alone. Â This fabric comes in the hue of a red wine type color and a navy blue. Â Below you can see a pillow sham that I created out of the Navy Blue “Watch Over Me” and a table runner made out of the Red Wine “Watch Over Me”. Â I have seen beautiful quilts made from these fabrics. Â You would want to design the quilt so that it had large blocks to feature the scenes depicted in the toile fabric. Â It would be simple to create a very quick quilt from these fabrics as you would want to accent the fabric and allow the toile scene to be the feature. Â There are many shades of reds and wines along with navy blue fabrics to coordinate with these toiles.
At Stitches quilting, we have another unique set of coordinates designed by Nicole de Leon actually called Mother’s Day Bouquet manufactured by Alexander Henry. Â The main piece titled “Mother’s Day” features mothers with their children in various settings with bright colors and flowers for Mother’s Day. Â I have never seen a piece of quilting fabric like this. Â The coordinating fabric is a gorgeous bouet of brightly colored flowers. Â These fabrics could be used to create a beautiful quilt honoring the generations of motherhood. Â It would be easy to combine a contrasting black, white or other brightly colored fabrics to feature these coordinates. Â This fabric is a 100% cotton high quality quilting fabric by a the well renowned manufacturer of Alexander Henry. Â Another excellent gift to make from these fabrics would be a diaper bag, tote, zipper pouches, bibs, burp pads, diaper changing mat, quilt for mother or quilt for a brand new mother to celebrate. A.H. Prints 15146 D12 and 15147 D Made in Japan
Below are just a few ideas of items I have already made with these fabrics. The King Sized Pillow Sham is cross hatched quilted on the front of it with a scalloped edge. Â The table runner is diagonally quilted with four lines of extra quilting around the scalloped edges. Â Both of these items were machine quilted on my domestic machine. Â Included in the pictures is a photo of my mother, Deanna, that passed away from Lou Gehrig’s Disease in 2005. Â If you would like to subscribe to the blog, I will send you the pattern for the King Sized Pillow Sham and Table Runner. Â I will also publish this week a video tutorial to learn how to machine quilt a cross hatched scalloped pillow sham on your domestic sewing machine. Â It is extremely simple and easy to do.
Items to create with these fabric collections are really up to you and your imagination and how you want to celebrate the mothers and those women around you!
Please comment about this post with additional ideas that you have to celebrate the women around you this special time of year. Â What are your traditions in your family to honor those lovely women that sacrifice so much on your behalf? Â I would love to hear your ideas of items that you have made in the past, received in the past or other acts of service or traditions that you do to celebrate those you love. Â Send me photos of items or ideas that you have made either with these featured fabrics or with other fabrics you already have collected and used and also indicate if you would like to give me permission to publish them on the website to share with others.
There are just so many things to do in life with working, raising families, being a member of a family and our community that we need to focus on the right things in life. We live in a world where we are so distracted by the constant stimuli that we no longer focus on the truly important things in life. I have been blessed with many many obstacles in my life that I have learned to really concentrate on the right things in life and why. These obstacles have been challenges that I have embraced to my fullest to allow myself to be chiseled to be the soul that God intends me to be. Through this blog I will share with you things that have been set in my path that have made me to pause in life and truly focus on what is important. It is a time in the world to simplify and focus on what is truly important. I have found that through my challenges that I have developed gifts, skills and desires that I never imagined that I would learn in life. I never imagined that some of my most intense growth in life would come with the age that I am. But the refining has come and I have chosen to stay the good soul that I am and not allow difficulties to change my spirit but just allow my spirit to lift and grow in ways to help others. As I have faced the challenges that I have had through the years, there are many interests that I have acquired and would like to share with all of you. In the quiet moments, I have turned to quilting, sewing, crafting, re-purposing, cooking, photography, jewelry making and more to fill my soul with the emptiness that it might have felt with the beautiful people that I have enjoyed things with. I have always strived to have my home be a warm loving place of refuge and peace for my family to come home to. I have found by simplifying my life that I can live a more authentic life and have more cognitive space/awareness for improving myself as a person. Nothing makes me more pleased than to make or share something for my family members, loved ones, people in need or just simply for myself. I hope that I can share that love for the things I do with all of you in your homes to improve where you are in life. This blog is dedicated to sharing those ideas and lessons learned by stitching along through life. I say stitching because I am not always sewing but I am piecing the layers of life together to learn what I am intended to become and continue to evolve to be. We have so much to learn in life and hopefully here we can share some of the things learned to share with others. I have many posts ready to share that will be coming to you soon. There are Stitches Through Life Blog Categories in the upper left column and right side bottom footer of posts to wander through and be inspired and resourceful in life! The resourcefulness that we learn in life gives us confidence, builds self-sufficiency to have courage to do just about anything that we may have to face. May the work of your hands inspire the soul!
Threads of Topics that are Coming SOON!!!!!
Making Life’s Hard Things Feel EASIER!
How the Way We Think Changes the Things we DO!
Being Grateful, Thinking Positively and using to the Fullest the Things we Already Have
Finding a Center of Happiness and Core Just Right Exactly Where We Are Right NOW
Developing a Devotion to our Spouses to keep our Families Intact
Developing a Foundation of Faith that will Never Collapse Under the Weight that We Carry Throughout Life
Having Adult Issues be Adult Issues and allowing our children to grow up without having to Navigate Adult Issues
Raising Children Practically
Raising Children with Structure and an Abundance of Love
Raising Special Needs Children taking in the Complexities Involved
Raising Children in Blended/Single Homes while Living with Dignity after a Divorce
Being Practical! Creatively Making the Best of Our Homes
Being Practical! Re-purposing the World Around Us into Needed Items
Stitches “DeWall” homemade beauty and household products to make in your own home
Stitches Jewelry Creating to give me strength and share as a gift to others
Stitches Photography tips and my own images that document life and its adventures
AND I will always continue to post things about fabric, quilting, sewing, home products and more. That has always been a consistent thread of life and always around us to improve upon and enjoy.
I know I we can’t be completely self-sufficient in this life as we are interconnected and weaved into the society of our families, communities, and the world. Where ever we might be we can certainly carve out a piece of serenity no matter where we are.
I was able to quickly construct the bag within about an hour and a half. It was a fun project that didn’t take long and that made me feel GREAT! And the best of all, I get to carry it around with me all day long and enjoy it day after day. I love the velvet rick rack accents and the pockets inside to organize small items. The laminate fabrics that I used are from the Lost & Found collection designed by My Mind’s Eye for Riley Blake Designs. These laminate fabrics are for sale by the yard in the Stitches Quilting Shoppe along with four different French Accent Tote kits with different combinations of four unique laminate fabrics from the Lost and Found Collection. If there is a kit fabric combination that you would like for me to put together for you just email or call and let me know. The kit includes everything you need from the coordinating laminate fabrics, cotton fabrics for lining and handles, pattern, velvet black rick rack, fusible interfacing and stabilizer perfectly cut just for you! No need to run to the fabric store to pick up necessary items. All you will need is thread and a bit of time. Perfect gift to give to others!
I organize my life and balance my responsibilities so I can enjoy it! Quilting is always waiting for me in the background if life does get crazy and I need to put it on the back burner.
Quilting motivates me first of all so I can live a long healthy life to execute and complete all the amazing things I dream to create. I love my family and want to be healthy like eating well and exercising so I can hopefully avoid unnecessary disease and pain to be fully functional and capable of doing the many things I day dream about long into life.
There are so many ideas buzzing around in my head that I want to execute that I hope that long healthy life is waiting for me.
Secondly, quilting motivates me to live an organized life. By living an organized life, I will have more rewarding time stitching away.
Thirdly, quilting is my reward! I get every room put back together after an evening of children being home, clean the kitchen, throw a load of wash in, prepare dinner, get necessary mundane tasks completed like paying bills and then quilt, quilt, quilt away! It feels great; even if it is only for a short bit of time.
When I worked on my master’s degree while at the same time worked at my husband’s office and managing kiddos at home, there was not much time for quilting. There was just no room for creativity to flow BUT I longed for it. I couldn’t wait to finish and for life to settle down to enjoy the colors and fabrics and creation of beautiful things for loved ones. There is a time and season to all things. Well as I was working on my master’s thesis and to break the barrier for motivation, I bought some special fabrics for a quilt pattern that I had longed to complete from many years prior.  The pattern came from an old quilting book that I had admired and tucked away.
Then I LITERALLY slept with the fabrics under my pillow and in my bed with me every night. I would fall asleep touching the fabrics and admiring the color collection carefully fanned out, after a long day of forcing myself to be disciplined on my project. In the morning I would wake up and again touch them then turn with the determination to get my mountain work done each day.
Finally, the day arrived and I finished my master’s thesis. I had done all the work for whatever reason comfortably sitting in my bed on my laptop. When I pressed send on the email to my professor with the master’s thesis attached, I turned to my fabric and smiled!
I then went down stairs to my sewing room, dusted off the sewing machine, rotary cutter and mat and started playing with the fabrics. It was just a sweet quilt for my son that played soccer that would become a wall hanging in his room. But that quilt represented so much to me, the freedom that I know had to be creative again and the discipline I used to do hard things.
Quilting enriches and motivates me to be a better person and keep my life prioritized.
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Quilting motivates me to live a balanced life so I have time to put a healthy hobby like quilting in my routine. Quilting is so spectacular and there are just so many pleasing things to do with it!
There are so many quilts that I have made through the years! Here are just a few samples for you to enjoy. Let me know if you need any fabrics or patterns to make the quilts.
Sewing with teenagers or pre-teens to quilt isn’t difficult especially when the task is broken down into bite size pieces with a simple, trendy, attractive and whimsical project.
Emily’s Finished Quilt
Long Arm Quilting on Whimsical Brown & Pink Quilt
More Long Arm Machine Quilting on Quilt
Emily holding her finished quilt top!
Sample of some of the fabrics used and for sale at www.stitchesquilting.com
Quilt Kit available for this quilt at www.stitchesquilting.com
Nothing is better than to share my love of quilting with others and introduce to them the joy of the craft. I especially enjoy sewing with teens or pre-teens! I have taught many classes through the years to young teens. It is amazing what they can create, how good they feel about themselves while gaining confidence that they can reach outside their comfort zone to learning a new skill. The sheer amazement and pride seen in their eyes as they examine a finished project that they never imagined they could accomplish. Lessons can be learned in the process of quilting which may seem to one like a big project but when broken into small pieces with encouragement, proper instruction and a reasonable pattern that they can do it. There has never been a better time to introduce how to quilt with trends going in the direction of big, simple and bold!
Attached is a video of me sewing with my step-daughter Emily. When we first started this quilt, she actually sewed through her finger straight to the bone. Not fun at all! But Emily overcame this mishap to sew again to finish the quilt! Watch the video to see her overcome her fear!
Video to watch construction of Whimsical Brown and Pink Quilt with Emily!
Later I long armed it for her and it has been a quilt that she has been found curled up in. She has later in life sat at the sewing machine to quilts and even knows how to long armed now!
Enjoy quilting with your kids; not only do they learn confidence in doing different things but it is a bonding experience that you will grow together in. Enjoy long talks while stitching away and learn about your loved one. I try very hard to allow all beginners to do almost everything, so they truly have pride in the end result with the learning of new skills. My number one goal is that they can tell others that they made the quilt without a tinge of guilt that their step-mom or teacher really made most of it.
I just got my NEW long arm quilting machine by Innova!!!! I am simply SEW excited! This is utterly amazing! I have always wanted my very own long arm but it was difficult to justify.  I finally sold enough fabric to save up and buy the machine! I am in seventh heaven.  Waking up each day starting a creative project and then finish it on the long arm will be incredible!  I don’t feel like able to quilt my quilts with my domestic machine anymore…. not with all the things that I day-dream to do! Wow this will be a learning curve but Innova has a week-long course on how to use the machine and make it WORK!  When they installed the machine they gave me a mini lesson. I have my good friend Renae Haddadin, that is an expert award-winning machine quilter. She ordered the exact same machine as me and she said that she will help me too!
The long arm machine I purchased was the Innova Quilting System 22″ with the lightning stitch regulator. Renae Haddadin is now a dealer for Innova Longarm Sewing Machines and an award-winning expert in long arm quilting.
Exciting days, months and years ahead! Â It feels good to be creative and create.
Quilting is Therapy! When I had my storefront quilt store in Yuma, Arizona, I featured a local customer as Quilter of the Month and showcased her quilts in the shoppe. It was an absolute delight to see the gorgeous quilts come out of the closets and drawers to hang them beautifully around the store. I couldn’t wait each month to see the unique style of each quilter unveiled each to learn more about her.
One gal that I approached for Stitches Quilting “Quilter of the Month” having her quilts showcased in a future month was hesitant. She said that she loved piecing quilt tops together but that she rarely quilted and finished them. I told her it did not matter, that we wanted to see and display all her work. She said she didn’t care about finishing them because each quilt top of quilting was her therapy!
I agree 300% with that. Quilting is therapy! There is nothing like being discouraged in life and thoughtfully pause with beautiful fabrics, and threads to execute something your mind has envisioned. There have been many times that I have felt so downtrodden not knowing what to do, but in this confusion I would quilt and create while thoughtfully considering how to react to an event in my life. I remember those quilts so vividly and I am so deeply attached to those stitches. It was through those stitches that I decided how to rise above a situation that was challenging. Often I made quilts for other people at those times and I think that by serving another through my stitching, I was able to put my troubles into perspective.
I remember quilting while I was expecting my second child knowing that he had severe special needs (tuberous sclerosis) and wanting to wrap this child with my love when he arrived. I remember making a quilt when my little brother died to comfort my mother the first Christmas that he would not be with us. I remember making my mother an intricate quilt and so lovingly picking out fabrics and designs when we learned of her diagnosis of Lou Gehrig’s disease. I made that quilt to manifest my love for my mother; that quilt laid over her as she progressed through the disease and I cared for her until her death. I cherish that quilt now in my home representing the bond of our mother daughter relationship.
I remember being bewildered at the thought that I was quickly going facing a divorce with three small children to care for. The youngest was three months old and the second oldest with very severe special needs. The thought of the challenges ahead overwhelmed me, but what did I do?  I quilted. I quilted a simple quilt for my special needs son and as I stitched I knew that I would have the strength, dignity and resolve to face the challenges ahead.
Quilting is Therapy… there are so many challenges that we may face quietly stitching away while deciding our resolve or approach. Quilting is Therapy… in the friendships that we create as we stitch, share and dream together. I am so grateful for such a beautiful healthy hobby to embrace that helps me become a better person while doing something positive. Whether we stitch alone or with others, pull out a sewing machine, let it hum and sooth your troubles to become peace within your soul. Allow yourself to lay fabrics on the floor next to each other for hours deciding upon a beautiful combination that will express what you need to share. Give yourself the permission that no matter what you will face in life that you can still create and feel joy.