Gah!! The first big assignment of the semester is the biggest one of the entire semester, and at last, I have finished grading it!
That big whooping noise you might have heard yesterday just after 6pm likely was me beginning my celebration.
I purposely build my classes to get this intimidating assignment out of the was first - both for my students and myself. From here on out, grading will be a cakewalk compared to this one.
Because of the school work, I have very little to share on the blog today. I did spend Saturday sewing here with Sharon, and I have all my jelly roll blocks finished as a result of that. We laid them out on the bed to see the final effect. Click here for when I began the JR quilt.
This picture looks busy at first glance because I have a star quilt on the bed with a large patchwork pillow. I placed my red and white jelly roll blocks right on top -- and of course, Gracie had to get involved.
At this point, I'd made 20 red blocks with white chains and 20 white blocks with red chains for a total of 40 blocks. Where Gracie is standing is a perfect spot for two more blocks, one of each, so I have now made those for a current grand total of 42 blocks. The quilt will be 6 blocks wide and 7 blocks long.
I have made a change -- correcting those 4 blocks in which I'd put the 4-patch part in the center. (click here for the pictorial of that) I was thinking it wouldn't make any difference, but as I laid out the blocks, it did interfere with the (very) subtle secondary pattern that emerges. Unsewing and making them right didn't take too much time, and I'm glad I did it.
By the final few blocks, I was running out of the original partial jelly rolls of La Vie en Rouge by French General/Moda. If you know French General, you know that all their lines play so very well together, so I dug into my FG remnant tub for suitable additions. That tub is quite full, and I could end up making more blocks, but then my quilt would not qualify as a "jelly roll" quilt. I think I will stop here, ending up with a nice-sized lap quilt - a true jelly roll quilt, in other words.
I tell you, the weirdest thing - when both Sharon and I looked at this quilt we could not see those diagonal lines at all. The blocks just looked like a big mess. But through the camera, the diagonals were so pronounced. Isn't that strange? How can a camera view change a quilt so much from a direct eye-view?
I am glad to be back in action here on the blog. Hopefully the rest of the semester will be easier to manage.
Happy Quilting, Friends!
You do know those are my colors..................right?
ReplyDeleteHmmmm, yes, I believe I did know that!
DeleteLove this quilt...red is such a remarkable colour. Yes, I have to say the camera often sees things my eye misses. It is downright eerie sometimes. :)
ReplyDeleteI’m glad it wasn’t just us! Whew!
DeleteJust lovely!! I think I need to start buying some French General fabrics, do they have a blue line too? Hope you have more time for stitching now.
ReplyDelete