We got the sweetest quilt submission from Simple Sewendipity. How darling is this? Now I want to make one with my little girl! What a great idea and darling mini. I am sure this will be kept forever! (Probably by mom!) Be sure to go check out Simple Sewendipity, , these quilt finishes will have you following her blog. Such talent!
The Last and the First...
While the title of this post sounds like some profound novel in progress, I have my last finish of 2014 to share with you. But what I'm most proud of is that it's also my daughter Sophie's first quilt finish - ever. She is 6 and has been watching me sew for her entire life. She's pretty crafty herself but the furthest we've gotten as far as sewing is her sitting at my sewing machine, practicing sewing straight lines onto paper. But last week, I got on a potholder kick due to a gorgeous post by Ashley at Film in the Fridge. More on this next week, I promise!
Inspired by the idea of scrappy rainbows, I had ALL of my color coded bags of scraps out and scattered across the floor in my tiny sewing corner. Sophie sees all the fabric and asks if she can sew too - usually this just amounts to her taking her ragged safety scissors and ravaging the life out of fabric scraps. Sure, I say...and if I'm being completely honest, I was only half listening and trying to stay in the zone. Maybe a minute later, she asks if I can sew these two pieces of white fabric together. Yeah, yeah, here you go....I mumble. I zip it through my machine and back into the zone I go.
Five minutes go by and suddenly - in typical mom fashion - I realize that things are quiet. Too quiet. I turn around and see this:
I feel instantly proud - here she is armed with only scraps and a glue stick, making this adorable rainbow "quilt". But also, in that flash of proudness, I felt that awful flash of mom guilt. I was wrapped up in my own project, single-minded and focused...and this was happening literally a foot behind me. And I was missing it.
Needless to say that the potholders were set aside and we finished the rainbow together. It took all my self control not to trim here or smooth a rough and jagged edge there. She was happy with how it looked and it was HER quilt. Perfection be damned. It looks perfect to her, so who am I to argue?
When all the gluing was done, we ran it under the iron to set things up a little firmer and I asked if she wanted me to quilt it all down. If this was practice for her, it was going to be practice for me too! I decided to practice a different technique in each color band - matchstick quilting in the pink center, pebbles in the purple, crosshatching in blue, meander (I stink, STINK at this supposedly easy style!) in green, ribbon candy in yellow, chain squares in orange, and a regular curvy back and forth in red.
Even though the backing is really dark and busy, I love how the rainbow quilting looks on the back :)
I did a very tight grid in the white background and a free motion sunburst in the block of sunshine.
Sophie says that she wants to use it as a doll blanket, but I added a couple pockets on the back just in case she decides to hang it on the wall instead.
My favorite part of this whole thing is that it was pinned up on my corkboard while I was deciding how to quilt it and Sophie wandered up behind me and put her little (okay, not so little anymore) arm around my waist. "Mummy," she says. "It's so beautiful that it makes me want to cry!"
Me too, honey. Me too.
I'm a big believer that everything hand made has a story. Sometimes it's a little story, sometimes it's just a feeling but this mini will forever have a beautiful memory attached to it. How lucky are the two of you to have each other!
ReplyDeleteGreat story. It's so beautiful I could cry too. Please make sure you label and date the quilt for future reference, so everyone remembers her first quilt.
ReplyDeleteSo sweet and lovely! I'm glad you were able to work on this with your daughter. My hopes are to do the same with my grand son and grand daughter some day.
ReplyDeleteWonderful! Freedom to create beauty -- a gift that will keep on giving.
ReplyDeleteLike button over and over and over again!! It is BEAUTIFUL!! and your quilting is great too!! (I think a loopy meander is MUCH easier than a regular meander!!)
ReplyDeleteSo cute! I showed it to my daugter and she wants to make her own rainbow too. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteTotally crying here.
ReplyDeleteOh my gosh, that is so great, what a sweet post! I hope my grandaughter will make things like this. Your little one is adorable and her quilt is Awesome! Great job!
ReplyDeleteThis hit home for me. I'm a Lifeskills teacher and my students all have different disabilities and motor skills. Last semester I brought in some of my fabrics and let the students put together quilt blocks for a peer tutor who is graduating. Though I cringed at how they cut the fabric and had to be creative when sewing the blocks together, they created the most beautiful and creative blocks.
ReplyDeleteThis is completely adorable - the quilt and the story. Big congrats to Sophie and great quilting too :)
ReplyDeleteThat's totally awesome! Good for you guys!
ReplyDeleteOh this is so sweet and of course her quilt is gorgeous. She will always be proud of it. It reminds me of a similar moment with my daughter that inspired me to host The Primary Bee last year. Both of my kids can't wait to get their quilts finished.
ReplyDeleteIt is perfect!
ReplyDeleteOh what a sweet story, made me cry too. Tears of happiness that you were able to make this happy memory and tears of sadness that my own little girl has grown and I can't make these memories with her.
ReplyDeleteDebbie
It's these little snippets of time that add up and become a point of light in our fondest memories. I hope when you label her very beautiful quilt that you will add the story as well. It speaks volumes about love - on so many levels. Thank you for letting us share in your beautiful co-creation with your daughter.
ReplyDeleteThat is a beautiful quilt! You ladies did a great job :) Love/relate to every part of this story.
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