stacked coin quilt

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Daydreams - folded

This quilt is for a little girl named Willa, a girl not much younger than my own nearly-three-year-olds.  I don’t actually know her. She lives in Pennsylvania, and her mother is a friend of a friend.  This friend of mine pointed me to Willa’s mom’s blog.  I read it and I cried and cried and cried. Willa is dying.

Daydreams - front

In addition to being born with a rare and serious medical condition, they then discovered a tumor. Cancer. Inoperable. I’m not sure she was even two years old at the time.

Daydreams - front detail

My heart broke into a million tiny pieces. I wanted so badly to do something to help, but what can I do? Aside from not being a doctor or a creator of miracles, I don’t even live anywhere close to them.  I can’t make a batch of cookies or bring over a few nights’ worth of dinner.

Daydreams - back

But I can sew.  I could make Willa a quilt. Is it a particularly practical gift?  No, I suppose not. But I have a little girl. She likes to get surprises in the mail, she likes pretty things.  All I can hope to do is to send a little smile via Express Mail.

Daydreams - back detail

Oh, and the latest blog entry says that the tumor is growing. They’ve stopped treatment and met with hospice. Willa is at home. That’s why I rushed to finish it as fast as I could. I thought there might be more time, but I was so very sadly wrong.  So I finished it and sent it Express.  Tracking says it arrived last week. I haven’t heard from Willa’s mom, yet. I have no idea if it made it there in time.

Daydreams - label detail

As for the practical details of the quilt:

It is my second time doing the Stacked Coins tutorial, which I cannot recommend highly enough. If you have a couple of charm packs lying around and want to make something beautiful and super fast, this is the ticket. It’s the perfect size for a baby/toddler quilt, about 40×50. The charm packs in this case were Moda Daydreams, which is a few years old but I found them last fall in Colorado and was waiting for just the right use.

Backing is Amy Butler Full Moon Dots in Camel and a blue tone-on-tone butterfly print from my stash, which the selvedge said was by Anna Griffin.  Binding is Full Moon Dots in Lime.  I quilted it in my favorite (and fast, though my machine was acting up and breaking thread a lot) loopy stipple, and the white pretty much disappears into the quilt.

Like I said, I have no idea if it made it there in time for Willa to see it or snuggle with it. I can only hope that it gave her, and her mom, a smile.

UPDATE, JULY 8

I got a beautiful thank you card in the mail from Willa’s mom.  Not only did Willa get it and like it, “she hugs it and won’t let anyone take it away.”

You’ll excuse me, I’m going to try not to cry.

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I finished a commissioned quilt for a friend of mine a day or two ago.  She wanted a gift for a new baby boy, preferably in shades of Tiffany blue and brown, and she liked the stacked coins design.  Here’s what I came up with:

Blue & Brown Stacked Coin

The solid is about the closest I could find to Tiffany blue. I believe it’s Kona Cotton in Cornflower but of course I never remember to write these things down.  The solids were a bunch of fat quarters I found from various sources, including several prints from the Kaufman Monaluna line.

Blue & Brown Stacked Coin

The backing is a fabric my friend and I fell in love with, Zoology by Michael Miller. How fun is that? The background is a very dark brown, though from a distance it can look black.

Blue & Brown Stacked Coin

I made a little label and embroidered the new baby’s initials and birth date.  The label border and the binding are from Connecting Threads, their Riviera line.  I thought the fabric quality was nice and the price is great!

And I really love the organic straight lines for the quilting (inspiration here). Enough that I may have taken back some of the nasty things I’ve been saying about my walking foot. Not only does it look neat and modern, but the way it crinkled up in the wash made it seem extra cushiony. It measured about 36×30 before washing, not entirely sure how much it shrunk.

Speaking of the wash, there were some minor heart attacks involved when I ran it through the washer & dryer.  You see, for the first time since I jumped on the no-pre-washing bandwagon, I neglected to throw in a color catcher.  And lo and behold, the damn thing bled. I am tempted to blame some of the, ahem, bargain fabrics I got at Joann’s, but of course I have no evidence. Just faint brown spots that nearly made me cry in frustration.  I scrubbed it with Oxi-Clean and sent it through the wash a second time, and they’re still there.  Thankfully, my husband tells me I’m crazy.  Even knowing what the problem was, he says he looked closely at the quilt and could barely find the spots.  So it’s not a complete tragedy, but you know I was freaking out pretty badly.

So, there you have it. Another finish, hooray!

And just wait until I get back from visiting my in-laws for Rosh Hashanah this coming weekend.  I’ll have another finish to show off, and many of the fabrics will look awfully familiar…

Piecing a zig-zag

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I finished the stacked coins quilt for my brother’s niece, and I have to say, I’m pretty happy with it.

Stacked Coins Quilt

Truth be told, I actually wasn’t thrilled when I gave him the choice of several different Moda charm packs and he selected the Summer Fun line.  For whatever reason, it’s just not my style. Not sure if it’s the prints in particular or if I’m just not digging the primary colors, but I didn’t love it.  It also doesn’t really say “baby girl” to me, but hey, it’s his quilt.

Stacked Coins Quilt

Once it started coming together, though, it grew on me.  The white sashing (a bleached muslin from Joann’s) helps give the colors some breathing room.  They still give a very summery, picnic-y vibe, but it’s maybe a little less kitchy.

Stacked Coins Quilt

And I really started to love it when the backing and binding came together.  I love the playful, swirly-ness of the backing (and the fact that it’s kind of busy and hides some of my quilting sins), and there’s something about the red binding with tiny polka dots that just makes me happy.

Stacked Coins Quilt

All that remains is to sew on a label and stick it in the mail.  The envelope is ready and the postage is printed.  Off it goes tomorrow.

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Weekend Work

What was the best Mother’s Day present?  That my husband got up with the kids and let me hide upstairs for much of the morning and sew. :-)   In all honesty, actually, it turned out to be a lovely day.  Nice weather, played outside with happy kids. And, yes, some sewing.

I’m making a stacked coins quilt for my brother’s niece, and the requisite charm packs arrived in the mail on Friday.  (Summer Fun by Moda, my brother’s choice.) I started cutting and piecing the stacks on Friday night.

Stacked Coin Quilt in progress

May I take a moment to pause and thank the quilter who taught me the joys of chain piecing?  Holy moly, what a life saver that was.  Before I learned that trick, I would have sewn and pressed each one of those blocks, one by one.  All 144 of them.  Instead, I zoomed through six at a time.

Stacked Coin Quilt in progress

Anyways, I spent much of Friday and Saturday evening piecing the stacks. I threw all of the coins into a plastic bag and picked pretty randomly from it. I retained veto power, but mostly trusted the judgment of the bag.  When I was down to only about five left (per stack), I did take them out and sort them to make sure I didn’t end up with about 15 blues in a row, but otherwise it was random.

Stacked Coin Quilt in progress

Got the sashing on last night, and today I embroidered the new baby’s birthdate (french knots in red thread).  I’m pushing to finish as quickly as I can, in part because I know my brother is kind of chomping at the bit, in part because I have plenty of other projects on my to-do list, and also because my sewing time will be cut into this week with visitors and other plans.  Not a bad thing, to have a life outside of my sewing machine, but still…

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