Needlely Thoughts

In case you’re wondering – Schnap and I recommend the Schmetz Sharp Needles 130-705 H-M Microtex 90/14 for piecing and quilting.   And not just because we like the name.

I started getting curious about what all the numbers really mean.  That’s my geeky side showing.  I found that Schmetz has a nice handy downloadable guide.

It turns out that on our preferred quilting needle, the 130/705 H part means that it’s for a home/household sewing machine (vs. industrial), and the 90 is the diameter of the part of the needle above the pointy part.  Schmetz calls that the blade.  So for instance , an 80 is a smaller diameter needle.  I’m still not clear on what the 14 part of the needle means.  Maybe the eye size?

Anyway, in one fell swoop, I increased my knowledge of needles by about 500% so I thought I’d share.  Hopefully not needlessly.

Here in the home office, we use our needles until they’re not sharp.   Which is usually after piecing 1-3 quilts.  Or quilting one quilt. Or when  the needle runs over something it should not be running over (like a pin or a finger). Or when fabric points start getting pushed into the plate of the sewing machine.   And paper piecing is murder on sharp needles.  I don’t think there’s any way around that.

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Kaleido Progress

I have never done a quilt with such an absence of color. I’ve been struggling with the monochromatic palette that I committed to in the Project Modern Challenge.  I love color! That said, committing to entering something has been a motivator to keep going.

The Process Pledge has also been helpful though I don’t know that you readers really truly want to know how much second guessing has been done here (and on everything I do.)  If you like it, keep reading…if you don’t thanks for your forbearance.

So…here we are.  The Kaleidoscopes have morphed into snowflakes of  a sort.    I think they’ll be sewn into a white ground, so how it’s looking on the design wall is about how it might end up looking.  This picture has the snowflakes running off the edge (I cropped) to see if I like that look.    I’m not sure.     I’m also still wondering if I should make yet another small snowflake/kaleidoscope for one of the empty spaces.

I might leave this a day or two and come back to it with a head clearer and less obsessed with kaleidoscopes.  I’m pretty sure between Co-Q and I we will have rearranged things a time or two by the time you’ve even read this.

Some Additional Lessons Learned:

  • I commented that sewing the strata with a close stitch is a good idea.  It still is.  But….sew the pieces together with less of a close stitch.  Don’t go crazy and make the stitch basting-big, but mistakes and ripping out is a bummer with a tiny stitch on bias fabric.
  • Use a sharp (new) needle on the sewing machine.  Yeah, I know that all quilting books say that, but I’m bizarrely cheap about needles and cutting blades and don’t change them as often as I should.   (Oh, and a sharp cutting blade is a good and dangerous thing.  But back to the needle. ) It’s more important than usual because little pointy bits and shards of things are being sewn together.  Pointier pieces than are usually sewn here.  These little bits get ground into the machine if the needle is not sharp and pushes the fabric (not good) vs. pierces (which it is supposed to do)
  • It is possible to sequentially piece without cutting thread after each piece.  Ricky Tims doesn’t advise this, but I like to live on the edge.  Work from outer pieces towards the inner ones.  Either deal with two or three wedges at a time (I tried this first and it worked ok),  or in concentric circles (all the #5 pieces to #4 sewn together, and so on)  I found the latter to work the fastest and best for me.  Pin the pieces together at the seam as you’re removing them from the design wall so you don’t get confused because there are  mirror image pieces.  Then press each round as you finish sewing.
  • Ricky Tims has the strata sewn with a little less than 1/4″.  He moves the needle to the side setting and sews at the 1/4″ mark.  I did that with Kaleidoscope #1 and #2 (because #2 was largely cut from scraps of #1) but for #3 I went back to 1/4″ seams.  It was much easier to deal with seams and ironing and keeping things pressed to the right direction with the true 1/4″ seam. I know we’re talking a bit more than a hair, but I’m just sayin.

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Co-Gardener

Schnap has been distracted from her self-appointed role as Co-Quilter (Co-Q) as she has also appointed herself Co-Landscaper.   It is tough work for a small dog and she has a hard time multitasking, so I’m letting her focus on the garden.

Work started today removing some of the sod in our backyard to be replaced with raised vegetable beds.  There’s still going to be plenty of lawn on which Schnap and her buddies can run, roll, fetch and play.

Nonetheless,  Schnap is supervising the work closely to make sure, and she’s not above making a lot of noise about it.

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