Saturday, March 14, 2026

Pastel Kitties and More Red Blocks

 Welcome to Treadlestitches!  Thanks for stopping by!


One of my favorite quilt testers is at it again!  While I was out of the room Lizzy made herself at home on this little cat quilt.

Once she lost interest, I finished the quilting and bound it, and hurried to hang it outside.  It was one of those beautiful days that happen here occasionally in spring, 69 degrees F and lots of sunshine.


There was a little more light on the front porch.



I made MANY cat blocks for the Rainbow Scrap Challenge in 2024, and am still putting them together into quilts.  This one used up the pink, purple, and aqua cats.  (Doesn't Aquacat sound like a cartoon superhero? lol).


The vertical rows of cats are offset from each other, a set I really like that I believe I first saw on a quilt made by Diann of the Little Penguin Quilts blog.  The cats are separated by sashing made from a cat print (of course!), which I bought while visiting my mom in Oklahoma.


Simple grid quilting, as usual, with Mrs. Pfaff's serpentine stitch.


The back is this dotted print from our guild's stash.  The quilt will go to the Children's Advocacy Center in Milwaukee.


I don't know if I will ever catch up with previous years RSC blocks, but that isn't stopping me from making more!  This year I am doing lots more planning of the eventual quilts, so maybe I won't be adding to the backlog.  Greek Crosses are this week's set.  These two have ninjas, Mickey Mouse, dots and a dinosaur.


Two more, one with numbers and one with alphabet letters.  Also dots, and hedgehogs.


Last one, dog themed but no dogs!  I need to get more red novelty prints STAT.


Here's where I can get more second hand fabric!  The new Shop Our Stash resale shop at the Wisconsin Museum of Quilts & Fiber Arts is now open in the restored blacksmith shop.  I made my first trip to it last week.  Rain was pouring down so I couldn't take pictures, so I borrowed these from the museum's web site.


It's small, but very well organized.  Prices are good, and the volunteers are friendly and helpful.  I donated two big bags of fabric, good quality pieces that I know I'll never use, and brought home a small bag of stash enhancement.


Here's what I bought, mostly fat quarters in lights or colors I needed.  Some of the light ones are already cut and pieced into quilt blocks!
Shop hours are Friday and Saturday only, from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.  It's a win for everybody:  inexpensive fabric, yarn, etc. for makers, income for the museum, and a good place to donate craft/sewing/quilting supplies.  Click HERE for information on items accepted for donation, etc.

In Progress


The string blocks are almost finished into a quilt, which I hope to complete today.  I also have only two more blocks to make for the Lori Holt Twinkle Twinkle Scrappy Star quilt, and then I can start putting them together.  When I do that, I like to have something simple to piece as leaders and enders, so I chose this pattern. 

 The original is called Cabin Steps, and was a free handout at a local quilt show in 2016.  When I made a quilt inspired by this pattern a few years ago, I changed it from a 12 in. block to a 9 in. one by making it a 9 patch instead of a 16 patch.  I like that size for the quilts I make, so I'm doing it again.

The blocks will use the rectangles in the plastic shoebox.  I need 420 dark and 210 light--think I have enough?  Seriously, I may have to cut some light ones, but there might be enough dark ones for two quilts.


In other news, we had fun last Saturday with our youngest grandsons at the Kettle Moraine Geological Society Show, held at the fairgrounds.  The boys were very excited, especially since we gave them some spending money.  Little Guy wanted to buy everything.  His biggest purchase was an abalone shell. Buddy was more selective.  Each of them went home with rock, fossil and mineral treasures.  They also bought a small quartz heart for their mom.


There was a Native people's display area with a teepee the boys loved.  A man there was making small leather shoes by hand.  Another man gave the boys each a turkey feather, and tried to teach us to say thank you in his language.  All in all, a very good day.

I hope you have very good days this week too, doing things you love to do.  Happy Quilting!

Thanks for reading,

Sylvia@Treadlestitches

Check out all the quilts and quilters at these linky parties!


Angela at So Scrappy, Home of the Rainbow Scrap Challenge

Cynthia at Oh Scrap









Friday, March 6, 2026

Big Bright Hopes

 Welcome to Treadlestitches!  Thanks for stopping by!


Big Bright Hopes is a flimsy!  You may remember me starting this one after our last guild meeting, when I was inspired by a block like this in the scrap pile on the free table.  The blocks were easy to sew as leader and enders while working on other projects.  (Sorry about the inside photos.  It's been raining all day today.)


I chose novelty print squares for the 5 in. (cut) centers, and bright colored strips in calmer prints to surround the centers.  The strips were cut 2.5 in. x 7 in.


When it comes to math, I like to keep it simple.  I needed 140 strips to make 35 blocks.  So if I chose 7 colors, I only needed 20 strips in each color.  Perfect!  


Big Bright Hopes will be approx. 50 in. x 67 in. when finished, and will be donated locally.


Speaking of big bright hopes, it was Little Guy's 6th birthday this week!


He posed for us, wearing the stickers he got at school for being the birthday boy and his classroom's Star of the Week.


After opening presents, the boys had fun with a musical birthday card.  

Too much excitement!  After they went home, I went back to the sewing room.


In honor of red week for the Rainbow Scrap Challenge, I made the red Dawn Chorus blocks.  Each big block is 4 small blocks put together.  This one has Bucky Badger and cows, appropriate for Wisconsin.


The novelty prints in this block are dogs and dog bones.


This one is my favorite.  The bird fabric came from the scrap tsunami (see last week's blog), there are lots of rabbits, and some dinosaurs and friends from the 1990s.  I don't think I'll ever run out of that dino fabric.

It's always fun to get out a new color of scraps at the beginning of the month.  I can't wait to see what everyone else is making.

In Progress



Remember the string blocks?  All 30 of them are done.  And because the strings were sewn directly onto a batting square, they are quilted as well.  I'm going to try a new-to-me technique with them, wish me luck!


These are the blocks I'm sewing in the photo with the string blocks.  It's a Lori Holt pattern she calls Twinkle Twinkle Scrappy Star.  I found a tutorial for it on her You Tube channel.  (Click HERE.)  All the print pieces for 30 blocks were in my box of 2.5 in. x 4.5 in. rectangles.  I had to cut most of the background pieces from strips and scraps.  It's a fun block to piece.

Good luck this week with all your projects.  Happy Quilting!

Thanks for reading,

Sylvia@Treadlestiches

Linking up with:


Angela at So Scrappy

Cynthia at Oh Scrap



And now, just a few words about quilts and politics.  Feel free to skip, I won't mind.



Today I spent some time watching the funeral of the Reverend Jesse Jackson on television.  It was sad to see the passing of such an important Civil Rights leader, but heartening to see and hear how many people were inspired by him to continue his work, including three presidents and a vice president.

He was familiar with quilts in his own background.  In two of his most famous speeches, he spoke about quilts as a metaphor for our country.  

In 1984, in his speech at the Democratic Convention, he said:

"America is not like a blanket - one piece of unbroken cloth, the same color, the same texture, the same size.  America is more like a quilt - many patches, many pieces, many colors, many sizes, all woven and held together by a common thread. The white, the Hispanic, the black, the Arab, the Jew, the woman, the native American, the small farmer, the businessperson, the environmentalist, the peace activist, the young, the old, the lesbian, the gay and the disabled make up the American quilt."

Four year later, he again referenced quilting, with an example from his own life, as he emphasized finding common ground with each other. 

"America is not a blanket woven from one thread, one color, one cloth. When I was a child growing up in Greenville, South Carolina my grandmama could not afford a blanket, she didn't complain and we did not freeze. Instead she took pieces of old cloth - patches, wool, silk, gabardine, crockersack - only patches, barely good enough to wipe off your shoes with. But they didn't stay that way very long. With sturdy hands and a strong cord, she sewed them together into a quilt, a thing of beauty and power and culture."

[By the way, crockersack refers to a burlap bag.]

Later in the speech he said:

"Be as wise as my grandmama.  Pull the patches and the pieces together, bound by a common thread.  When we form a great quilt of unity and common ground, we'll have the power to bring about health care and housing and jobs and education and hope to our Nation."

I remember these uplifting speeches, and of course I loved the mention of quilts.  I also love the hope that we can find common ground with each other.  

We are more alike than we are unalike.




















Friday, February 27, 2026

Farm Quilt and Green Crumbs

 Welcome to Treadlestitches!  Thanks for stopping by!

The Farm Quilt is a top!  The wind died down enough yesterday afternoon to take a photo outside.

Isn't this farm print fun?  I knew when I picked it up at a quilt guild meeting that it could be a good border.  It came from our guild stash, which is donated to us.  Check out the date:  1999!  With proper storage, good quality cottons can last a long time.

The blue fabric with chickens was also from the guild stash.  I originally wanted to have a narrow border of the blue between the main part of the quilt and the red border.  Unfortunately, when I did the math I didn't have enough of the red for that option, especially if I wanted to show most of the repeat of the farm print.  I will make the binding from the blue.

Here's what I meant about the border repeat.  These borders were cut at 4.5 in. and you still can't see the whole scene.



The framed blocks were cut from several different farm and/animals prints.  I have a bag of farm themed fabrics and scraps that I used to make the 16 patch blocks.  And to no one's surprise, even after all these blocks the bag is STILL not close to being empty. 


 I counted 8 different tractor prints in the bag, both scraps and yardage.  They were mostly John Deere but also International Harvester, and some generic ones like the block above framed in dark green.


The blocks are 8 in. finished, and the top measures 49 in. x 65 in.  It will be donated locally.  I don't plan to quilt it myself as I know others can do a better job.  It will either be quilted by someone in my quilt guild, or by Lynn with the Children's Advocacy Center.


Tomorrow is the last day of February, and that means the last day of green month at the Rainbow Scrap Challenge.  I finished these crumb type blocks just in time!  I'm making them from leftover small pieces and strips.  After making a Duckworth quilt as a guild challenge, I've changed how I make this kind of block.  Now I'm working from the center, kind of like a log cabin, instead of a less organized approach.  It's fun to learn new things!

While I had the green crumbs and strips out I made a few more things for an eventual village type wall hanging.  There's a big green house with a Green Bay Packers strip, some green grass for the little blue house, and a couple of trees made from scrap triangles.  I'm not really happy with the big tree, I think it looks less like a tree and more like a big green tent, but it might be better when I add a trunk.

In Progress


New Project Alert!  Multicolored string blocks are under my treadle's needle today.  I went through my bags of strings and pulled out bright strips of all the colors.  I'm sewing them to batting scraps.  This will end up being a quilt for another guild challenge.

Check out this orange strip!  It's from a scrap of Halloween fabric I got from the free table at guild a while back.  The whole verse on the fabric says: 

Trick or Treat
Smell my feet
Give me something good to eat.

Rude, right?  I'm glad the manufacturer didn't include the rest of that rhyme that the kids at school used to say!


Here's a little more green for the last day of green month.  That's me, standing outside our hotel in Arizona in January next to the tallest cactus I have ever seen.

Time to go cut up more batting squares and do something about the scrap pile on the cutting board.

Have a good week, everyone, and happy quilting!

Linking up with:

Friday, February 20, 2026

Many Hands Make Light Work, and a Scrap Tsunami

 Welcome to Treadlestitches!  Thanks for stopping by!

 
Technically, I managed to take an outdoor photo of this quilt now that it's finished.  The wind was terrible that day, it's a miracle I got to take it at all before the clothespins shot off the clothesline and I had to grab the quilt to keep it from falling.  Weird weather here lately.

Ah, that's better, safely inside.  You might remember this as a top I finished in December.  The charm squares were given to me by a friend at quilt guild.  I sewed them up, and added the border from stash.

Another friend, the Amazing Colleen, did the quilting on her long arm, and it turned out great!


Our guild supplied the batting and this colorful blue backing.  I did the binding, with pink binding also supplied by the guild and made by one of the members. 
Lots of us put our time and effort into finishing this quilt.  Many hands really do make light work!  It will be donated to the Children's Advocacy Center in Milwaukee.


 I didn't have a lot of time for sewing this week, but I am keeping up to date on my Rainbow Scrap Challenge blocks.  These are the Whirlygigs, made using Preeti Harris' tutorial. (Click HERE).  One of these prints is an Easter print with Snoopy and Charlie Brown.  Lately I decided to just go ahead and use holiday prints on my scrap quilts.  It's all fabric, right?

Wonderful and fun things happened this week!  The Winter Quilt Show in West Bend last Saturday was a highlight.  One of the vendors had these antique sewing machines for sale.  They were calling to me, but I didn't weaken.  I still have several and enjoy getting them out from time to time.

These ladies were documenting a lovely crazy quilt from the 1880s.  It was in very good condition, with very little shattered silk.

This was my favorite quilt in the show!  The maker wrote about her immigrant grandparents in her artist's statement.


This little quilt is inspiring me to make something similar with novelty print squares.  I haven't figured out just what yet.

I might have bought some fabric at the show.  But none of it cost over $10 per yard!


In Progress

The Farm Quilt is coming along well.  All the blocks are finished and set together, ready for the borders.  I'm taking a little time to decide which fabrics to use.  I'm glad to have several good choices.

Meanwhile, the green crumbs and strings are spread out all over as I work on February's final RSC set.

But, scraps got me sidetracked!!!


Wednesday night was our monthly guild meeting.  This scrap tsunami was on one of the tables.  The scraps were donated to the guild by someone in the community.  Our guild has quite a large stash of fabric yardage, but we have no room for scraps. We were encouraged to TAKE SCRAPS HOME.  Any not taken would be donated elsewhere.  Woo Hoo!!!


Look at all the cool stuff I snagged!  Plus the Amazing Colleen brought me some too.


All I can say is, the scraps made me do it!  This is what I did this morning, instead of working on all the other quilts in progress.  The block on the left above was in the scrap tsunami.  I really liked it.  It's like a big Bright Hopes block.  All of a sudden I decided to make a quilt like this, but using a charm square for a center instead of the original 5.5 in. square.  (The charm squares are trying to burst out of their plastic shoebox.  Must use them up!)  My practice block is the one on the right.

I already had the new-to-me scraps out, so I cut all the rectangles I could from them.  I chose non-novelty prints for these, mostly geometrics, knowing I would use novelties for the centers.  The rest of the needed rectangles were cut from my parts department.

All I have to do now is choose charm squares, and I can start sewing this quilt as leaders and enders.

So that was my week.  How was yours?  I hope you had at least as much fun as I did!  

Take care, and happy quilting!

Sylvia@Treadlestitches

Linking up with:


Angela at So Scrappy

Cynthia at Oh Scrap