Quilt ADD in therapy

My photo
Colorado, United States
Other than my family, the passion of my life is quilting. An eclectic, I love a wide variety of styles and techniques encompassing both machine and hand work. I am a longarm quilter who can work for you. I enjoy any style, from pantographs to all-over to full custom, ranging from traditional to modern. I love bringing vintage tops to life and am willing to work with a challenging quilt top. Instagram: lyncc_quilts

Monday, September 29, 2014

BOMs Away Monday - Heart & Home



Welcome to the Link-Up for BOMs Away Mondays!
 
We'd love to see the BOM you're working on lately.
This week's link-up is at the bottom of the post.
 
I have to say - it was fantastic to get a couple of FMQ sessions in this week, and I actually got a full-on BOM day put in. So now "Heart & Home" is at this point:
 
 
 
And I put all the hearts together for the ribbon border. They took much longer than I thought they would!
 
 
 
 
~*~*~*~*~
 
How about you? Did you get to work on any of your BOMs lately?

 

Monday, September 22, 2014

BOMs Away linkup -



Welcome to the Link-Up for BOMs Away Mondays!
 
We'd love to see the BOM you're working on lately.
This week's link-up is at the bottom of the post.
 
I did the tiniest bit of BOM work yesterday - about 5 whole inches of needle-turn stitching on Fiesta Mexico. And that's the sum total of my quilt work for the week!  Heh! 
 
 
 
Some eye candy:  A traditional Japanese theater troupe in the Heart Mountain Japanese-American relocation center, 1942 (a Tom Parker photo):
 
 
My thesis is really taking shape! Just have to do whatever revision work my advisor wants, then I can submit it. It'll end up somewhere around 220 pages when all the formatting is finished, looks like. Egads!

And that means that I should be able to go back to my normal BOM working on Sunday!!
 
~*~*~*~*~

Have you done any work on your BOMs recently?

Monday, September 15, 2014

BOMs Away Monday



Welcome to the Link-Up for BOMs Away Mondays!
 
We'd love to see the BOM you're working on lately.
This week's link-up is at the bottom of the post.
 
I did not work on Ruffled Roses at all (the second-Sunday BOM). Did get Preface & ch. 1 revamps worked out to my advisor's satisfaction and finished ch. 5 to send over to him.
Working crazily on ch.6 right now, which is a coordinated jumble of research notes and bits of finished draft. 35 pages at the moment to be smoothed into 20 or fewer.
 
Here's some eye candy for you, though. Brooches made by Japanese American WWII internees in the Topaz center in Utah. They got the shells from the surrounding desert, and used paints and fingernail polish to color them. Aren't they amazing?
 
 
This shot is from the book The Art of Gaman, by Delphine Hirusana, which is really terrific to browse through.
 
~*~*~*~*~

Have you done any work on your BOMs recently?

Monday, September 8, 2014

BOMs Away - Crunch Time



Welcome to the Link-Up for BOMs Away Mondays!
 
We'd love to see the BOM you're working on lately.
This week's link-up is at the bottom of the post.
 
Hey there! Bear with me over the next 4 weeks if I'm a little slow getting this linky up or not as social as I used to be. It's crunch time for the final draft of my thesis to be turned in, and I've got 4 chapters remaining to fix up.  This is this week's task:
 
 
 
These last chapters are in my "Throw Down" stage, where all research and analysis notes are pasted into documents that are organized by divisions of information. Meaning, with the chapter for this week, there are 55 pages of such info copy/pasted as I worked with the individual items (and there are thousands of them) into an organized Word file under appropriate Navigation Pane headings. But when you get to each heading, it's literally a pool of individual items/thoughts that need to be logically ordered and then massaged into coherent paragraphs. I expect this one will finalize around 9ooo words, something like 30 pages.
 
Sooooo - I was busy yesterday finishing the clean-up of footnote formats in last week's chapter, and the sum total of BOM work I got done was quilting the maze work on the dark half of THREE ENTIRE log cabin blocks in Kelly's quilt!  Woohoo!!  ;D 
 
 
 
But hey, something is better than nothing.
 
~*~*~*~*~

Have you done any work on your BOMs recently? Hope my U.S. friends are enjoying their Labor Day weekend!

Monday, September 1, 2014

BOMs Away & Colorado Balloon Classic



Welcome to the Link-Up for BOMs Away Mondays!
 
We'd love to see the BOM you're working on lately.bo
This week's link-up is at the bottom of the post.
 
(BOM work in a sec - gotta journal some family fun first).
 
We had the best time yesterday! Scott and Marissa and I got up before the sun to drive down into Colorado Springs for the 38th Annual Colorado Balloon Classic. We wanted to catch this unique bit of fun in Memorial Park since it looks like it's the last time it'll be held here. Not sure what I was expecting, but it wasn't an open free-for-all where crowds of people could literally walk right up inside the crush of densely-packed hot air balloon crews. Owners brought their balloons in pickup trucks and small trailers (sometimes just the trucks!), and they were literally being inflated within touching distance of each other. Some pilots didn't have enough crew members, so Scott and Marissa answered a call from the organizing staff to jump in. I would have been a superfluous helper, so I had fun catching snapshots of the process.
 
First you pull everything out - prep the basket, lay out the envelope, and then get to the big work.
 

Mr. Keller (owner and pilot) was very particular about the hoses being connected properly.

The entire envelope is in that canvas bag!

Hmm... not sure where the shot went of the top pulled out entirely -
it stretches out in a line maybe 20 yards long.

 Pilots "cold pack" the tops, which is blowing regular air into it first. As that is starting, folks up front hold the opening open, and folks in back attach the top to the top. (Don't know any more terms than "envelope.")  Somebody holds on to the tether line that is attached at the tip-top to keep the whole thing under control as the inflation process continues.
 
 
 
The fan behind Marissa is what fills the balloon in the first place.
 
Attaching the very top while the envelope fills
 
Once the balloon is full of cold air, the pilot oh-so-carefully sends jets into the opening to heat things up. It's amazing how fast the air in there responds, and very soon you control the tip of the basket as it all pulls itself upright.
 





 
 
 
Once the organizers remove the "hold" flag, the pilot gives a little boost to his hot air, and he's up - up - and away! 
 
 
Have a great flight, Mr. Keller!
 
 
What a great random adventure to be able to be a part of that process.  :D
 
Here are a few of my favorite shots after that. They had 80 balloons this year, and sent them off in two waves. Check out how the spectators are packed right in with the balloons once people really started arriving!  Also, you can see in some of the pics how the pilots love to come down and "kiss" the little lake in the park before re-ascending for the rest of their flight. Oh, and don't miss catching the crazy man sitting in a "Cloud Hopper." Two of those were there, and they just sit on a little aluminum chair instead of in a basket!
 
 
 

 

 

 

 
 
 

 

 
 

 

Cheshire has a tail, just out of sight -
hangs down almost to the basket!

 
 
It was a superb morning - definitely worth the too-early rise out of bed and the $10 parking we paid to get into the lot the Boy Scouts could use for fund-raising.
 
~*~*~*~*~
 
So - for BOM stuff!  I didn't do much at all, cause the day at the Balloon Classic was too much fun and then I wanted a nap.  But I did do some hand work. 
The bottom of the first block for "Fiesta Mexico" is stitched now - that piece is over a yard long.
 
 
 
Navarre says to tell you it'll eventually have this design work stitched on it:


 
 
 And I hand basted the 48 berries onto the applique border for "Heart & Home."  But I didn't stitch them down yet - started to, but had to go take a nap!
 
 
 
Also, the second of my cousin Kelly's Joseph Smith quilts has been up to bat at the quilting machine for about 10 days. The stabilizing is finished and the stars are quilted.
 
 

 
The finish will be a lonnnng time coming, though - I only get two 20-minute quilting sessions per day as breaks in my thesis work, which is back at full-steam-ahead. Last semester!!
 
 
~*~*~*~*~

Have you done any work on your BOMs recently? Hope my U.S. friends are enjoying their Labor Day weekend!