Sunday, September 14, 2025

Monday Meanderings 9 - 15 - 2025

Here we are in the middle of September. What? September? It's still in the 80s where I live. It's getting dark earlier and the humidity isn't as bad as it is in the middle of summer. I enjoy taking Sunny for walks in the evening but for the most part I hang out in my basement studio. This week I read or listened to 3 books.  Nothing spectacular but entertaining. Now, on the quilting side of things... not a lot of check marks. But that is fine with me because the main checkmark is a finish (of sorts) that has been waiting for a year to be worked on. See below. 

9/8/25

✅Load and ✅start quilting Ombré quilt - Whoopie!  Quilting is done! 

Make RSC blocks in light blue and light green and more 9 patch blocks — cut out a couple of 9 patches but nothing else. 

✅Cut out more Sept UFO challenge- Economy blocks — just need 5 more.

Continue cutting out the Magnificent Mystery quilt— nothing done. 

Bind baby quilt — trimmed quilt, cut out binding but nothing else done


I finished my super queen size Ombre top last year.  I love/d how it looks. I bought the backing for it in MI last July.  It sat in the laundry room waiting for me to wash it. Surprise, a few weeks ago I washed it. It sat in the studio waiting to be ironed for several weeks. I finally decided I really need to get it finished in September cause I need to be able to show more fabric usage. (I went wild buying fabric this quarter!) Happily enough, I did the ironing, I loaded the backing and the batting and the quilt top (which also needed ironing). Saturday I started quilting it. My thought was I'd get it done later this week. But, I was ready to get'er done. I got several rows done Saturday and the rest done on Sunday.  It is quilted! 



Darn, you can't see the quilting.  Here's the E2E I used so you can see it clearly.  I love how it turned out. It's called Briar Rose in Winter and is a computerized Edge-to-Edge pattern. The pattern is available at My Creative Stitches. And yes, I've used it a few times. Below you can read some of the statistics and why I really wasn't looking forward to doing this big quilt. 



So it took approximately 23 minutes for each of 9 rows. So total actual stitching time was 3 hours and 43 minutes. (Which doesn't count the bobbin winding time, the time to load this big quilt, time moving the quilt forward after each row, and the time I had to rip out one/tenth of the row.) There were 166,140 stitches in the quilt (including the small section I had to rip out.) That is equal to 459 yards of thread.  One of my jumbo bobbins could only do 2 rows before running too low to start another row.  


So, I now have 5 bobbins with just small amounts of thread on them. (And, no empty bobbins!) Hopefully the next quilt I do will be much smaller and use white thread! There is more than enough thread if I do, say, a 36" wide quilt.  These small amounts would probably last for the whole row.  I do have one bobbin with not very much thread on it so I could unwind it if my next quilt isn't with white thread! 


I realized last week I left off the picture of the Economy blocks that are ready to sew.  This is last week's photo. If I had taken a pic this week about 4 of the fabrics would be sets now. I'm definitely going for fall colors.


As you can see I got a little bit of one other project done. I prepped some blocks to sew and I got the binding cut and pinned together for the baby quilt. Now that I think on it a bit -- I also worked on another knit hat and spent one evening working on my cross stitch bag. (You can see it here although I've done more since this picture.)  I really have to concentrate to get this one done correctly.  (And honestly, I haven't been as accurate as I should be but I think in the end it will look fine.) 

Here's what I'll be working on this week. 

9/15/25 

Cut, prepare, and sew  binding on Ombre Log Cabin 

Sew binding on baby quilt 

Continue cutting out Magnificent Mystery Quilt 

Keep making 9 patch blocks and/or RSC blocks

Quilt two quilts (not mine… sigh.) 

Quilt  a little doll quilt on my domestic machine to give to the guild


That should keep me busy this week. And, all my choral groups have gone back so that is taking up some time too.  Maybe I'll get even more done this week but I'm not holding my breath. 


Here's my 15 Minutes of Stitching report.


W/ending 9/14/25. 257 days of 2025

    • 15 minute days Sept = 7/7
    • 15 minute days/2025 = 257/257 days
    • Success rate = 100%
Not much more to report from here.  Sunny is thriving and stubborn.  She likes to play with her balls but also tends to put them under the couch which means she can't actually get to them without some help.  Sigh. 

Please spend some time checking out these Linky parties.  Hopefully it won't take me until the end of the week to link up to the bottom two parties.  


Hope everyone is finding peace in their quilting this week.  I always appreciate it when the outside world has gotten intolerable.  It's cheaper than therapy...maybe! 

Happy Quilting All! Bonnie

13 comments:

  1. The Ombre quilt turned out beautifully, congrats on making more progress then you expected. Your stitching numbers look excellent. You make it to the end of this month and you'll just have one quarter left in the year!

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  2. Have you ever used a side light for photos so the quilting shows up? Sometimes even just stepping to the side of the quilt and getting a photo from that view works. At any rate the quilt is a beauty with all it's glorious colors!

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  3. Congratulations on the finish! After a ten days of cooler than normal we're back into the 80's.

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  4. That's a beautiful finish, Bonnie! I love the quilting design - I always like curvy, viny stitching on square blocks. Did you say you wash the quilt top before quilting? What happens with all the raw edges? (Some of my tops might just fray right apart.) Have a great week!

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  5. That is a very pretty ombre quilt! Glad it is finally on the done list!

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  6. Oh my, the quilt is wonderful. Like you, I dread those big quilts. Such a hassle to iron the top and backing without stepping on it, only to wrinkle again. I hate the mostly empty bobbins too but don’t like coming back to my machine and finding half the row not finished because the bobbin ran out. I take the mostly empty bobbins back to my sewing room and wind the thread onto the bobbins that fit my regular sewing machine. I put the bobbin in a coffee cup that has one of the sipper lids, put the thread through the opening, and wind away. This way, bobbin doesn’t swing all over the sewing room, messing up the tension. AND, I don’t waste the thread. It’s much easier to replace the bobbin when I run out on the sewing machine because I can see when it happens. Hope this helps!

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  7. Beautiful quilting, Bonnie! I can see it when I click on a close-up of the photo. And congrats on 100% success rate of 15 minutes per day.

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  8. I like the quilt even if you can't see the quilting

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  9. Ombre is just gorgeous, Bonnie. It was so interesting to read about the stats in respect to quilting- time and thread used. It is a beauty.

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  10. LOVE, LOVE, LOVE your ombre quilt. I like this setting for the blocks as well as the log cabin blocks. Great contrast in the design. Good luck on all the projects.

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  11. Ombre is really beautiful. Wow!!

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  12. Ombre is amazing. That quilting pattern sounds perfect for it!! and just in time!!! Fall/Winter is coming

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  13. Oooh I love your ombre quilt, Bonnie! Great job. It has such rich colors. I think the pattern you chose was perfect for it. I love all of the Christies' motifs. They all stitch out beautifully. Don't you wish our machines could have double extra large bobbins? I surely do! I have become proficient and stopping and restarting when I run out of thread, but I prefer to stitch a whole row and then change. Oh well, such is quilting! Have a great week and thanks for sharing with us at Monday Musings.

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