Monday, March 25, 2013

Gluten Free Pancakes


Gluten Free Pancakes
Ingredients:
5 mashed bananas
3 organic pastured eggs  
2 cups oat flour (I make my own from GF oats, it's very easy)
1.5 tsp vanilla extract
1.5 tsp baking powder 
1 tbsp coconut sugar

Optional:
1.5 tsp cinnamon
1 cup blueberries (fresh or frozen)

I combine all the ingredients and cook them on the griddle at 375 degrees.
They are very delicious, they remind me of banana bread!





Photobucket

Monday, July 30, 2012

Christmas Quilting Already

I have been super busy the last 2 weeks with my family. My oldest and my youngest have birthdays 10 days (just shy of 3 years) apart. I really haven't had much time to sew until today so here's a little sneak peak at what I'm working on. 


I absolutely love winter time. I love the cold, I love the holidays, I love the decorations, It is all wonderful! 

So I'm here in VERY hot Arizona VERY ready for winter. Heck, even the thought of getting down to 80 degrees at night excites me! So what am I to do? Start my Christmas sewing of course! 


I'll be posting about this project again once I finish. 




Photobucket

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

My First Quilt

This isn't the first quilt I made, this is just the first quilt I ever owned. My grandma made it for me about 10 years ago. (I can't remember exactly but I think it was about 10 years) It was her 2nd or 3rd quilt. She was taking lessons from my aunt who is a very talented quilter and used to own a longarm quilting machine. Before My aunt started quilting I didn't even know what a quilt was. We used comforters on our beds and I thought that was what everyone used. 

Well, my grandma made this quilt for me and I have loved quilts ever since. Very shortly after she gave it to me I started learning how to quilt myself. 

I love this quilt because It has a lot of great memories around it. Not only was it hand made just for me but it is extremely well used. I has seen many a beach bonfire, picnics, camping trips, naps in the backyard, it has gotten a lot of use! 


It is a great example of why quilts are so great. I took a picture of this seam that came loose about a year ago. Yes, a year ago, this seam came loose and it is still fine everywhere else. I plan to mend it soon but the point I'm trying to make is that quilts are so sturdy because of the quilting process and all that thread. A quilt is really a long lasting treasure, a useful gift (if you quilt for others) that will last them for many many years, maybe their whole life if they are kinder to their quilt than I am. You can't buy a comforter and expect it to last this long! 


My grandma pieced the top but my aunt quilted it. I think she did a beautiful job! She did a curvy outline of the stars and stippling around them. 


Then on the borders she did stars that don't show very well in this picture but they are really nice on the green and a loopy zig-zag on the white. 


My husband took this picture of a praying mantis he found on our orange tree over the weekend. We thought it was pretty cool. 



Photobucket

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

What I've been working on

I have been doing a lot of little things this week. I want to try to finish somethings up before I start my next big project! 

I was inspired by Alyssa over at Pile O Fabric to make a needle book. Hers is very fancy with hand stitching and pretty fabric but I had fun making mine with some scraps I didn't want to throw away. I still need a button for the front but otherwise I finished this project in one nap-time.  



Then I finished the back of my son't quilt. I found some very Arizona looking fabric that I think is pretty fun. I did a stripe of pinwheels through the middle. I'm pretty pleased with how it turned out. 


And finally, a stack of one inch HSTs was left over after my daughter's doll quilt so I am playing around with designs right now. 
I keep seeing sewing machine covers all over Pinterest and then yesterday I saw Clara over at Clover and Violet made a really beautiful one with a piecework outer. I think I am going to finally make a sewing machine cover and this is going to be part of it. 



Photobucket

Saturday, July 14, 2012

The Doll Bed!

We finished! I posted earlier about my daughter's birthday approaching here

I think my husband did a fantastic job on the bed. He added extra support because we know she's going to sit on it or maybe even try to lay on it. We let her pick out the paint color and even though she didn't now why she was picking a color I think her choice turned out perfect. 

I had a wonderful time making this little quilt, it was pretty easy. 


I also made a mattress, pillow and pillow case. I think they all turned out pretty darn cute! I think she's going to love it!


The back of the quilt has some embroidery. 
The lettering is small but it says "Happy Birthday    Love, Momma"


I'm so excited and I can't wait for her birthday so I can give it to her! I hope she loves it! 


Photobucket

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

How to Apply Binding

Finishing a quilt is, in my opinion, the best part of making a quilt. It is so rewarding to sit down and put the finishing touches on a quilt that I worked so hard to make. I think binding is the one part of quilting that I can honestly say I have mastered so I'm excited to share with you how I do it. 




1) I always start by squaring up my quilt. This is a very small quilt so I was able to use my rotary cutter but I use a yard stick and scissors if I am working on something larger. 


2) I like to roll up my binding tape before I get started. It makes it much easier to get it in place.
Go here for a tutorial on how I make my binding tape.


3) I start in the middle of one side and pin every 2 inches or so. The raw edges of the binding tape should be lined up with the raw edges of the quilt.


4) When I get to a corner I fold up creating a crease with a 45 degree angle. Putting a pin in there helps. 
NOTE: if you have mitered the corners on your border it will give you a very nice guide! 


5) Then I fold down and keep pinning. I do the same for the other corners.


6) When I get back around to the beginning I overlap the binding about 4 to 5 inches.



7) I set up my machine to sew 1/4 inch seams and start at least 6 inches from the end of the binding tape. I like to leave plenty of room to work because I'll be coming back to join the ends later. Having plenty of room there really is key!


8) When I get to a corner I stop 1/4 inch from the edge. 

Thanks to my son for the finger :)


I have gone one stitch into the fold in this picture. That's fine, 1 or 2 stitches is actually good for strength. 


9) Without cutting my thread I open the fold, turn my quilt and keep sewing. 


10) I keep sewing around until I have about 6 inches of binding tape left. 


11) I bring my pieces together and mark where they meet.


12) One marking on the right side and the other on the wrong side of the fabric. 


13) Then I open up the binding tape and lay the strips, right sides together with the marks I made at the lower right hand side. I use a ruler to draw a diagonal line. 


14) Pin that together.


I think this shows a little better how the pieces should be lined up


15) I sew a seam right on the line.


16) Trim and press open.


17) Then I close my binding, pin it down and sew with a 1/4 inch seam.


This is a tool I use to hold my binding in place while I stitch. A lot of people like to use hair clips, I'm sure those work just as well. 



18) I fold my binding around from the front to the back just enough so it covers the seam I just made. 


19) I like to clip mine down all the way around before I start stitching. 


20) From here It's a simple invisible stitch all the way around. I start in the inseam and bring my needle out a few threads away from the seam.

I really like to hand stitch my binding. I encourage other quilters to at least give it a try. I think it makes a huge difference and doesn't really take that much extra time. My thought is that I spent a lot of time and effort piecing a quilt top and then spent even more time quilting the layers together, I don't want to lessen the beauty of the quilt with a seam running down my binding. 
However, if I'm binding a quilt that isn't super special to me and I am in a rush I have in the past finished my binding by machine. In that case I like to use a zig-zag stitch. I think it makes it less noticeable that sometimes the seam isn't perfectly straight.

Red Pepper Quilts also has a very nice tutorial on how she binds her quilts by machine. Definitely worth a look if you don't want to do it by hand. 


21) Then insert the needle in the binding directly beside where the thread is coming out of the quilt. I like to make my stitches about 1/4 of and inch but it's not important to be exact because they won't be seen anyway.


22) Then move down and insert the needle directly beside where the thread is coming out of the binding. 


 23) When I get to a corner I stitch all the way into the inseam before I fold the next side down. This allows the corner to miter itself. 


24) I bring my needle out in the middle of the mitered corner and stitch around the corner.



25) When my thread runs out I just make a few tight stitches one right on top of the other and hide the tails in the binding. 



You might notice I stitch with my thread doubled. It's the old way of hand stitching. It's the way my mom taught me to sew and I like the added strength of having 2 threads. I learned in a sewing class I took in high school (yes, I took sewing in high school) that the new way, the "correct" way, is to thread your needle like you would for embroidery, with a single thread and a tail handing down after you thread the needle. The new way eliminates tangling. So if you find you are doing it the old way and tangling bothers you, try threading your needle the new way. The tangling doesn't bother me so I do it the old way. 

The result is clean and pretty! I love quilt binding, it really brings a quilt together. 



Photobucket

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...