Felted penguins in a dish! From the newest addition to my Japanese craft book library. The ones with the little closed eyes are the best!
And here are Derek and I as Simpsons characters. Create your own Simpsons avatar here.
Felted penguins in a dish! From the newest addition to my Japanese craft book library. The ones with the little closed eyes are the best!
And here are Derek and I as Simpsons characters. Create your own Simpsons avatar here.
Come one, come all! Hope to see you there!!!
I was so thrilled to see these new Orla Kiely-designed tents and sleeping bags on her site the other day! They were produced in collaboration with a British outdoor goods company called Millets, are affordable, and in traditional Orla style, they're bold, graphic and absolutely covetable. Makes me want to plan a camping trip right away!
We just received a shipment of 7 new Suspicious, Talking and Combination Paintings from J. Richel, and they're for sale in the Gallery section of the shoppe! They each have so much personality, and we could sit here for hours making them talk to each other and give each other sidelong glances by pulling on their tabs. I'm especially into this lovely lady with her cat-eye glasses. She looks timid in this picture, but trust me, she's a talker!






Ever since making that quilt a couple weeks ago, I've had quilt fabric on the brain. My mom and I spent a long time in Stonemountain and Daughter Fabrics in Berkeley the other day, just ogling all the different prints and beautiful solid colored cottons they sell there. I decided that it would be fun to make one quilt per year (which is only way I'd be able to add quilting into the mix with all my other current projects/hobbies). That way you'd have an ever-growing collection of handmade quilts, you could take your time picking fabrics and piecing them together, and perhaps even hand quilt them.
We can't get enough of all the delicious fruits and berries that are in season right now! We've been making jam like crazy, and eating bowls of berries for breakfast every morning. (That bowl on top there matched my woven dishtowel sooo well that I had to take a picture of it!) Bon Appétit everyone- enjoy then while they're ripe!
Ever since I picked up this book a couple weeks ago, I haven't been able to put it down. It's a recipe book from the Rose Bakery in Paris, called Breakfast, Lunch, Tea, and it is delightful! I haven't made anything from it yet, but I keep flipping through and admiring the beautiful photographs and type. Check out that cover!


What the?! How did we miss this? We love Modest Mouse, we use Apple computers...??? So evidently there was a contest put on by Apple where they posted a bunch of camera shots of Modest Mouse playing "Missed The Boat" and encouraged people to download the shots and make their own video "using Apple editing tools." Well, some of the best ones are now making their way around the blogosphere, this one was emailed to me this morning by a colleague over at ReadyMade who found it through the Wooster Collective. It's pretty darn brilliant. Check out the other entries and finalists here.
Last week I made my first ever quilt (pictured above) from a pattern in the Denyse Schmidt Quilts book, which is based on the traditional "Flying Geese" pattern. I just love how the triangles look like little pennants- they remind me of the flags that fly over christmas tree lots and used car dealerships (is it strange to be inspired by a used car dealership?? Anyway...) It is a crib sized quilt, and a gift for my sister who is about to have a baby. The process was fun, a little confusing and very exhausting, but I finished it in time for the baby shower yesterday and I thought I'd share some of pics of what it looked like in the various stages of construction.
My favorite part of the whole quilt-making process was laying out all the triangles of cut fabric and moving them around until I was happy with the design. Then I numbered all the rows and stacked them up so I would know what order to sew them in.
Here is a completed strip, with all the seam allowances pressed towards the colored fabric pieces so they wouldn't show through to the front. (Good idea, right?). Those little triangles of fabric were snipped off before proceeding to the next step.
Next, I took all the numbered strips and attached them one by one, until I had my completed quilt top.
Then it was time to make the "quilt sandwich". I layed out my bottom piece, (which was a twin size sheet cut down to size) my cotton batting, and my quilt top, then hand basted all three pieces together so they wouldn't shift once I started quilting on the machine.
I quilted 11 vertical lines down the center of each triangle, and then "stitched in the ditch" around each white triangle, which took FOREVER! My sewing machine was not happy with this chain of events, but we made it through.
Finally, I cut a bunch of 2 1/2" wide strips and sewed them together make the binding. which was pinned into place, attached with the machine, and slip-stitched by hand to the back of the quilt, which Derek was kind enough to stay up and help me with until the wee hours of the morning on Saturday night. I learned a lot and of course have a whole new appreciation for the art of piecework and quiltmaking. I'm already looking forward to picking out fabric for my next one!