Stash Diet

I really am on a stash diet – this time for sure!

I’ve been telling myself for months that I really need to quit buying new materials and starting new projects. Each time, I would finish up a project or two, but then there is always something new that calls my name. Not even quiet little whispers – it’s like constant yelling.

But this time, I mean it. I sat down this weekend and started wading through all the yarn, beads, and fabric I have (not to mention all the partially done projects), and decided that I have at *least* one year’s worth of projects of various kinds to make. The first part of the plan is to finish up the following:

1. Topdown sweater (gift for April birthday; status: done but making hood cord, sewing hood for cord, washing/blocking, wrapping, mailing (OK, sounds a lot worse than it is – I’m nearly done with the cord))

Sweater - entire

Sweater - entire

Sweater - detail

Sweater - detail

2. Crib quilt (gift, originally due in late December; status: pin-basted, ready to quilt, nervous about quilting it)

Crib Quilt update

3. Knit hat (for chemo suite general stock at my oncologist’s; status: still needs about 9″ of ribbing, 3″ of decrease) – I’m trying to make one of these a month using Lion Brand Homespun. The first one actually went to Brian, because I could see him eyeing it lustfully as I was finishing the ends, and he *just happened* to mention that his old watch cap was too short to cover his ears twice.

Oncology hat

Oncology hat

4. Orange/black Irish Chain quilt (for quilting class ending this Thursday; status: top pieced, back pieced, need to pin-baste, pin basting on my living room floor kills my back and knees, need to get over to quilt store to use their wall, unless:

Irish Chain Quilt update

4. a. I can get this “wall” finished. Brian and I got the chipboard home, but we had a piece of soundboard that we were going to glue to it that had a transportation disaster on the way home. We obviously didn’t do a very good job of tying it down. But the soundboard seems as if it will be a perfect solution to stick T-pins in to hold the backing and batting in place, while one pins the top; so I hope to get another piece (we’ll probably have Home Depot cut it in half so we can transport it *in* the car) this weekend, maybe get the gluing done too.

Pinning wall pieces

Pinning wall pieces

5. Cabled pillow cover (for us; status: started it, hate doing the cables, but hope that perseverance will get past the really annoying part of it – I’ve cabled plenty before, so I think it’s just the width of the cables plus I may be working too tight. May frog it and start over, but modify the cables, making them more slender but adding another one in or something…)

Cabled Pillow cover - Jo Sharp pattern

Cabled Pillow cover - Jo Sharp pattern

6. Zigzag bead necklace (for me; status: need to add some more fringe, may add a strand with some fringe wrapped around the herringbone tube, need to add cones and clasp.)

ZigZag necklace w/o findings

ZigZag necklace w/o findings

ZigZag necklace - bead and fringe detail

ZigZag necklace - bead and fringe detail

7. Painted Hummingbird quilt wall hangings (for us; status: one top pieced, need to piece second top, etc.)

Painted hummingbird quilted wall-hangings

Painted hummingbird quilted wall-hangings

Now, don’t get me wrong – this is not by any means a complete listing of every project I have started, but this is a good representation. There’s the Brian sweater, the cougar cross-stitch (oh, boy, is *that* one ancient! but I really love it, and really want to finish it, but it keeps getting shuffled down the list), the half-finished socks (half meaning one sock less some Kitchener is done), the anniversary “Love is. . .” cross-stitch (hey, I figure I can have that one done in time for our fifteenth anniversary), the needlepoint chair covers to replace the upholstery on Granny’s dining room table chairs and the piano chair, and, well, you get the idea.

I’m not going to limit myself to simply finishing existing projects, however, because that would probably make me break my resolution a lot sooner than might otherwise happen. I’m also going to make new projects, as long as they come from my stash. If I find I need just one little thing to make something using mostly stuff from my stash, then I may go ahead and buy that one little thing, but generally it is going to be stash-only. Most of the new projects will be gifts, although I may have to be more creative about who gets what based on what I already have. I have already identified a couple projects that I want to start later this year that will require some new knitting needles – I don’t have any circulars long enough. I will be giving Brian my “particular” gift list for birthday, etc., so hopefully he will buy some of those items ;-}

The year started as of January 1 – even though I started the quilting class in mid-January, I already had all the materials (fabric, batting, thread, etc.) for that quilt, and I’d already started cutting strips when I first started taking the class in 9/07; so technically, it was already a WIP.

And here I am, I’ve already finished one hat, nearly done with the sweater, and cranking out the next hat; the Irish Chain quilt is probably going to be fairly easy to quilt, once I get the pin-basting done. So I’m encouraged at already making progress; and seeing all the sorting I did, getting projects together, I’m going to be able to pick and choose what to work on next very easily.

We’re almost two months into it, so I’m 1/6th of the way through the year without buying more materials – still plenty of potential, but I’m feeling pretty firm about sticking to this diet.

Crib Quilt Progress

Wow – I had no clue I hadn’t posted this! This was written on 12/27/08.

**************************

I finished the top of the crib quilt yesterday, and pieced the backing together.

Pieced, ready for quilting

Pieced, ready for quilting

Now all I have to do is figure out what sort of quilting I want to do on it. I was considering just a basic cross-hatch, but I’d really like to do something a little more complex. For the border, I’ve come up with a simple pattern of “braided” wavy lines; but because of the pattern of squares and number of rows being irregular, I’m having difficulty with the body.

BTW, I had to figure out for myself (with huge amounts of help from Brian) how to do the half-rectangles. The website that I’d found was *WRONG*! Guess that’s what I get for believing what I read on the internets ;-} Fortunately, I had extra material that I could play around with. I’m going to write up the method I used (probably isn’t the only way, but it works without having to have any special rulers). The only thing is, because I used batiks, there was no right-side/wrong-side issue with the fabrics. I will have to experiment with some one-sided fabric to make sure I cover both types of fabric; and also the orientation aspect (which direction the angle goes).

So I’m off to go searching through my quilting books to see if I can decide on a quilting pattern for the body – if not, I may actually have to drag out a pencil and see if I can draw something I like (and believe me, drawing freehand is not one of my talents. . .).

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.