My quilting thoughts and inspirations sprinkled with a glimpse of life down on the farm

Friday, January 30, 2026

End of January catch up.

I've been able to indulge myself in The Palace (aka the sewing room) this month. There has been the much needed tidy-up which led to lots of opening of and peeking into project boxes, and then rearranging them within the room. 
The biggest change has been installing another cube bookcase under my cutting bench. (Six cubes, on its side.)
I put one in for project boxes sometime last year and it has worked rather well, and after getting fed up with folders and papers everywhere - and all over the cutting bench - I decided to get another identical one for the other side of the bench to tidy up that area of my life.
Sideways bookcase #1 for project boxes—
The Palace also doubles as a Farm Office; the main hub for the farm accounts, animal and farm records, not to mention an ever increasing amount of Fonterra compliance paperwork (even online systems need supporting paperwork!). These all incessantly jostle for space with my sewing and quilting folders and paper stuff.
Of course I didn't measure beforehand and the big ring binders don't fit the cubes....(sigh). Thank goodness I hadn't found a new home for the large cube I'd been using and after a bit more rearranging, a new solution was found!
Sideways bookcase #2—

The start of the year always sees me doing some secret sewing for the shop, as we work towards our 'New Year's Launch' later on in February. 
However, while waiting for some fabric to arrive, I did have a chance for a little more personal sewing, making this quilt top for a soon-to-be-new-baby.
I started with a block from the new pattern by Elizabeth Hartman, Show and Tell.
And grew it a bit, adding to her suggested instructions for a baby sized quilt.
Here are two kiddos showing it off at the shop —
Hehe —
I then discovered the perfect fabric for the final border, and soon it was ready to be presented as a top. My attempts at outdoor photos (in the natural light) did not go well —
So indoors it came!
(Hint there may be more of this pattern sewn for the shop's New Year's Launch).
Apart from the extra fabric for the border, all the rest of the above baby quilt were scraps and bits and pieces - using those always gives me so much pleasure!!
And I've had lots more pleasure sewing more Leader-Ender blocks while tackling my other projects.
Back in October, I shared that I had joined in with Bonnie Hunter's Leader-Ender challenge. This year's block (July-July) is Four-patch fun.
I'm using any shade of red and have amassed 51 blocks to date—
I made a couple of blocks in the same fabric at the start but am now only using each fabric once. 
144 blocks will give me a 72" square quilt, and that is my goal at this stage. 
(I used 80 different reds for Mum's birthday quilt back *here* so let's see how I do this time!)

And yesterday a Squirrel sent me down a Rabbit hole. I have so much on my plate that I was not looking for another project, but I always relish the chance to pull out and play with some scraps (can you see where this is heading?!).
I saw Janice's finished Rainbow Scrap Challenge quilt on her blog the other day, and commented that the block she had used was one I'd always admired (or something like that). Of course that little seed planted itself in my brain and sprouted into a baby squirrel!
Hence —
I was quite pleased with myself because I finally mastered the web piecing technique for making this block. I was shown it a few years ago but had not seriously tried it until now. It meant that once I had all my squares laid out the block went together very quickly (and efficiently).
Blue was January's colour for the Rainbow Scrap Challenge - I'll probably follow Angela's colour prompts, and make one a month.

I know this is getting photo heavy but I just want to show you my new chickens. I like to get a few every year to keep the supply of eggs going (their laying slows down as they age).
I saw some advertised reasonably local and couldn't resist grabbing them. On my way home I picked up Odie to help me unload them and he was as entranced as I was with them......
They bob their heads around so much that decent photos are hard to get, hence I caught this one for a selfie—
(Yes, I should have waited until he'd finished his snack!)
We call them Dr Suess Chickens but their official breed is Legbar. Apparently sometimes you have to trim the feathers around their eyes so they can see. 
They MAY lay green/blue eggs but we have to wait patiently for a couple of months to find out.
Cute, huh?!

And on that happy note, I will leave you.
'till next time,
happy stitches,
Raewyn

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