

And of course there were leftovers from cutting them, so I sewed them into these tiny halfsquare triangle units, and I intend to make some filler blocks for the Orphan box. There is no temptation to do anything more ambitious with these little fellas.


All this sewing has entailed working with old projects and, now that I am wearing glasses and sewing in excellent natural light, I'm appalled at how inaccurately I used to piece. I had to do a lot of fudge work to make these bits play nicely, especially when I cut new strips to use with the old. I can actually see what I'm doing now, and for the last two years I've been guessing. Hopefully all my work will be accurate from now on....
The last two years are going to be known as my Magoo period; quilt historians examining this lot of quilts will nod knowledgeably and say 'These predate the arrival of the new spectacles, you can tell by the mismatched seams and variable strip width....'
Wouldn't this be the perfect car for me, as Ms Magoo? It's in the Birdwood motor museum, and is an electric car from 1929. It even has crystal vases inside. I WANT it!

Your blue and white quilt is lovely!
ReplyDeleteA small quilt eh? I'm eating my hat as I type......
ReplyDeleteJust love your blue and white double Irish chain.
ReplyDeleteLove the double Irish Chain but the cot quilt is just adorable. Love the colors and the settings. Beautiful.
ReplyDeletelove the idea of a magoo period -- now if it could always be so easily cured with glasses it would be even better! :-)
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful collection of quilts. I like your Irish Chain.
ReplyDeleteThe double Irish chain is lovely, but my heart is stolen by the lovely colours of the little quilt.
ReplyDeleteThankyou for the tips you share.
accurate shmaccurate. your blocks look wonderful no matter what.
ReplyDelete