In between thread changes of embroidery designs, I sometimes
resort to stitching up someone else’s pattern for relaxation—I do feel guilty
about NOT working on my own original art, but in this case, it’s even worse—I pieced
a KIT, so even the fabric choices were made for me!
shops about a year and a half ago. I once had one in my hands at the checkout
line—it was $45 which was a bit steep, but the tin was so cute. Before I checked
out, I noticed this:
off and put it down before I ever got to the cash register. I’m not sure how I
thought they would fit a 50” x 50” quilt in that little tin, but my Frivol
story almost ended there.
great sense of humor, and is always working on something fabulous. Apparently, she
purchased all twelve Frivol kits as a subscription when they first were offered—a retirement gift for
herself. She’s making this her “Year of Frivols,”– finally stitching one a month. There’s no lack of creativity there– this is her original pattern in the latest Keepsake Quilting catalog.
have a lot of quilts around the house which may surprise you. So I thought I could use them for a little decoration here and there, and especially a little mental down time.
was on! The first one I found at a quilt show, Frivol #5, for 50% off. From
then on, I spent the next few weeks Googling , Ebaying and Etsying until I had
them all. I did get most for 50% off but #1 and #12 were RARE and I ended up
overpaying. Plus, by the time I paid shipping, well you know. It was all about
the thrill of the hunt at that point. Mine, all mine!
order, and certainly won’t be making one a month, so I started with #4 Windermere—it
looked so crisp, WHITE, and spa like.
master bathroom.
quilt instructions, a cute saying, and a couple of flosses. I had to make 156
flying geese.
block making. To prevent boredom, I sorted the fabrics into pink, blue, green,
yellow and warm gray, then only stitched enough geese for each row—first two,
then three and four, and finally eight and nine geese, drawing evenly from the
colors to make sure I was left with a good mix. It was a great strategy–all four
interior blocks were the same, and that actually was much easier than trying to randomly
layout 156 geese at the end as the pattern suggested.
the enjoyment of sewing is musing on names for my quilts while sewing them together. This one had
me stumped—until Eureka!—or maybe more like “DUH!”… the lake I live on is called “Triangle Pond”… I kid you not.
there than geese, so it’s a bit of a creative license.
But I love it. For quilting, I am just going to do some straight lines in a rippled pattern, like water droplets on my little lake.
I’m thinking #8 would make 6 placemats and a nice table runner. I wish I could sew as fast as I can Photoshop!


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