Finish that Quilt… or Not

It seems logical that one should finish one project before starting another, but the vast number of UFOs (Un-Finished Objects) that I have lying around the house would argue to the contrary. I am certain I am not alone in this predicament. It just makes sense that once you’ve spent all the money for the fabric then put in untold numbers of hours planning, cutting, piecing and sewing, you should just power through and finish the darned thing, right? Could there ever be a good reason to start a new project when there is an unfinished one (or two…) just begging for your attention? In my opinion, yes.

Aside from some obvious situations such as running out of a necessary fabric color or type and waiting to find a suitable replacement, there is a good reason to set a project aside in favor of another. You need to have a project which matches your energy and creativity levels at the time. Have a lot going on with the kids’ fall sports or holiday planning? Now would not be the time for the Double Wedding Ring quilt you have planned for your nephew and his future bride. Maybe a big block project with a “don’t-want-to-cut-it” large print might be the ticket for you right now. Is work so slow these days that you are bored out of your skull? I think now might be the time to tackle the tessellating queen size pattern that you’ve been doodling in the margins of your notebook for weeks. Whatever is going on in your life, it’s important to have multiple projects going on at any given time so that you can find the right fit for your current circumstance.

The next time you find yourself starting a new project when there is still something else under your needle, give yourself some grace. You will finish most of them eventually!


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By the Yard® 2025 Calendar for Quilters

In Defense of Keeping that Fabric Forever


When I was in high school, everything was purple. And frequently paisley. Whether inspired by the Little Purple Rock Star, Prince, or just a sign of the times, you couldn’t get away from the stuff. I used it for everything, including a purple paisley velvet jacket that boasted an impressive 28 pattern pieces. It was fully lined, too! You couldn’t pay me to undertake such a complicated project today, but back then with no kids and no job it was just an easy weekend’s worth of sewing. I still do have that paisley jacket in the back of my closet. I know I’ll never fit into it again, even if I did want to wear it ironically. I’ll continue to keep it around, just in case it is ever 80’s theme day at my kid’s high school.
Although I no longer have most of the tragically hip getups I crafted in high school, I continue to hang onto the little fabric remnants from those projects. There isn’t enough fabric to really make anything with them, even if those fabrics were in fashion again. Speaking of which, have you seen those dolman sleeve knit mini dresses that are now back in style? I still have my original McCall’s pattern for those… ripped straight out of the Brooke Shields line. Unlike the old days, with the benefit of my adult sized paycheck, I can now afford a serger to theoretically sew those knit dresses up properly.
I hang onto fabric scraps from those long-ago projects as a kind of tactile scrap book, reminding me of all my Prince and Bowie-inspired threads and how cool I felt wearing them. Just for a minute, I’m a kid again with the coolest jacket in the whole school.


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By the Yard® 2025 Calendar for Quilters

Don’t Fear the (Replacement) Zipper


The one act of sewing that universally strikes fear into the heart of even the most sturdy sewing enthusiast is the act of putting in a zipper. So much consternation caused by two little innocent strips of teeth, but why? I’m going to say the root of this evil is not installing a new zipper, but rather the latent fear replacing a broken zipper. After all, we can sew, right? So how hard could it be to just take out that old broken zipper and pop in a new one? Pretty hard, cupcake. Pretty hard. Here are a few tips to increase your odds of success.

  • Plan… with your phone! I know you want to hurry up and get started, but before you do, let’s make a preemptive strike towards success. Everyone has a cell phone now and thus easy access to something better than memory – photography! Before going at it with the seam ripper, take some pictures of what it looked like before you ripped it apart (both sides!). You are really going to appreciate some reference pics in about 15 minutes.
  • Rip it good – Once you go at those jeans with the seam ripper and quickly find out how hard that is, the initial inclination is to just take out enough stitches to get that sucker out of there. Herein lies the problem. If you just barely had enough room to get the old one out, then getting in the new one will be harder than parking an F150 in a Boston parking garage. You are going to have to rip those stitches back, waaaaay back. You are going to want to rip out enough seams to be able to lay the whole thing flat.
  • Baste, not waste – Next, I’m going to recommend something that is pretty much anathema to modern sewists: basting. I know we live in an age of the Clover® Wonder Clip – possibly the greatest quilting accessory ever – so why ever baste again? Zippers, my friend. Zippers. Basting will enable you to get into all those little, tiny seams and corners. Normally, one rips out the basting stitches after the job is done, but in the case of zippers, I just use the same color thread as is the zipper and leave those little guys in there because, after all, we’ve done enough ripping for today.
  • The right tool for the job – Finally, my last tip for guaranteed zipper success is please use a zipper foot. If you don’t have one, you can get an after market knock off zipper foot at your local big box sewing and crafts store for a few dollars. It is worth the drive to the store, even if you do end up buying more fabric that you don’t need while there. The zipper foot enables you to get really close to the teeth. Trying to use a regular foot will result in you having to sew with the teeth under the foot and that’s going to skate all over the place and leave the stitches really loopy.

I hope these recommendations will help make your next zipper repair project a success. Before you know it, you’ll be doing what I do: taking zippers out of old jeans and saving them, just for the sake of having a bunch of cool little zippers!


Check out the NEW By the Yard® 2025 Calendar for Quilters!

By the Yard® 2025 Calendar for Quilters

Fall Into Quilting

It might already be too late

Fall is the perfect time for quilting. Summer vacations are over; the kids are back to school; work hasn’t
hit the inevitable end of the year crunch yet, and the quilt shops have all their holiday colors out in full
bloom. Time to start making holiday gifts… or is it?
Every year right about this time, I am stricken with the ambition to make handmade gifts for everyone I
know. Then, with startling regularity, the last week in December I’m scrambling for gifts because I pretty
much didn’t finish anything. What is a habitual crafter to do? Consider this:

  • Start Early – For what is worth, it’s October. Its already too late. Juts go back to knitting your
    Rhinebeck sweater. You might (barely) still have a shot at that.
  • Prune the List – I know you are awesome and crafty, and it would be cool to give some
    handmade love to everyone, but you need to be realistic. Pick one or two top loved ones to craft
    for this year.
  • Cookies are Still Handmade – Everyone else can get a tin of homemade cookies. How else could
    you bang out 10 handmade gifts in an afternoon? You know that cute tiny Santa fabric you
    didn’t have time to make into rug mugs for your entire quilt guild? Just cut a square with your
    pinking shears, affix with a ribbon to the top of a mason jar full of cookies and it’s pretty good
    enough.
  • Get a Jump on Next Year – Everything you planned to do but it’s already way too late (refer
    back to #1), just make it anyway. You will have a head start on next year. I have said this for
    three years running and I still haven’t finished a January birthday gift for my Bestie. It will get
    done eventually and when it does, its going to be awesome!

Remember, there are always local donut shop gift cards.


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By the Yard® 2025 Calendar for Quilters

Making Room for the New Quilt

I got a ticket for quilitng

Is it ever acceptable to start a new quilt when you still haven’t finished the one you’ve been wokring on? I always feel very guilty buying fabric for a new project when I know there is another project lying in pieces all over my sewing table. However, there are some cases when it’s OK to set an in-progress project aside to start something new. Consider these:

  • A gift-giving occasion has arisen – You never know, a baby shower could pop up at any moment. It is always defensible to set aside the old for the time being to start something new. After all, you are on a 9-month time limit and baby quilts are so cute and fun!
  • I’m pulling out my hair – Your current project is just too difficult or demanding right now given everything else that’s on your plate (work, kids, the garden needs weeding again…). Now would be a good time to undertake something simpler and more relaxing.
  • This is never getting finished – We all have that one project. The one we started with the best intentions. It’s been years now and you no longer work on it. Yet it sits there in the corner mocking you. It’s time to let that one go. Rip it part and make it into something new or donate it and all its parts to someone else who can make good use of it. Try again with something else!

If you are feeling unmotivated or some other new sewing circumstances have arisen, it’s not a crime to set your current project aside. Woking on something new might even generate the spark you need to get the old project finished. Imagine how good you’ll feel with two finished projects!


Check out the NEW By the Yard® 2025 Calendar for Quilters!

By the Yard® 2025 Calendar for Quilters

I’m Positive My Bobbin is Half Full

Is your bobbin half empty or half full?

Is your bobbin half empty or half full? It all depends on how you look at it. As a full-time working mom with a hideous day job, a business on the side and a busy kiddo, I feel like I never have time for my sewing projects. The stacks of uncut fabric and partially completely projects strewn all over the place are pretty strong indicators of my lack of available time for hobbies. I can easily get to feeling down about this state of affairs. But it doesn’t have to be this way.

Lately I’ve been trying to look at my opportunities for spending time on sewing projects from a viewpoint of abundance rather than scarcity. Instead of thinking “I never have time for sewing!”, I’ve been trying to reframe that thinking to “I had a chance to do 30 minutes of sewing today!”, or “I’m never getting this gift done in time for Christmas!” to “I’ll have it done in time for their birthday”, or better yet “I’ll give it to them when it’s done, whether it’s a holiday or birthday or not!”.

Sewing and crafting are supposed to be fun hobbies, not meant to feel as chores or yet another undone thing on the to-do list. So, the next time you feel like “I never get anything done!”, just try to spend 20 minutes on a project. You will be amazed at how much better you will feel. Those 20 minutes will add up and you’ll be done in no time, ready to fill up that bobbin and start on the next sewing project!