Showing posts with label Door hanging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Door hanging. Show all posts

Monday, December 20, 2021

Surviving the Holidays

I hope that you're not too stressed with the holiday preparations. I've been taking some of my advice this year...because not much is ready here ๐Ÿ˜ 

10 strategies for surviving the holidays 

Do you want to know the secret to surviving the holidays? These are my suggestions. I’m not an expert – except that I have managed to survive 58 of them so far…

BTW I can’t be held responsible if others in your family don’t approve of these great innovative ideas!

Survive and maybe even enjoy the holidays!

1. HIBERNATE! 

This is by far my favourite idea! Hide out in your quilting studio and don’t come out till the holidays are over – or better yet, when spring is in the air, your bulbs are peaking through the snow and the birds are back! 

If you just can’t swing this, negotiate at least one day (or a few hours over a few days) to yourself, in your quilting studio during the holidays. Hopefully that will be enough to energize you for a while.

Hibernate in your studio...for the holidays
or for the entire winter  ๐Ÿ˜Š

2. Gift giving - Online shopping

I know....we should be finished by now...but not a chance! 

We’ve all become experts on doing online shopping. It doesn’t mean that we don’t love our local quilt shop, it just means that we have expanded our horizons! The perfect time for online shopping is when all is quiet in the house! If you can’t get to the store across the city during the day, shop online and have it delivered…and if you spent lots and lots of money, they’ll deliver it for free!

Pamper yourself, or others, online
You can even buy locally online

















3.  Gift giving - Quilted gifts

I can hear you wondering how this is going to help you survive the holidays since this is possibly one of your major holiday stressors. My innovative idea – give the hardest to-shop-for person a quilty IOU. In a Christmas card or on a large gift tag, write down what their quilted gift will be (keep it general, small and realistic – they may actually expect you to deliver on this!) Then you can shop the Boxing Day sales from the comfort of your home, buy some yummy fabrics for you and to make the gift!

This year, I am following this idea, sort of....I managed to make 2 Christmas placemats but only one of them got quilted before my son and his girlfriend left for the holidays....so I wrapped the one that was done, and will quilt the other one and send my son a picture of it so that he can share it with her ๐Ÿ˜Š on Christmas day. I can have it FMQ before Christmas, but not before they left this morning!

The one left to quilt! ๐Ÿ˜€

The finished one ๐Ÿ˜Š

Here are some great gift ideas that could easily be delivered later....after Christmas!

Make a set of microwave bowl holders


Quilted baskets are a great gift and don't
need to be Christmas themed

4. Gift giving – Support local crafters, artists and companies

An alternative is to support local quilters. artists or specialty food companies, either online, in stores or through crafts shows. I know of several quilters who have Etsy shops with incredibly well made and reasonably priced quilted gifts and textile art. Don’t procrastinate though cause you’re going to run out of time!

Buy from local quilters on Etsy!
Cheesecakery Bakery - locally made cheesecakes
in a jar ๐Ÿ˜‹ Yum!







5.  Decorating

Take out all of your Christmas quilts, runners and wall hangings and call the house decorated! If you really must have a tree, get two or three of your grandchildren, nieces and nephews, or neighbour's kids to help decorate the tree. Have them decorate your tree, then feed them holiday sweets and send them home before the sugar rush sets in!

Take out the Christmas quilts!
Take out your home-made holiday decorations












If the tree really needs to go up, get bribe the grand kids to do it!


6a.  Cooking – get invited

Get yourself invited for Christmas dinner somewhere, pick up an amazing desert at your favourite local bakery and a bottle of wine. If you can’t pull this one off, consider cooking less. There are great places that make excellent food that you could buy for parts of your meal.

Buy some locally made food to give or for parts of your meal

6b. Cooking - Try out your festive meal ahead of time

Make sure that the meal that you’re planning for Christmas dinner only includes recipes that you’ve tried before. This year, we practiced our dinner twice on company – so the third time will be a breeze! 

If you’re having people over, when they ask you what they can bring, instead of saying “Oh, don’t worry about it”, seriously consider letting them contribute. If they are really good at making something, give them the pleasure of making and sharing it with everyone.

7.  Sleep in

Even if you can't sleep in every day, give yourself permission to sleep in at least on one or two days.  If you're the type of person who wakes up at 6 am every day, consider getting up to make a coffee and then going back to bed with a great book. Give yourself permission to rest :-)

This Christmas we are dog-sitting my brother's two small dogs. They wake up early but once they've done their business and gotten their treat, they don't mind taking a nap ๐Ÿ˜Š

Twix and Taffy going back to sleep!

8. Pamper yourself

What is the one thing that you haven't done in ages that you used to love to do, before kids, work and responsibilities? It could be singing your heart out, dancing, going out with friends for a cup of coffee or tea or maybe even giving yourself a manicure (or better still getting someone else to give you one!) Take the time this holiday season to do something that makes you happy or makes you laugh. You deserve it!

Take it easy and enjoy the holidays!

9. Reach out

The holiday season can be very difficult for people who are grieving or who are lonely. If you can, take some time out of your holiday to call or visit someone who could really use a friend.

Visit those who are lonely or grieving

10. Gratitude

No matter how busy or stressed this holiday season gets, remember that you are blessed with all kinds of wonderful people around you. You are also blessed with this amazing art that makes your soul sing! Be grateful for all that you have.

Gratitude makes everything better :-)


Do you have any other ideas for surviving the holidays? Please share them with us! ๐ŸŽ„๐ŸŽ…๐ŸŽ‰

I wish you all a Christmas / Holiday season filled with love, joy, fun and peace.

Thanks so much for sharing this quilting journey with me. It means a lot to me ๐Ÿ˜Š

Love, Andrรฉe

Related links

Linking parties
I'll be linking up to many fun linking parties. Let's see how other people are coping with the holidays๐Ÿ˜Š Mosaic Monday, Monday Making, Design Wall Monday, 15 Minutes to Stitching 2021, Patchwork & Quilts, Oh Scrap!, TGIFF with Anja, Peacock Party, Off The Wall Friday, Tips and Tutorials

Tuesday, September 04, 2018

Meet and Greet Event

Quilters' Meet and Greet Event

2018 Online Quilters' Meet & Greet
For quilter's participating in the 2018 Online Quilters' Meet & Greet and to my loyal readers ๐Ÿ˜ƒ, welcome.

I'm Andrรฉe G. Faubert. I've been quilting for about 10 years although I've been sewing and embroidering, on and off, since I was a teen.

One of my last woven projects
(still a UFO)



In the early 1990s I started weaving. That was my passion until I learned to quilt. After weaving and making fabric, it was very liberating to walk into a shop and buy fabric that was already made :-)

More than anything else, I'm a learner and a generalist. I love trying new techniques but I get bored rather quickly. I'm also not a perfectionist, especially for things that I feel are "fussy" and complicated. As a teacher and instructional designer, I appreciate that "practice makes better" and have proven that with my free motion quilting. It's one of the few things that I've stuck with long enough to get pretty good at. That's mostly because there is so much to learn that I haven't gotten bored with it yet :-)

When I started quilting, I made some very traditional quilts and runners.

My first blog post in March 2012

My first traditional quilt as well
as my first Quilt-Along
My first FMQ runner,
summer of 2013
There are some of my first quilts.

Once I started quilting, I was hooked. I joined a local quilting guild, learned more techniques and started blogging. Now I enjoy blogging almost as much as quilting.


My first improv quilts were door hangings. The piece below was my first one, although it got FMQ later. I could call them my own design instead of improv, but improv is how I created them since I didn't plan much.
My first improv door quilt - one for every season.




















Then in 2015, I started playing with landscape quilts. I even started my own Landscape Art Quilt Challenge and dove into making different kinds of landscape quilts. I had a blast and learned so much. If I have to choose a point when I started making art quilts, this would be it.

Lone Tree 2 - Tired or Over Achiever?

Clover at Dusk
I loved blog hops, quilt-alongs and any other event that gives me an excuse to create, quilt and post. My all-time favourite event is the semi-annual Art with Fabric Blog Hop hosted by Alida. I've participated in all of Alida's Art with Fabric events and have really enjoyed them. Some quilts were more successful than others - but I learned so much that it was always worth it.

My first Art with Fabric Blog Hop piece -
Light at the end of the tunnel.

Batik hexie for
Kingfisher Stitch-Along
These days, I'm all about making easily pieced quilts, practicing my FMQ on quilts with lots of negative space, making more art quilts and getting back to handwork with embroidery and hexies made using English Paper Piecing (EPP).

Batik lap quilts - my favourite quilts to practice FMQ


My first quilt pattern in Make Modern Magazine, Issue 21.
Hexie runner

My favourite quilt so far...


I made this art quilt for the Art with Fabric Blog Hop of Spring 2018. It's everything I love in a quilt - it's colourful, whimsical, and incorporates lots of FMQ.
Morning has broken
from Art with Fabric, Spring 2018

I'm very glad that you came by to visit. I'm really looking forward to reading the other participants' posts. Why don't you join me? You will find the link to the other participants on the Meet and Greet main page. There are also some great prizes to be won - check it out!

Related Links

Linking Parties
My post will be linked from the Quilters' Meet & Greet main page.  I will also be linking up to many linkup parties. Check them out to see what's happening around the quilting world. Main Crush MondayDesign Wall MondayMoving It Forward MondayTuesday Colour Linky Party, Linky Tuesday, Silly Mama Quilts WIP, Needle & Thread Thursday, Midweek Makers, Let's Bee Social, Finished or Not Friday, Friday Foto Fun, Can I Get A Whoop Whoop?,


Wednesday, August 22, 2018

100 days of fun with hexies

I am participating in the 100 hexies in 100 days event (#100hexies100days2018) which began August 6, 2018. It's hosted by Sew Foxy Mama (sewfoxymama) and takes place on Instagram. I'm new at Instragram. Events like this are a lot of fun because I can just go to the event tag and look at everyone's posts.

Each week has a different theme. The hexies can be made with fabric following the theme, or the images can be shot in surroundings that illustrate the theme. It's been so much fun seeing all of the yummy fabric and great ideas for pictures.

We can post one hexie each day, or the 7 hexies together on one of the days of that week. I post once a week because I'm sure that I would forget to post every day.

Week 1: All about you

It was great to read everyone's posts and see their images. I had a crazy week (aren't they all?!) and so I used images of hexies that I had already.

Since I'm crazy about hexies, this is my stash box of already finished 3/4" hexies. You know you're addicted to something (hexies, fabric, colour or all of the above) when this image makes your heart flutter ๐Ÿ˜Š
Stash box of hexies
I also included pictures of the Kingfisher Stitch-Along hexies that I had just finished, with flowers from by backyard jungle.
Aren't these tall rudbeckia amazing?

Pretty pinkish purple Echinacea - so lovely
Week 2 - Summer Fun

This was an easy week since my scrap bag had lots of fabric depicting summer fun. I even put in some golf clubs for my husband since he loves his golf.

I took the pictures on top of the first door hanging I made. I have one for each season, and this one is for summer.
Summer fun hexies with my Summer Door Hanging

Summer fun close-up
Week 3 - Mythical 

This week's theme was interpreted rather loosely since I don't have much mythical fabrics. I did have a few fabrics with fairies, angels, mermaids and the frog prince. It's a bit of a stretch, but Cupid is there, represented by one of his arrows.

I took out my plush Bing Bong (from the movie Inside Out) and one of my daughter's figurines. I confess that I didn't know the name of the plush, or the movie (which I did see and liked) - thank goodness for Google! Bing Bong sits by my sewing machine and is my Muse, reminding me to believe in myself and my imagination.

Week 3 - Mythical

Close up of a fairy, angel, mermaid, Cupid's arrow and the frog prince
Update - Upcoming Blog Hop
Welcome To My House

I can't believe that I forgot to mention this - I will be taking part in the Welcome To My House Blog Hop on September 13, 2018. I'll remind you when the fun starts.

I started my house quilt last week. I'm having too much fun again, playing with lots of colourful fabrics! ๐Ÿ˜Š 
See you on September 13, 2018 
What I learned
  • I've been having a good time looking at images of each week's theme. I don't spend a lot of time on Instagram but I do like looking at images that are pretty and quilting related :-)
  • Since making these hexies, I've started sewing them together in flower shapes. I'm sewing all of the flowers without hexies between them so they won't look like flowers once the're all sewn up. This is going to be a purely scrappy project for when I want or need something mindless to do. No thinking allowed!!!!
  • As much fun as it is following everyone's progress on Instagram, it would be nice to have a blog component to this event. I really like reading about quilter's journeys, their choices and their work.

Related Links

Linking Parties
I will be linking this post to all kinds of great linky parties. Follow along to see what the fuss is about :-) Linky Tuesday, Colour Inspiration Tuesday, Let's Bee Social, Midweek Makers, Silly Mama Quilts WIP, Needle & Thread ThursdayFinished or Not FridayCan I Get A Whoop Whoop?Friday Foto Fun, Wandering Camera, Oh Scrap!, Monday Making, Main Crush Monday, Design Wall Monday, Moving It Forward Monday, Slow Sunday Stitching,


Friday, December 23, 2016

7 Ways to Survive the Holidays

Hibernate!
Want to know the secret to surviving the holidays? These are my suggestions. BTW I can’t be held
responsible if others in your family don’t approve of these great innovative ideas!

1.  HIBERNATE! This is my favourite idea! Hide out in your quilting studio and don’t come out till the holidays are over – or better yet, when spring is in the air. If you just can’t swing this, try asking for at least one day to yourself, in your quilting studio during the holidays. Hopefully that will be enough to energize you for a while.
Winter Vacancy


2.  Quilted gifts: I can hear you wondering how this is going to help you survive the holidays since this is possibly one of your major holiday stressors. My innovative idea – give everyone on your list a quilty IOU. In a Christmas card or on a large gift tag, write down what their quilted gift will be (keep it general, small and realistic – they may actually expect you to deliver on this!) If you can’t do this for everyone, consider giving the hardest to-shop-for person a quilty IOU.

3.  Decorating: Take out all of your Christmas quilts, runners and wall hangings and call the house decorated!
Snow Globes make a great quilty IOU

Tree Skirt














4.  Cooking: Get yourself invited for Christmas dinner somewhere, pick up an amazing desert at your favourite local bakery and a bottle of wine. If you can’t pull this one off, consider cooking less. There are great places that make excellent food that you could buy for parts of your meal. If you’re having people over, when they ask you what they can bring, instead of saying “Oh, don’t worry about it”, seriously consider letting them contribute. If they are really good at making something, give them the pleasure of making and sharing it with everyone.


Take out your quilts and call the place decorated!

5.  Pamper yourself: while planning next year’s quilted IOUs, have a glass of wine, turn on (or off) the Christmas music and peruse the internet for fabrics you’ll need for those projects. There are lot of sales, so make sure to pick up a few quilting gifts for yourself!
Pamper yourself!






6.  Sleep in! Even if you can't sleep in every day, give yourself permission to sleep in at least on one or two days.  If you're the type of person who wakes up at 6 am every day, consider getting up to make a coffee and then going back to bed with a great book. Give yourself permission to relax :-)

Bandit sleeping in my fabric stash
Bandit sleeping in my fabric stash

7.  Gratitude
No matter how busy or stressed this holiday season gets, remember that you are blessed with all kinds of wonderful people around you. You are also blessed with this amazing art that makes your soul sing! Be grateful for all that you have.

I hope that your Christmas / Holiday season is filled with love, joy, fun and peace.

Thanks for sharing this quilting journey with me,
love to all,

Andrรฉe
Winter Door Hanging
Gingerbread Mug Rug
Christmas Ball Mug Rug
I've linked to these great linky parties. Check them out!
Linky Tuesday, Let's Bee Social, Midweek Makers, Needle and Thread Thursday, Off the Wall Friday, Finished or Not Friday, Can I get a Whoop Whoop? I have also linked up Bandit's picture to Pets on Quilts 2017. Check out everyone's adorable pictures!

Ribbon Wreath Wall Hanging