Saturday, February 9, 2013

Just A Dash

Happy Saturday!
Aren't the weekends loverly? I love to sleep in a little, then mosey out to the family room and have a couple cups of coffee with Sean. I catch up blogs, the weekend news, and critter cuddles. It's not unusual to have both of us, both dogs and both cats all snuggled up on the couch at once, especially on cold winter mornings like this. I love Saturdays.

This week, I decided it was time to get my rear in gear and make something that I meant to make last Valentine's Day, a small, quilted table runner to liven up the pub table in the family room. I already had the fabric, I just needed to get moving before I missed V-Day again this year. 


I used this little, laminated pattern that I picked up at a local quilt shop some time back. Easy peasy!
Basically, sew three long strips together, slice them into 5" pieces, flip every other one, sew together and viola!


I backed the piece with this pretty, pink striped Moda, Love those stripes.

I only quilted the long seams where each slice was sewn together, I used one of the fancy stitches on my machine, it kind of looks like a feather stitch.

I guess that might be why this runner feels puffy to me, it doesn't have much quilting. I actually wish it lay a little flatter, anyone have any tips on that? Maybe a trip through the washer & dryer and a pressing? I'm all ears.
See? It's kind of thick-ish...


Just a dash & a kiss.

All in all, I'm pretty pleased with this sweet & simple project, I don't think this runner took more than a couple of hours start to finish, but it makes a nice addition to the table. In fact, it was so easy that I think I might make another one soon, maybe for St. Pats.

SO! What'cha doing this weekend, chums? 
Got any exciting plans? Do tell!
oxo,
Lisa

2 comments:

TheMistressT said...

So cute and cheery! I can't imagine accomplishing such in just a couple of hours. AMAZING!

beadgirl said...

Wat kind of batting did you use? Polyester tends to be puffier than cotton, and battings can also be low loft or high loft. I prefer low-loft cotton, to get that flat, antique-y look.

It's pretty, though!