Buttonholes and zippers. Two of the things I can "do" but hardly the stuff of the Great British Sewing Bee unless I'm the one going home in week 1. I watched a few videos, consulted the Bernina website and grabbed my test fabric. Ultimate goal - 6 perfectly corded buttonholes on my new (ish) long shirt. The shirt has been finished for a year of two, just needed buttons and button holes. Found the silk cord in one of the packing boxes and a few other things I didn't know I needed in the sewing room office. The mission was to practise until it became my practice. Feeling very confident and comfortable with it all now. Another "new to me moment". Full of wild enthusiasm and only slightly less confidence, another few videos and two darts now in the back of the shirt to enhance the fit (it's a Big Shirt pattern, it's meant to look big).
Three or four hundred upper thread and bobbin changes over the past four weeks. There's a textural effect I'm trying to create with the quilting - that compliments the imperfect shapes of the pieced fabrics. Something akin to wabi, sabi and shibui. The infinite ways that dense, linear quilting can be used to create story are coming to life, one piece at a time. Sometimes barely visible, sometimes contrasting. There is an uneven fullness in the seams that help create miniscule bumps at the end of each line. There are also the seamless directional changes absorbed into the looser weave of some fabrics. Every change and every bobbin. Testing tensions, adjusting for the different threads as each shape submits to the process. It is a peace-filled activity, permanently set up so I can work for several minutes at a time. Never wasting moments. I get immersed in the meditative quality of the quilting and thinking only about the stitch. Some of the combinations I use: using the same ...
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