Tuesday, July 24, 2012


Weeded the garden on Sunday. The weeds were thicker than the grass outside the gate! Peppers are coming in well. Tomatoes are slow this year and something is attacking them. I guess I need to spray. L
Designed another couple of quilts in Visio. I love being able to use it for designing.  Fun fun fun! Okay, geeky fun! Attached are pictures.






The Saint is a Velcro Saint. He sticks to me! The heat doesn’t bother him too much but he is constantly shedding! I brush and brush… I swear he shouldn’t have any fur left by the looks of the piles I brush out!

Monday, July 16, 2012

Here is my latest design. My youngest said he wanted an orange and blue quilt. His favorite colors. Can you tell we are from Denver? (Denver Bronco's colors!)  I used VISIO instead of a quilt pattern or quilting software. I think it turned out alright as a drawing, lets hope it looks good as a quilt! The number 23 has special meaning to him. His birthday, and it was his number for all sports, all the way through college. So, what do you think?  Orange on blue or blue on orange? Brighter blue?


Monday, July 9, 2012

Coloring Portfolios

Hi!  I finished the coloring portfolios!  Yippee!  Last Friday night I was using my Singer Geni to finish up on the portfolios.  Ugh!  The poor machine needs a good cleaning and tune up.  After hours spent rethreading after thread breaking every couple of inches.  I tried different thread, a new needle, and adjusting the tension over and over again, I just gave up and brought out the Brother.  So now, I have three sewing machines that need to go to the shop.  While I am at it, I think the sergers need help too.  Back to the portfolios...  I think they turned out ok, considering the horrendous mess the sewing machines caused.  Still stuck with the fisher price primary colors.  Next one will be done a little different. I found some better stabilizer.  Moreover, I hope the machines cooperate!  I have attached photos of the outsides and insides of both portfolios.



Thursday, July 5, 2012

Awesome Podcasts I listen to - try them out!

Thought maybe I would share some of the podcasters that I listen to. Some are wonderful, others are struggling. I subscribe to podcasts on my ZUNE, so I don't get quite the variety of iTunes. I don't know, I just can not get going with ipods. When I bought my Zune, it just stomped on anything anyone else had to offer... 120GB of storage was the biggest thing that sold me on my Zune. I have movies (30 or so), thousands of songs, and 35 audio podcasts I listen to and 4 vodcasts (video). I can also put thousands of picture on the Zune.

These are the Sewing, Crafty, Quilty podcasts I listen to:

Crafty Pod 2.0 by Sister Diane - Wonderfully done.
GreenStitch by Anne Kenlon - green green green crafting, sewing, etc.
iMake  - coming from the island of Guernsey.
Katie' Quilting Corner - young newby quilter adventures
Quilted Cupcake - Not only quilting, but all sorts of crafting too
Quilting For The Rest of  Us by Sandy Hasenauer - well done, informative and fun.
Sew Forth Now by Lori V. - very good podcast, but she is a very busy mom so her shows don't come out often enough for me!

There was a podcast called Sew Stich Create by BryLynn. She started SeamedUp and I think is podcasting with some of the other founders - Please make your podcasts available outside of iTunes! Thanks!

Have you checked out podio books - way cool serialized books.

Have feedback? Feel free to contact me - SaintPoweredLife@gmail.com
Been a busy week, even with the Fourth of July off! I created and finished the fisher price primary color themed lined toy tote. Look for pattern at the end of this post. I cut and laid out the coloring / drawing portfolios for granddaughter and daughter. The portfolios are using the same fisher price primary color theme. The portfolios on the left hand side will have elastic for holding individual crayons, pencils, markers, or pens. I will sew strips of elastic at 1-inch intervals. The right side will have a piece of elastic to hold drawing paper or pads. I also have some clear plastic sheet that I might use on the back or in place of the paper holder. I will make it into a clear pocket for holding sharpeners, rulers, erasers, and what not. I will finish them off with a Velcro or snap closure. I am going to put a couple of scruffy yoyo flowers on the front – in primary colors. Should look cute! The fabric for both projects is a heavy canvas / duck cloth that I‘ve had in my stash for a long time. Actually, everything came from my stash - Elastic, clear plastic sheet, interfacing, thread… Wow!

Fisher Price Themed Toy Tote
July 2,2012 By Saint Powered Life Contact me at SaintPoweredLife@gmail.com

I made this tote over the weekend. I used red for the body of the tote, blue for the handles and green for the binding. I planned to embroider my granddaughter’s name on yellow, but my machine was on strike.
2 Yards heavy canvas or duck cloth, smaller amounts for handles and if you want pockets, (contrasting colors)
2 yards of appropriate material for liner
Fusible interface or stabilizer (heavy weight – 2 yards)
Coordinating thread
1 inch quilt binding – coordinating or contrasting color - 1 pack (3 yards)

Directions: Determine the dimensions of the tote. Mine was about 40”by 15”. The bottom was square so all sides were the same measurements. You can make the tote larger, smaller, and/or rectangular. My bottom piece was 15 by 15, yours will be whatever width you choose, or the two widths if you are rectangular. The handles I made were of contrasting color and measured about 4” by 10”. Mark the fabric with the dimensions, making sure to add seam allowances. Mark contrasting fabric for handles. Cut. Mark fusible stabilizer with the same measurements a as fabric. Cut Mark lining fabric the same way. Do not use stabilizer on the lining. Cut. Iron the stabilizer to the main fabric pieces. Sew lining side’s together right sides facing each other. Press seams open. Sew lining sides to  bottom lining piece. Press seams open. Sew main fabric right sides together. Press seams open. Sew sides to bottom. Press seams open. Hem handle ends at about an inch. Trim close to the stitching. Sew handles, right sides together. Iron seams open and trim to stitching to remove bulk. Turn handles right side out. Iron flat. I added extra stitching down each side to ensure strength after I turned the handles. . At this point, you have the basic tote, two handles, and the liner. You can add pockets wherever you choose. Add them before working the lining in. Also. Attach the handles before the lining. so they do not show. I attached the handles to the exterior of the tote so one side had one handle attached and the opposite side had a handle. Make sure that you sew the handles about 1.5 inches from the top of the tote – reserve this space for the binding. Now you have the handles and possibly pockets attached. Feel free to add other embellishments or embroidery. Make sure lining is wrong side out. Drop lining into tote. It should fit nicely inside. Pin lining and binding to the tote making a sandwich. (One side of binding, tote, lining,  binding). Sew about a quarter inch from the outer edge of the binding making sure that you catch all of the layers. After you have attached the binding – you are done! Use it for toys, laundry, or any other idea you might have.

Here are pictures of my toy tote and lining. Please let me know how your's turns out and what type of modifications you made.