Saturday, February 9, 2019

Challenge 10.3 Bigger Than A Breadbox



The challenge this week for Project Quilting is "Bigger Than A Breadbox"...what?? LOL
I had a moment of panic when I thought this meant we would have to create a full sized quilt. There was no way I could accomplish that in one weeks time. Then they gave us a minimum size we could use & said it had to be bigger than that. So it had to be larger than 8 x 16 which is apparently the average size of a breadbox. My finished project ended up being 9 x 24 x 3.

When we started Project Quilting this season, my original plan was to create a little book using all the quilts I make for the 6 challenges. When they gave us the size rules, I decided I would use this challenge to create the cover for my "quilt book". On Sunday I started doing research about the saying "Bigger Than a Breadbox", I thought maybe this would give me some creative ideas, because we never had a breadbox, we had a bread drawer! LOL

I found a book titled "Bigger Than a Breadbox" about a young girl who has a magic breadbox that apparently grants wishes that are no bigger than a breadbox. I didn't have time to read a book this week for inspiration, but I did like the idea of something magical.

I also found a band called "Bigger Than A Breadbox" and went online to listen to some of their songs...they were "interesting" to say the least. One song that cracked me up was called Dark, it had lyrics that were pretty "dark" with verses about dark things....black is the color of my true loves soul...dark like my coffee...the reason I wear black is to soak up the light...the song was chanted to the tune of a creepy, old organ in a scary movie. I have a DARK sense of humor so I found it funny, you can listen to it and other gems by "Bigger Than a Breadbox" on YouTube. I liked the idea of something dark, mysterious & a little creepy.

As you know my brain tends to wander, so with a couple of thoughts in my head, I decided that the forest surrounding my quilt shop fit the idea of something a little magical, dark, mysterious & creepy. I had a plan, I would create a book cover that represented the woods next door.


The house where I quilt is Ron's parents old home, it was built the year he was born & sits on the site where another family homesteaded in the early 1900's. There is a little forest of old trees all around the house & down through the draw that separates their house from ours. Some of the big old cottonwood trees & willow trees were probably here before any people lived here, but most of the trees & bushes were planted by the first homesteaders & later the Linn family. Over the years it has become one big tangled bramble of old trees, new trees, dead trees, bushes, tall grass & owls.




There is a family of big horned owls who watch our every move. They have lived in the forest for as long as I have lived here. We love to listen to them in the evening & every once in awhile we will catch them sitting out in the open, or see them silently swoop from tree to tree. Someday I hope to capture them on camera, but they are pretty elusive! They & the other forest birds & creatures give you the sense that something is always watching you in the woods.


When our kids were little they spent hours playing in the woods & on the big sprawling willow trees we call the monkey trees. With the help of their cousins & friends from town they built elaborate little cabins, tree forts & rope swings in the deep dark woods. If I wanted kids out of my hair I knew I could tell them to go play in the trees & they would gladly head out the door. I knew they would end up at Grandma's house at some point where she had a magic cookie jar & real TV. I never worried about them being in any sort of danger, it was only 1/4 mile between grandmas house & ours, what kind of danger could lurk in an area the size of Winnie the Pooh's 100 acre wood? It wasn't until they were all grown up & had kids of their own that I suddenly realized how dangerous those woods could be.


The way is clear,
The light is good,
I have no fear,
Nor no one should
The woods are just trees,
The trees are just wood.
Not need to be afraid there-

There's something in the glade there.....
 (Into the woods lyrics-Stephen Sondheim)

It's funny how as a parent you just say...GO...but with grand kids you change your tune & say NO...it's too dangerous! Rattlesnakes, Spiders & Ticks Oh My!



These beautiful tangled old woods have a way of drawing you in,  I love listening to the wind in the trees while I am working in my garden or quilting in the summer with the windows open. It's fun to walk back through the brambles trying to catch a glimpse of the owls who live in the tall branches. The big old cedar trees are beautiful during the winter months when they are covered with snow. Walking in the woods in the winter reminds me of the verse from the poem 'Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening' by Robert Frost...

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.


The woods are certainly "Bigger Than a Breadbox" :)  Somehow I wanted to capture their beauty, mystery & magic in my little quilt this week.

 On Monday I  dug through my stash and found the perfect fabric, a bundle of Marcia Derse fabrics I  bought last summer. *you can check out her fabric online...AMAZING designs! It has that magical element I wanted to convey in my design.

I have been cleaning my sewing room since January & last week I found some paper piece patterns for pine trees which I had printed a couple of years ago. I decided I would give them a try even though I don't like paper piecing.

A couple of friends & I got together during the polar vortex & did some foundation string quilting, I still had that in my head & thought it would be fun to incorporate some string quilting, I thought this would be a good way to represent the lines of the trees.


Instead of doing paper piecing, since I also wanted to incorporate the string quilting I decided to do foundation piecing. I traced the tree pattern onto a piece of fabric that would fit the guidelines & work as a cover for my quilt book. Then I decided I would make a darker side to my forest & a lighter side, separating the two with  bright yellow strips left over from the yellow challenge we did last season.

Doing foundation piecing was pretty confusing, but I really like the sharp look of the little trees so I am happy I attempted it. I know I will be using this tree pattern again down the road!


On Tuesday after I had the main idea all sewn down, I  just needed to quilt & bind it. I was pretty excited I had the whole thing almost done & it wasn't even Wednesday yet!
I had a box of crafty junk from my cleaning spree I took in on Tuesday afternoon for the art teacher at school, when we were talking about the new challenge for the week. she asked if I was making a box since it was a breadbox challenge....hmmmm....I really hadn't thought of that.

When I got home I looked through my craft supplies, did some measuring, and decided I still had the rest of the week & if I could make it work I would create a little box to attach to my quilt.







I didn't take the seam allowances into consideration so it isn't quite as large as I a planned to make it, but it works & I really like the way it turned out. I used a heavy stiff felt to make the box and then lined it with tag board. I then found what I thought was a magical looking piece of batik and quilted it to the felt, and also created a lining for the rest of the box cover. I didn't think the cover was stiff enough so I found a fusible interfacing and added that to the cover before I sewed the lining on. I then glued and sewed my box to the cover, I love this Fabric-Tac glue, it smells awful, but you can mend jeans with it if you are in a hurry & it doesn't wash out! I did a lot of hand sewing on this project, mainly because I needed to tack the box down to the lining fabric & hand stitching seemed to be the best way to do that, since I was stitching that down I figures I might as well hand sew the binding on too.

To finish the outside of my box I made a button out of a piece of red twig dogwood, and a little latch out of braided raffia. I really wanted a piece of wood from the actual forest next door, but the snow is now over the tops of my boots deep & trudging through it to find the perfect twig is not on my bucket list for the week!


On the inside of the box cover I painted a little owl & added the lyrics to the song "Winter Woods" by  Minnesota folk artist Peter Mayer. (if you ever get a chance to go hear him perform...do it!) 






I also added some little eyes to the circles on the darker fabric...gotta have that creepy element :) 

Even though the woods are a bit creepy, mysterious & dark...they are magical & oh so beautiful. This song says how I feel about them & is the feeling I wanted to create when I made my little box.

I fly sometimes
Through the frozen trees
In the winter woods
In their robes of white
Chanting silently
In the winter woods

Like a forest abbey choir
Whispering hymns of snow and ice
In Excelsis to the cold
And Hosanna to the sky
Hosanna

And holy trees
They know when I'm
In the winter woods
And they bid me to sing
And I comply
In the winter woods

But I stumble in my turn
Because I cannot find the words
In that church of birth and pine
The only word that comes to mind
Is "beautiful"

So quietly
I sing beautiful in the winter woods
And the trees agree
They all agree
In the winter woods
We all agree
In the winter woods

Amen
Amen





14 comments:

  1. Beautiful, creative and amazing, amazing!!!!!!💕

    ReplyDelete
  2. The piece you created is absolutely beautiful and I loved reading the accompanying post! You are so talented! Thank you so much for sharing...it all made my heart sing!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you! I am always happy to know others enjoy something I’ve had so much fun creating!

      Delete
  3. INCREDIBLE!!!!!!!! The process, the story, the product.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I just came over from the Bigger Than a Breadbox Challenge because I was intrigued by your contribution. Your "book" is amazing and I love it! Now I need to figure out how to follow your blog!!

    ReplyDelete
  5. Three dimensional and absolutely stunning details!! Wow! Wow! Wowza!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Wonderful! Well done! I absolutely love it! Just the kind of thing I’d love to make too, with homemade toggles and things!
    Barbara x

    ReplyDelete
  7. Thank you! After making this little box I’m thinking it would be fun to make some more fabric boxes to give as gifts, it was a lot of fun to make!

    ReplyDelete
  8. This is incredible! I love that you went 3-d on it!!!!

    ReplyDelete