Showing posts with label green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green. Show all posts

21 August 2025

Crocheting of the Green

My green collection of solar-dyed, hand-dyed crochet thread has been getting a workout this week. We've had a few medical appointments with long waiting room crochet opportunities.

I have far fewer greens than blues. I have been battling the temptation to dye more shades and gradients all week long. I'm not trying to use up everything I've got before I dye again, and I really miss dyeing. But solar dyeing is a time hog I'm not sure I should invest in right now. Most satisfying and rewarding, but just too demanding right now.

I have five old crochet bags I used to tote on public transportation when I was working. I haven't touched them since 2019 or perhaps even earlier. I went on a scavenger hunt to see if there was any more hand-dyed green in any of those old bags. I should have snapped a post-hunt photo because the tiny little balls I found are gone now.

Three of the tiny little balls barely made one disc each. I found six more tiny balls of blues, too, so after I finish the greens, I'll finish the blues again.

I still haven't decided what to do with the hearts or scraps yet, but I'm hoping some magnificent inspiration will trigger one sleepless night, and I'll come up with the coolest jewelry ever.

20 February 2025

Welcome to the Jungle

I wrote the blog post below long, long ago, before I finished all of the projects mentioned. Then I forgot I had written this post and wrote new ones as I finished projects. I almost deleted this when I stumbled upon it. I didn't have anything better to publish today, so I might as well take a fun and memorable step back in time!

Before I began piecing together the lime green batik remnants of my treasured bag, skirt and dress, my goal was to use up a good portion of my leftover stash. I've always had great difficulty throwing away pieces of fabric that might be big enough to make into something. Some day.

My remnants stash has overgrown its boundaries many times over. It was time to make a dent in it.


2011 green batik stash


2025 green batik stash and leftovers

As I began working on Welcome to the Jungle, I began running out of some of my favorite bright lime green batiks. I caved and bought two more yards because every quarter block has at least four different bright lime green batiks. As I began working on the French braid border (my first pieced border ever), I began running out of the darker and lighter green batiks.

Oh, was I tempted to buy more!

The day I began cutting the strips for the main squares, Lizard asked if I was making another dress. Oh, the inspiration that swirled through my entire core! I could make a dress of the strips! It would be beautiful!

Now I was running out of everything, and I wouldn't have enough left over to make yet one more dress.

I had to give myself a time out to prevent me from shopping for more lime green batik.

The purpose of Welcome to the Jungle was to use up remnants! To make them go away. To completely run out. To not have enough left over to make anything else.

After a bit of attitude adjustment, I realized I could do the strip dress from purple batiks. Or turquoise batiks. While making this quilt, I kept thinking how much fun it would be to do another one, different pattern, with purples. Or blues.

And yet, each week when I receive an email ad announcing new fabrics in stock, I find myself drawn to luscious new lime green batiks. Again, and again, and again. And again...

My next quilting project goal was to finish Leaf Me Alone, also inspired by dress remnants. My sister-in-law's admiration for the leaf quilt pushed me to finish it before Welcome to the Jungle.

Now, Welcome to the Jungle takes front and center. It must be finished in time for the Denver National Quilt Festival. (2025 Edit: Which ended about a decade ago...) Then comes fun. Then comes sewing and quilting without deadlines.

The next project I wanted to do after Welcome to the Jungle and Leaf me alone was a scrap happy quilt. To use up even more remnants. To make them go away. To completely run out. To not have enough left over to make anything else.

At which point, I can begin using stash fabric that had never been cut.

I have so much stash, I can make a new dress without buying a thing except maybe a zipper or button. By making a new dress, I might ignite new dress-remnant quilt inspirations. I might replenish my remnant stash. Without buying a thing.

Sigh. How much of this will actually get accomplished while bright lime green fabrics continue to call out to me so loudly?!?

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