Hello lovely lovelies♡ I woke up this morning......and you were on my mind ♪♩ ♫♫♪♪......because.....'tis Sunday♡ And....we all know what that means??!! It means 'tis the day of flower overload....and a little slow hand stitching; from my happy little place♡
How has your week been?? Mine flew by....again. I am supposing yours flew by, too. Actually, some days I didn't know what day it was, such is the cadence of late, of the days, the weeks. Thank goodness for calendars and phones; and the like, to keep me on track. February has arrived. I am reminded that it is the last month of summer (not that I need reminding) and I had better make the most of my balmy, February days.
The garden has gone bonkers! 'Tis wild! 'Tis overrun! Both the flowers; and those dastardly, pesky weeds! But I will pretend I don't see the sky-reaching weeds and just focus on all the pretty flowers. We will get to those nasty garden interlopers eventually and dig them up, sending them to the great abyss. Oh my goodness; the flowers! The armloads of beautiful bouquets picked to fill pretty vases! Our home is overflowing with vases of hydrangeas, dahlias, roses, gladdies, sweet peas.....cosmos. There is a potpourri of delicious scents wafting throughout the rooms.....intoxicating! Also, from every window there is a vignette of flowers nodding and swaying in the breeze. 'Tis rather heavenly♡
In the garden the hydrangeas are still blooming beautifully, but I have noticed ever so slightly, the petals beginning to nudge me that the time when hydrangeas begin to change into those soft, pastel hues of autumn, is not far away. Not a lot.......but the seasonal cycle of the hydrangeas are a-changing...just a wee bit. I suppose over the coming weeks and months the softly-hued pastels of the hydrangeas will be become more apparent.
In the sewing room, the fernery....and wherever else I placed my gluteus maximus I have been hand quilting my Hydrangeas Cobblestones quilt. Gosh, it was a pain in the royal proverbial to sandwich all the layers together. Now I know why I very rarely piece the backing of a quilt. You have to try to place the front aligned with the backing design, seams etc etc. Such a pain!! I don't know how you ladies who always seem to have a pieced backing do this; perhaps you could enlighten me. Even now, I don't really know if it is perfectly lined up, but you know, at this point I don't really care. I know, shocking!! But, this queen size quilt took such a long time to prepare for quilting that I am soooooo over it. Me thinks I will look at the back of this quilt wearing my rose-coloured glasses. I will perhaps turn a blind eye to the misalignment; if indeed there is any. Yep....wilful blindness, will be my defence.
As for the design for the quilting; simple, simple and even more simple! I am quilting diagonally in both directions through the octagons with the quilting stitches kissing the corners of the squares as they skip by. Super easy, and I think will be super quick. Well...it should be...shouldn't it???? For the border, with the hydrangea flowers do-si-do-ing around on the butterfly fabric, I will quilt randomly around the outline of some of the butterflies with meandering quilting every which way giving a sense of the butterflies fluttering here, there and everywhere. But the border will be quilted lastly, so I need not worry about that just yet. For now I am just concentrating on the central panel of octagons and squares. I love skipping along the quilting lines, the needle burrowing down and up again....in, out, in, out; in a meditative fashion.
Cheerio from my happy, little, flowery place♡ Hopefully, I have beamed some flowery deliciousness into your little part of the world. For some of you the spring bulbs will soon be popping up their pretty heads, and for us downunder, the trees will soon begin to change into the gorgeous autumnal frocks. But not just yet. There is still day after day of summery loveliness for me to soak up; to immerse myself in. This coming week I hope to enjoy skipping along the quilting lines of my Hydrangea Cobblestones. Sending you all a little summery love♡ Have a fabulous week♡ Don't forget to see the miracle in the everyday♡
Until the next time............
Hand quilting is so awesome. Dear Kim, your work is breathtakingly beautiful. i love your colors It's wonderful to look at the beautiful flowers next to the cute little butterflies :-) It's winter here with me. Less snow. Much gray in sky and wind.
ReplyDeleteSo digging at the sewing machine and more than usual TV. And I love my little birds at the feeding ground...
and browse the blog a bit.
Thank you for all your amazing pictures, garden, sewing, flowers.
Hug dear Kim.
I do love slow hand quilting, Viola. I love the rhythm and meditative nature of it. It sounds as if you are enjoying lots of sewing, TV and a little blog reading while those grey skies and wind howl around your place. I would imagine you are enjoying the Winter Olympics on TV?? Thank you for the gift of your beautiful visit and lovely words. Keep warm! Kim Xx
DeleteBreathtaking pictures!Wonderful flowers and gorgeous quilt.Have a blessed week ahead.
ReplyDeleteThank you, lovely Maristella. Hoping your week is filled with pretty china and oodles of blessings♡ Kim Xx
DeleteJust found your blog--- what a lovely place to be . It is very windy with snow/sleet here in Co Durham, UK. I love your quilt the colours are so cheery.
ReplyDeleteA lovely welcome to my little summery world. It's always a joy when new visitors stop by. Thank you so much for blessing my day with your beautiful words. I must say, it sounds very chilly in your part of the world. Keep warm. Kim Xx
DeleteOoh, both your garden and your hydrangea quilt are gorgeous. Lovely post, thank you.
ReplyDeleteThank you from the bottom of my heart. What a beautiful gift, all those flowers from your garden! Sharing them with all of us, a pieced backing? I try to stay clear of them. It is just no fun quilting through all those seams by hand. The view from your sewing room is amazing, we are looking forward to warmer weather…
ReplyDeleteAll the lushness and green of you photos make me long for Spring/Summer as I look out at another frigid cold morning. I adore the photo of your greenhouse. Enjoy your quilting.
ReplyDeleteOh Kim... beautiful sunshine and flowers at your place delight my soul!
ReplyDeleteI am sorry I can't help with the pieced backing issues as I rarely do that... I usually use a wideback or a soft cozy sheet instead depending on what I have on hand at the time... sheets can be tricky to make sure they are cotton and hand stitchable.... widebacks can be pricey though... Check youtube for tricks for lining them up maybe... but you did it this time and the top at least is impeccable with you tiny stitches! I love this quilt in the making as I do all your quilts and crafty items :) Such a lovely visit to your home down under... stay safe my friend! Kathi
Lordy, you could have a florist shop as a sideline! Such beautiful flowers. We are still many months away from the first spring bulbs popping up. Your quilt is coming along ever so lovely. Will it be finished in time for you autumn weather?
ReplyDeleteOh Kim, so many, really MANY flowers :) Gorgeous gladioli! And roses! And, of course, hydrangeas :) Just a Paradise!
ReplyDeleteLove that cushion with parrots! And butterflies on the quilt.
By the way it's a rainy week-end here in PR, no music for me :)
Have a nice week, dear Kim!
Oh dear, I bet that rain is tropical and torrential in your little Paradise, Alina??!! My little Paradise is lovely and warm, and not a rain cloud in sight. Don't get too wet, lovely Alina. =) Kim Xx
DeleteI love all your cut flowers - is that a greenhouse that you grow some in or a potting shed where you keep all your pots and soil to grow flowers in pots too? I would love to see more of it. Your hydrangea in the deepest darkest purple is so lovely I wish I had one grow of that color - mine grows three colors on one plant because of the acid in the soil it is pink, lavender and blue - but I would love that dark purple
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your oh so lovely garden! A lovely ray of sunshine for me in the frozen north! I am certainly glad that you are not agonizing about the back of this quilt. Life is too short for such nonsense. The quilt will be stunning!
ReplyDeleteAwww...such lovely photos of your flowers, garden, greenhouse and quilting. How lovely to be surrounded by such beauty!
ReplyDeleteYour hand quilting looks lovely;)) and thanks for the Flower show--we are still under snow cover here and it is only 17 degrees (F) right now!!Brrr...
ReplyDeletekeeping warm under a quilt for sure...hugs Julierose
Hmmmm - I'm glad you find hand quilting meditative because for me it's just plain a pain in the neck (literally!). I want my vintage linens quilt (which, I might add isn't anywhere near being bed sized, thank goodness) to be done but I have to take it in small amounts. Need I add that I find hand quilting boring? I know - what's wrong with me!!! I can spend hours embroidering but hand stitching anywhere else is done under great duress.
ReplyDeleteI won't mention how cold it's been here in Ontario so coming here and visiting with you makes me dream that it might be warm. Soon....
Your hand quilting looks great! Such even stitches. As usual I loved your flower pictures, and I didn't see any weeds.
ReplyDeleteSuper love the photos of your project in the hoop being quilted!
ReplyDeleteYour flowers are just beautiful. enjoy them to the full while you can, I can almost smell them from here. I bet your layers are matched perfectly but I feel your pain, I wouldn't have a clue, but does it really matter because when it has all come together I am sure that it will be amazing, I don't think that anyone will come a knocking with a magnifying glass in their hands to seek out any imperfection, just enjoy the process dear Kim. Have a lovely week. xx
ReplyDeleteGorgeous, gorgeous flower overload! Thanks so much Kim! I got a ticket a couple of weeks ago. My sprinklers dripped down into the gutter on a Wednesday. I guess we are on Stage II drought restrictions and I can only water on Mondays. I am watering the back more often when they can't see because that is where my hydrangeas are. Thank you so much for the lovely eye candy. I love your hydrangea quilt! I thought it was Thursday the other day when it was only Wednesday! Hope you have a great week.
ReplyDeleteEs un gran privilegio vivir rodeada de tantísimas flores y de labores preciosas. Feliz semana y muchos BESICOS.
ReplyDeleteHappy Sunday - or you are probably into Monday already! How lovely to see that February is such a wonderful and beautiful and amazing month somewhere. Here, it is surely the drabest and least cheerful month of the year. Nevertheless, it is good advice to see the miracle in the everyday :D
ReplyDeleteAnother beautiful flower filled post Kim, so special to see your flowers, so many of them! Your hand quilting is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteYour garden is certainly a magical place. Enjoy the late summer blooms
ReplyDeleteThis morning I saw the first snow drill flowers, it's still cold outside but it sounds like the end of winter ;) Enjoy your beautiful garden, sweet weather, and lovely hand quilting!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing some eye candies from your lovely world, and linking up ;)
You always have the most amazing flowers at your place - I bet it smells amazingly, Kim! I love the pretty blues of your current quilt project, and I bet the quilting will add lovely texture to it. Prepping a queen size quilt for quilting is a big job - sounds like you did the best you could!
ReplyDeleteHa! I am currently contending with backing seams matching up with front seams and causing problems when quilting! We'll see what happens with the other three quilts.
ReplyDeleteAh - your flowers are lovely, as always. And your hand quilting is beautiful. Rob keeps asking when I'll try to hand quilt something (would definitely need to start with a small quilt!).
Have a wonderful week!
It was so exciting to see your flowers and the fernery, Kim. The is a fabulous pillow in the fernery as well. Your quilt is simply stunning. Enjoy quilting this beauty.
ReplyDeleteSometimes it seems nearly impossible for you to be having all that sunshine and those amazing - I say AMAZING - flowers. This is especially true when I look outside to see snow covering the ground and the temps are really toooo cold! A heat wave is supposed to hit this week and we'll have temperatures in the 20s and 30s - maybe even a day that will hit 40 - heat wave. :) We still have a month of cold and snow with February just starting and March ??? who knows? It can be kinda nice or cold and snowy. Only the good Lord knows... Please don't worry about that pieced back. I'll bet it looks fabulous and if not, I won't tell the quilt police. Have a splendid week enjoying the summer weather and those incredible blooms. I'm head-over-heels for your pictures, Kim.
ReplyDeleteOh my you do have so many gorgeous flowers all around you, I can just imagine the smells, such wonderful inspiration as you stitch away this lovely quilt. I am so looking forward to spring, a little excited since our temperatures will be above freezing the next few days.
ReplyDeleteSo many flowers, colors and shapes ! Nature is indeed beautiful !
ReplyDeleteAnd your quilts , sewed by machine or hand, gorgeous !
Thanks for sharing those beauties !
Time fly here too ;)
Have a lovely week !
Hug
Anna
Thank tou for beaming up your overflowing garden blooms to this Northern Hemisphere gal! Your blooms complement the sense of spring to come. With bits of greenery popping up in my my new-to-me landscape, I shall be surprised to know what's coming up (as it was all shriveled dead when we moved in and the hired help had their way cleaning out the beds). Your hydrangea quilt is so lovely to see progress. You still have plenty of weeks to enjoy the labor in the garden, and in slow stitching, as you wish. Have a happy new week, Kim.
ReplyDeleteOh Kim, your post was just the remedy for my snowy world! We had almost a foot of snow last week and COLD temperatures. Seeing all of your flowers certainly warmed me up inside. I thank you for sharing your beautiful blooms! I agree that simple quilting on your lovely hydrangea quilt is the best decision, letting the patterns be the star. Enjoy your warm week doing what you love and don’t worry about what day or time it is - just bask in your wonderful weather! Zenda
ReplyDeletesuch beauty surrounds you ! I love it.
ReplyDeleteI don't hand quilt, so I don't line seams up.. so no help am I!!! haha
I did , however, by a little flower box so that this spring I can try and plant a flower to emulate you!
Hi Kim
ReplyDeleteSuch pretty pictures. Love your cushion. Your hand quilting is beautiful. Have a great week.
Best wishes Kay c xx
Isn't that cushion sweet?? I saw it in a shop the other week and just had to take those Aussie birds home with me. 'Tis perfect for the fernery. You have a fabulous week, too, lovely Kay. Thank you so much for stopping by. Kim Xx
DeleteYour quilting is looking good. So lovely to see your beautiful summer flowers. We have the first signs of spring here with daffodils, snowdrops and crocus. xx
ReplyDeleteWhat a wealth of flowers, hydrangeas, dahlias and gladioli. We used to go to gladiolus exhibitions with an aunt, I still peeled the gladiolus bulbs, that was the case then and tulip bulbs too.
ReplyDeleteSmart to keep quilting simple that fits best.
Dear Kim, enjoy the last month of summer a lot, we see you sitting there in your paradise summer garden.
"KISS - Keep it simple stupid" is always my ethos to hand quilting, Loes. =) And, especially with this quilt so as to not detract from the fabulous and may I say, busy, hydrangea prints. How wonderful you used to go to gladiolus exhibitions with your aunt. Love, love, love my gladdies. There was a time where they were considered a tad old fashioned, but now the beautiful gladdies seem to have become in vogue, once more. Not that I have followed the edicts of fashion. Every flower family is always on trend with me. =) Flowers, flowers...and then some is my philosophy. I will enjoy February and all that the flower kingdom gifts me. Thank you for your lovely visit, lovely Loes. Kim Xx
DeleteKim, I never get tired admiring the beauty of your flowers and photos. It is a real eye candy and balm for the soul. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteYour quilting is looking fantastic, enjoy.
happy new week
Your abundance of flowers just warms my heart. We've just had our second 12+" snowfall in two weeks, although the bright sun and 40 degree (F) temperature today has melted some of it away. I can see how the seams in a pieced backing would make hand quilting harder. I do piece backings, but quilt on my domestic machine, so the seams aren't a problem. It can still be difficult to make sure those seams are straight on the back though. Enjoy your warm days while you have them. 'll look at the seed catalogs and dream of spring.
ReplyDeletePat
Yes, I did enjoy the flowery delicious, Kim, in your beautiful garden flowers and your hydrangea quilt! Enjoy your last month of summer and stitching your lovely quilt. 💕
ReplyDeleteYou have an absolutely delightful blog of which I just discovered!!! The floral prints in the lovely quilt on your side bar looks so nice with your banner. All the flowers make me crave summer, and yet, there won't be that many blooms around my place. I would love to have a green house.
ReplyDeleteIt is lovely that you hand quilt. I have not done that in years.
Your garden and all the flowers you are surrounded by are so wonderfully beautiful! Now you just have to breathe in all this beauty, and store it inside you when you now soon go towards autumn and then winter. We are lucky to have been able to enjoy visiting your beautiful flower splendor that you share with us through our winter. Beautiful quilting on your your lovely hydrangeas quilt! It will be nice to have around you for the winter when you sit inside with your hand stitch and dream of summer and all the beautiful flowers.
ReplyDeleteI love your little lines of quilting Kim ... so perfect & beautiful. Your garden really IS a summer garden isn't it? I think my garden is more a spring garden. Everything here has kind of flopped by now. We had good rain for one day but it wasn't quite enough & now its hot & humid again. I think I need to live in your temps Kim 😉 Wishing you a lovely quilty flowery week my friend xx
ReplyDeleteWhere to start?
ReplyDeleteYour quilt looks so beautiful, and Oh blue and purple together so very lovely.
And the bounty of flowers just delights me to no end on this winter's day.
Thank you, Kim. Have a wonderful week!
It's always a delight to pop over for a visit to your beautiful, flowery world, Kim! So much eye-candy, I have to go back and take another walk through your garden and sweet sewing room. Flowers have so many meanings for different people, and seeing your gladiolas and dahlias brings back sweet memories of my grandmother Beatrice and my dear Mom. They both grew them and would fill my arms with bouquets when I would visit. It was always yellow gladiolas from my Grandmother and pink from my Mom. I've never had success with them, though. You have some gorgeous glads. Your quilt is so beautiful and I love how you do the quilting. It must be quite like heaven there in your flowery world. Enjoy these last days of summer. Hugs xo Karen
ReplyDeleteWell returning from qld to find a jungle of weeds the wisteria was so big we had to cut back before we could get in the front door,the tomatoes are not doing well will have to stake them and hope to get some ripening,lost quite a few pot plants and hanging baskets will replant the hanging baskets and pretty sure pot plants will build up in time again.we have a beautiful grandson Edward Douglas who came in his own time and way early much to his mum’s surprise and the other present they gave us was Covid still recovering from that. Have two baby quilts that I have to get finished had hoped to sew them together while in Queensland,but have the tops now done picked up wadding today and hopefully will be able to sandwich them tomorrow and start the machine quilting on the weekend as have heard one of the baby’s is going to be early.so had better get a move on.I have made them both I spy quilts in diamond shapes.love your hydrangea quilt and flowers mine is looking very bedraggled with only one flower to be seen not good at all.love Elizabeth
ReplyDeleteOh, a door hidden by wild and unruly wisteria; how fabulous. Why, I would've left it and climbed through the window. =D Congratulations on the birth of your new grandson, Elizabeth. Hopefully with you being home again you have been able to water your garden and the flowers and tomatoeshave revived a little. I'm sorry you have COVID.... hopefully you will be completely recovered very soon, so that you will be able to finish the two baby quilts. The quilts do sound lovely. Take care, lovely Elizabeth.
DeleteLove your post and all those flowers. All I see from my windows is SNOW! Celebrate a bit of garden time for me.
ReplyDeleteFirst off I want to say that your staged opening "Hello" photo is so cute and clever!!! And I just see beauty in your garden from here--no one else is looking close up! The photos of your quilt sandwich are delicious looking!!! Keep on quilting!!! I'm cheering you on!!!
ReplyDeleteMy goodness! This is truly a magical place you live in Kim!
ReplyDelete