HELLO my name is Heather

  • I like it a lot

    My kids are the best appreciators.  Both of them.  They have their
    foibles, but they know how to appreciate a handmade present.  I like
    this.  I’m not sure how we got there, but I like it a lot.

    Hb_blanket2

    My mom made a sweet little blanket for Chloe, with help from Chloe’s
    big sister, Haley (8 years old).  Isn’t it pretty?  Haley was so excited

    So, as I was laying the blanket out to take a picture of it for
    them, in trotted Charlotte with a sprig of jasmine.  Her freshly-picked
    bouquet was quickly abandoned for the rapture of a soft new blanket.
    She climbed right up onto the table to demonstrate, wiggling, giggling
    & swooshing her hair about.

    So adorable. 

    Hb_blanket1aWhen I sew, Charlotte hovers around eagerly waiting for the finish line
    when she can hop away with whatever-it-is, to her imaginary world. 
    Makes me crave sewing.  More sewing.  I could sew her a whole new world
    if I had the time.  And she’d love it all, whatever-it-is.  I love that about her!

    Earlier this week Charlotte packed up my new handbag (still had a
    couple of pins in it) for the movie store.  She had been waiting &
    circling till it was off the machine.  And she had a plan.  She quickly
    filled it with all the necessities and we were off:  Ariel, Snow White,
    a sash from one of my shirts, sunglasses.  She was looking pretty hip
    too.  Comically hip.

    Hb_blanket7
    Every teenager working there heard all about it, "This is the purse
    that my mom made.  I like it."   "My mom made this.  Look, here’s my
    Ariel." "Look what mama made."  "See my purse?"

    Elijah’s the same way.  When I make him a new pair of pajamas, he
    grins and saunters about.  Maybe sauntering isn’t exactly the right
    word, but he definitely swaggers or something.  And big hugs.  Very big
    hugs.  I’m thinking he could use some new pajamas here soon.

    ∆   âˆ†   âˆ† 

    So, Quilt Market is next week.  And it sounds like I might have some
    sample yardage coming in.  It was accidentally shipped to Heather Ross,
    but we’ve got it sorted out, I think.  If I can pull it off before
    Market, I’ll put together a snappy preview for you.  Waiting for that
    box though.

    Hb_blanket6

    And I’m looking forward to meeting so many of you this weekend at
    Blissful Living.  If you can’t stop by on Saturday, definitely come by
    some other time.  And there’s a well-loved mexican cafe along the same
    downtown corridor (Mangos) and a handful of fantastic antique shops.
    Make a day of it.

  • Blissful Living

    Chloefeet2_2

    I was toying with the idea of putting together a local meet ‘n greet
    – Phoenix, AZ area.  I was getting serious about setting one up for
    May.  And then good fortune winks my way and I meet Kristin, designer
    extraordinaire and owner of my favorite local boutique,
    Domestic Bliss (amazing! Like Anthropologie, but better), who has plans
    to open a new facility for local creative types to meet up & frenzy
    off each other’s energy, take classes, etc.  We became fast friends.
    She’s naming the studio Blissful Living.  And her concept is very close
    to my heart.  (We had an amazing dinner at their home a couple of weeks
    ago – should have brought my camera! – must go back & take photos.
    She even has chickens – fantasy of mine – in the most adorable chicken
    coop you’ll ever see.)

    Chloe1week_2
    And
    Kristin is quick to it — Blissful Living opens on Friday!  I’m
    planning to be there this Saturday, May 10th, from 11-2 to meet up with, well,
    whoever stops by.  A meet ‘n greet.  Thank you, universe.  So, come see
    me & maybe even bring some of your creations with you!  And if you
    stick around, hopefully you’ll make some new friends with similar
    interests who live in your neck of the desert.  Visit Kristin’s
    Blissful Living blog for more info.  And here’s the address:
    Blissful Living  166 W. Main St. Mesa, AZ.

    I’ll be teaching a workshop there toward the end of June too — details to come.

    And meet Chloe, my new little niece!  My brother’s fourth child, second
    girl.  (And she looks just like her big sister, Haley.)  They’ve had a
    couple of rough years and couldn’t be more ecstatic about welcoming
    home a new baby.  It’s a thrill to witness.  We’re so glad she’s here
    & safe!

  • Continuous Loop

    Charlottewelcome2lbl_2

    So this cracks me up.  I get off of my plane, head toward baggage
    claim and am greeted by "Charlotte," with a crown on top.  Every day
    I’m greeted by Charlotte with a crown on topAlways a crown .  I grinned, as the last thing my Charlotte had said to me
    before I left town was, "Goodnight, Queen!"  (You see, if she’s a
    princess, then I must be the queen — for continuity’s sake — her idea, not mine.)  Then, on
    the road, I notice that many of the road signs have a crown on them as
    well, I have a brief Twilight Zone moment, then have to ask. 

    Pinkcrownhblbl_3
    Turns out Charlotte, NC is nicknamed "The Queen City," as it was named
    after Queen Charlotte of Mecklenburg, great-great-great grandmother of
    the current Queen of England.  I had no idea.  Just as I had no idea my
    daughter was royalty when I named her Charlotte.  Just a happy
    coincidence.

    Spent my Friday with Westminster/Free Spirit, the company that
    produces my fabric.  Great people.  Good, honest & visionary.  We
    all had lunch at a place called Sugar Magnolia & I had a go at
    my first authentic Southern food:  fried green tomatoes (yum!), hush
    puppies, collard greens & shrimp calabash. Found out that one of
    the four key people at the company went to the same high school as me.
    He was there when my brother & sister were there.  We had teachers
    in common and shared some funny stories.  Mainly about our spit-fire
    math teacher and her fabulous wardrobe.

    Freespiritbldglbl2_3
    Our school had been built in the 70s with some bright idea to have all
    of the classrooms open to each other.  Imagine 9 classes taking place
    in one big hall or ‘pod’.  Ridiculous idea.  Well, that didn’t work out too
    well, so they quickly had to install wall-dividers.  My mother taught
    at the school and I clearly remember her frustration at the constantly
    moving walls. Kids would lean their chairs back into them and disrupt
    the class next door.  It was built in a big circle, with the library in
    the middle, a large hallway around that, and then 4 or 5 ‘pods’ fanning
    out from the hallway.  Navigating that main hallway between classes
    prepared me for driving later on.  Stick to your lane, signal
    when you need to turn, etc.  It was people soup.  Most of the
    classrooms could be entered from outside though too.  It was California
    after all.  Our lockers were all outside.

    Glassbouquetlbl_2
    Jeff stopped me by Sewing Arts Studio for a Hello and some giddy
    chatter about sewing with Timtex.  They pointed out a snapshot of me on
    the wall from a couple of Quilt Markets ago.  I didn’t think twice
    about it till this week (as that photo now leads me to another crazy
    coincidence).  I received an email just this week from a old friend
    from high
    school who says she saw my photo at that same quilt shop recently &
    told the owners, "Hey, I know her!  We went to high school together."
    They responded, "That’s Heather Bailey.  She’s designed these fabrics
    over here."  Brandi told the story better.  Here’s what she said,
    "And I know it has to be you because you look exactly the same…So I
    already owned some of your fabric and I had pulled a Free Spirit ad out
    of a magazine over the summer because I loved the fabric and wanted to
    find it…it was yours!!!" 

    So, here’s my brain thread…

    Princess Charlotte — Charlotte, NC — high school connection with
    colleague in Charlotte, NC — visit quilt shop with same colleague, see
    photo on wall — receive email from another high school friend who
    found me from photo on wall at same quilt shop in The Queen City of
    Charlotte, NC — Princess Charlotte… and it loops.  Though I’m a
    little weirded out, I’m also quite reassured by the interconnectivity
    of it all. Like a snowflake under a microscope, intricate &
    mesmerizing
    .

    Headrest2lbl_4

    And though I should end it there, all poetic and thoughtful, you
    have to see these new headrests on Continental airlines.  They can be
    bent around your head!  Now you don’t have to have a window seat in
    order to catch a nap.  Someone should sew up some shower-cap-like
    fabric covers for these things and start a little business.  Or Continental
    could offer them for a buck on every flight, like they do with
    headphones. 

  • |

    Les Machines

    Hbartista

    Found
    my card reader.  And I’m doing what I can to hop back on the tool train
    too.  I receive regular requests for sewing machine recommendations,
    but am a little shy about recommending a starter sewing machine as I’ve
    been entirely spoiled on the sewing machine front and haven’t had to
    shop for a starter sewing machine for, well two decades almost & I’m not that old!   

    I have three sewing machines and two sergers.  My newest machine is
    a Bernina Artista 640.  The coolest thing about this one is that I can
    design embroideries on my computer & then stitch them out at will.
    Of course, I confess, I’ve only done this once so far.  But that’s
    because I’ve been designing more than sewing in recent months. (Isaac
    wrote an article for Sew News about how to interface with these
    machines if you’re a Mac user & not on PCs. The embroidery I
    designed
    for that article is available as a free download in my sidebar
    under "Free Embroidery File.")  Anyhow, I’m not up to a comprehensive,
    statistical review, but I can say that Berninas are a very pleasant
    machine to sew on.

    Sewingmachine_hb

    Speaking of Berninas –– Quick story — Partway through my
    Apparel Design degree our workshop space was re-outfitted with an army
    of new Bernina 1620s.  Reading through the manual late one night (many
    all-nighters were pulled at school – Project Runway pretty much wraps
    up the experience), there was a mention of ‘memorized buttonholes,’ but
    the instructions weren’t clear what exactly those were or how to set
    the machine to do it.  Oh, but the idea of ‘memorized buttonholes!’  I
    proceeded to poke & prod & tap out all manner of button
    sequences before I was successful.  I think it took me an hour or so to
    break the code.  Completely worth it!  And, of course, I got to be
    Santa Claus the next day showing my friends that new technology.  We
    all took a renewed interest in buttons that season.

    Anyhow… sewing with a quality machine is really important,
    especially if you’re new to sewing.  I’ve taught many people to sew who
    were originally convinced they were stinky sewers.  In every case I
    recall, it was their cheapy cheap sewing machines taunting them. The
    machines would lock up & the threads would get all tangled.  Hands
    in the air, "I stink!" I’d re-thread the machine & get them going
    again, only for the machine to grunt & groan once more.  "My
    friend, it’s your machine that stinks!  Here, try mine."  "Oh, hmmm,
    maybe I can sew."  Yes, I’ve witnessed this many times.

    Of course, you don’t need that Cadillac up there in order to be
    successful either.  Most new sewers should look for a machine with a
    straight stitch, a zig-zag stitch, buttonhole capability, back-stitch
    button, ability to change needle position, interchangeable feet, etc.
    But go with one of the better brands.  (Can’t say just which models
    though as I haven’t researched any of this lately.)  Get a good quality
    machine so you’re more likely to succeed & to like yourself as a
    sewer.

    Otherwise, just know that if you’re learning to sew with a $50
    machine from the drugstore that half of your sewing battles are not
    your fault
    .  Blame the machine.  That works too.  And don’t give up
    sewing!

    My other machines…
    • Viking #1+ Sewing Machine – Not as
    new as the Artista 640, so it’s not in prime position anymore, but I
    still like this machine a lot.  This is the machine I take out when a
    friend comes over to sew.  And I like to do buttonholes on this one too
    (out of familiarity, I think).
    • Bernina 840 Sewing Machine
    Old machine.  It was old when I got it too.  But it has metal parts!
    And everyone I’ve ever heard discuss this machine has given it the –
    same – exact – nickname -, "workhorse," which really weirds me out.
    I’ve lent this machine out to many friends who were learning to sew.
    And this is the machine I do all of my upholstery and slip-cover sewing
    on.  It’s not an industrial machine, but it’s tough.
    • Bernina 2500 DCET Serger
    – Haven’t mastered this one yet, but it does all of those cool hem
    stitches for sewing with knits.  I like to keep this one set on a cover
    stitch and use my other serger for overlock, so I don’t have to switch
    the threading around too much.  See, totally spoiled.
    • Bernette 234 Serger
    I love this serger. Just a good, straight-forward machine that’s easy
    to troubleshoot.  Perhaps its our history though.  Loyalty.  I bought
    this one used.  It was the summer I turned 20.  I had already survived
    one fashion show in college (huge collection, one-of-a-kind
    hand-sweaters too, so tiring!) & I knew I’d be putting together
    another collection the following year.  This serger was my ticket to
    sewing at home & pulling fewer all-nighters at school (yes, those
    were crazy-fun, but I was newly-married & trying to be more
    sensible). It was $200 or $250 at the time, which was about as much as
    we paid in rent, but neither of us flinched.  It was a good call.

    So, those are my machines, a couple of which came as presents from my
    generous MIL who opted to be paid in machines in exchange for design work (machine embroidery, I think) over
    the years .  She’s just about outfitted all of her daughters with
    top-of-the-line machines now.  Ridiculously fabulous & indulgent
    pursuit, don’t you think?  Yes, there were times when my sewing machine
    was worth more than my car.  Not the nicest cars back then though.   

    I’ll
    take some photos of my other machines & mix them into this post
    later this week to break up all this text. I could probably go on, but
    I’m actually sewing today & am anxious to get back to it.  I’ll upload some N.Carolina photos for next time too.

  • Impressive.

    Where’s my card reader for the point n’ shoot?  I was going to show
    you some random shots from my trip to Charlotte, NC, but I can’t find
    the card reader & I don’t want to wake Isaac up over it.

    I was going to name the post "Old News," as I’m finding it hard to
    be very current with my updates (still meaning to show photos from our
    Disneyland trip months ago & my antique store finds with Laura).
    Now, when I do find the card reader, I’m going to have to name the post
    "Very Old News," as it will have been a whole week since I headed out
    to Donna’s Inspired. event.  Which was mightily impressive!  What a tremendous feat, Donna & Bill.  You must be fearless.  And everything was beautiful & seamless.

    Ddfabric
    Donna has two new books out.  I picked up a copy of each while I was at
    the event.  I knew that she had used a couple of my pincushions in some
    photography for Fabric Scrapbooking, but I had no idea that
    my Freshcut line was used throughout the whole book & on the
    cover.  That was a fun surprise.

    Cool projects too.  Donna has no fear of fabric, though she doesn’t
    profess to sew.  And she’s spreading the love.  The owner of
    Scrapbookin’ Adventures is all jazzed now to carry my Freshcut fabric
    collection
    , as well as the whole Freshcut scrapbook collection (coming
    in June, I’m guessing. I’ll get some dates.)  I think Donna’s to blame.
    Or maybe Christina.  She taught a fabric/paper project too.  Anyhow, I
    can’t wait to see what projects they put together.      

    And a big thanks to all of the wonderful women I met last weekend.  I had a ton of much-needed fun.

  • |

    Lotsa Lotsa

    I didn’t realize it until later, but "Random Debris" was a pretty
    sad-sounding post title, huh?  That wasn’t my intention.  We’re doing
    quite well for all of the hubbub.  My dad’s heart tests went well and
    he was released from the hospital on his birthday – best present
    possible.  Home-cooked meal at our house & chocolate cake too.
    Four family birthdays this week in fact, and one little baby girl on
    her way.  Lots of birthdays, lots of design projects, lots of catching
    up, lots of Lotsa.

    Hbpreview

    I’m heading out to North Carolina in the morning for Donna’s big
    shindig
    .  Humorously, business trips seem to be my best chance to
    relax.  It’s those long plane rides: sketchbook, embroidery,
    audiobooks, iTune movies for my Nano.  I’m all set.  Watched a rental from iTunes on my way to the Country Living event last month.  Pretty
    cool.  I just wish they’d give you longer than 24 hours to complete a
    movie once you start watching it.

    photo:curious    fabric:coming soon

    More on that later – *Pray for May* – Gotta go.

  • Random Debris

    My intentions are good.  I keep meaning to take out the camera to
    photograph my sewing machines or my Foredom drill, but it’s been a
    crazy week.  I’m busy wrapping up some huge projects that were put on
    the back-burner months ago when the paper collection cut in line.  You
    know that stage of moving where all of the furniture, boxes & other
    obvious items have been put on the moving truck, but the floor’s still
    swimming with random debris: the broom, several floor lamps, thread
    racks, spinning wheel, cleaning supplies, whatever?  I’m at that stage
    on a few business projects.  Not the fun part — but it does mean we’re
    almost done.

    My brother’s wife is on bed rest trying to make it one more week
    before delivering their fourth child.  We’ve had their youngest over a
    couple of days this week & that’s been big fun for Charlotte.  Then
    my dad went into the hospital today with a heart issue.  Word is that
    it’s not too serious, but the doctor wants to keep an eye on him
    tonight.  So there we are. Just enough added jazz to make
    picture-taking less important for today.  But a quick blog post is
    still a nice change of pace for a few minutes 🙂   

    Bejeweledspectacles

    Keepin’ it pretty, here’s a photo of Miss Charlotte showing off her
    favorite accessory (a snapped up point-n-shoot from our day at the
    Renaissance Festival).

    And for good laughs, check out this April Fools Day banner!!

  • 10,000 Points

    Such a great week!  We had Laura with us for four days, kids
    included (Luke & Lily below).  We hit the best antique stores & boutiques, my favorite new grocery
    store
    (a few times) for gelato & aisle-coursing entertainment, and
    we ate out more than we ate in. Whoa.

    Looloo

    I scored 6+ yards of vintage flaming-orange fabric, now destined for
    a bedskirt in my yet-to-be-decorated bedroom.  Got an old donut-maker
    tool too – in a cool paperboard box (that Charlotte later tore to
    shreds). Then more vintage buttons, a hand-knit yellow baby sweater, a
    bizarre basket purse, and a cool leafed table with a green &
    orange metal top.  I promise to show all at some point.  The donut-maker
    definitely fits into this month’s theme (a theme which will have to
    extend well into April as I didn’t expect my Chicago trip, Elijah’s
    Spring Break, and an Easter week with Laura to be such wonderful
    distractions).

    Lil
    On
    Tuesday, Isaac took Charlotte & Lily out for an all-day girl-extravaganza.  Lily practically bubbled out of her skin to tell us all
    about it that night.  Here’s Isaac’s
    outline of their day.  Perhaps he’s planning a thesis.

    1. Glitter Box — ultimate girl store
        a. Girls get princess updos and chat up the proprietresses
        b. Girls shop
            i. Lily – glitter journal, magic glitter face stamp, girlie bag
           ii. Charlotte – set of seven heart-shaped, flavored lip-gloss
    rings (cherry, orange, vanilla, etc.), magic glitter face stamp, girlie
    bag

    Ineverycolor_2

    2. Puppies ‘N Love–puppy super store
        a. Watch puppies
        b. Pet and play with miniature schnauzer

    3. Lunch at Johnny Rockets — hamburger joint
        a. Nickel juke box
            i. Del Shannon, Runaway
            ii. Lollipop
        b. Waitress makes ketchup (catsup) drawings
            i. Lily and Charlotte get ketchup puppies
            ii. Isaac gets ketchup winkin’ dude
        c. Burgers Fries & Chicken Tenders
            i. Cherry 7-up

    Princessday_4
    4. Disney Store
        a. ‘Nuf said

    5. Play in Park
        a. Make a new friend

    6. Apple Store
        a. Sponge Bob game
        b. Okay, this one is really for Isaac

    7. Pick Up Elijah from School

    8. Cold Stone Creamery — ice cream mixed on a chilled marble slab
        a. Lily – finally settles on mint ice cream, cotton candy ice cream & rainbow sprinkles
            i. First idea – mint ice cream, chocolate ice cream & gummy bears
            ii. Second idea – cotton candy ice cream, pineapple sorbet & gummy bears
        b. Charlotte – strawberry milkshake
        c. Elijah – mint ice cream, chocolate cake batter ice cream, chocolate chips
        d. Isaac – chocolate cake batter ice cream, banana ice cream, graham cracker crumbs, YUM!

    9. Movie Rental Place
        a. Aladdin
        b. Fox and Hound II
        c. Miss Spider’s Tea Party

    10. Back Home
        a. Princess photos by the front door
        b. Dump tablespoon of purple glitter on tile floor for special, girlie, princess grout-treatment 

    11. Heather & Laura Return
        a. Lily bounces down the stairs to report 
        b. Charlotte twirls

    Aaah_2

    12. Bedtime Bath
        a. Remove dozens of bobby pins 
        b. Rinse off glitter 
        c. Scrub out hairspray 
        d. Play some more

    In simple mathematical terms …

    Princess Day for the Girls + Shopping Day for the Moms = 10,000 Points for Isaac & a Good Night’s Sleep for Everyone.

  • Sketchy

    Sketchbooks2
    Probably
    the most-used, most-carefully-placed tool around here, the sketchbook.
    Not to be lost.  When one fills up, there are several new ones on hand,
    ready to go.  Small one for discreet sketching, at meetings or
    whatnot.  The spine of my latest sketchbook has developed leprosy or
    something so I’m giving the spiral-bound a try.  If the pages stay in
    then I’ll convert.

  • Isaac on Lenses

    Lavendar

    So this is new.  I mentioned to Isaac how I needed to do a tool post
    about camera lenses at some point this month & look what he put
    together & surprised me with… a guest post.  Too fun.  It’s kind
    of technical though, so perhaps we’ll need to discuss this in the
    comments till it all makes sense.  I’ll make sure Isaac reads the
    comments & chimes in if you have any questions about photo
    equipment, lenses, etc.  Here’s Isaac:

    Crw_7787_2_2
    "I get a lot of questions about the equipment I use to create the
    photos that you see on my website, which is the same equipment used to
    create photos for this blog. First of all, let me say that Heather is
    quite a good photographer and does 99% of the photography for her blog
    herself. That being said, we do share the same equipment and since it
    is March of the Tools, I thought I’d chime in and share one of the
    tools that makes my style possible. There is no substitute for a good
    eye and an active, observant imagination, but certain looks just can’t
    be achieved without the right tool.

    When I want to get the effect in the photo of the lavender flowers,
    where the flowers in the foreground are the only thing in focus and the
    background seems compressed and close, I use my 70mm to 200mm f2.8
    lens
    . Set at it’s longest focal length of 200mm, this lens all but
    eliminates depth of field. Depth of field is the distance between the
    first object in the foreground that is in focus and the last object in
    the background that is in focus. The depth of field is determined by
    two properties, the focal length of the lens (longer focal lengths —
    telephoto lenses — have less depth of field built in) and the aperture
    of the lens (f-stop) which is the size of the opening that lets the
    light into the camera. A very fast lens like this one opens very wide
    and hence has very shallow depth of field.

    200_2_2

    A third factor in the look is the effect of compressing the
    foreground and background, which eliminates a lot of extraneous details
    from the shot and has the effect of making shots look tightly-cropped
    in the camera. This is a result of the length of the lens — imagine
    looking through a long tube where all peripheral vision is eliminated.

    The 70-200 mm f2.8 lens is a bit pricey, but for the serious amateur
    or pro, it creates a look that can’t be replicated by other lenses.
    While you will not be able to fully achieve this look with a point-and-shoot, try setting the camera on macro focus (it’s usually the little
    flower icon), zoom in as far as your optical zoom will allow, then back
    in and out until you find the absolute closest place you can focus.

    By the way, thank you for all of the compliments on the MEHC
    article
    . That was a very intense and fast paced shoot, but extremely
    fun!"

    –Isaac

    Tinsleywedding2
    All of this camera talk reminds me that I never showed you the slideshow from Heather Tinsley’s wedding (click here).  Heather is a blog reader who
    flew Isaac out to photograph her wedding last December.  Love that!  Hi Heather.

    It was in D.C., I think, as Isaac went to the Spy Museum the next day. The Spy Museum!  Can you believe there’s a spy museum?  I wonder how much James Bond reflects reality — or vice versa. 

    There’s certainly nothing discreet about that camera lense up
    there.  I usually use a smaller 24-70mm f2.8 lens because the other one
    makes my arm ache.  They both have a similar effect in my opinion.
    Similar enough (don’t tell Isaac I said so).