I've got my first finish of the year! This quilt is 108x108, not a small one. I'm actually keeping this quilt which is notable since I give away 95% of what I make. I read an article on making autumn quilts a while back, and it said to always add a bit of purple to elevate the color scheme. I did in this quilt, and I do like the purple added. This quilt is all scraps, different cream on creams, and lots of different fabrics in reds, yellows, oranges, greens, browns, and of course purples. There is more brown and green than the other colors, but I think the warmer colors show up more.
I just finished FMQ another quilt today, so hopefully I'll get the binding on that this weekend, and have a second finish for this year.
I had originally planned to start my decluttering in other areas of the house, and finish in the quilting areas, but I switched that around. I had two big bundles of fabric sitting on the floor, and it was driving me crazy. I needed to get those off the floor for my peace of mind. I knew I didn't have space on the fabric shelves right now, but if I went through all my quilting magazines, I could make some shelf space and get the fabric off the floor.
I love quilting magazines! I don't have as many subscriptions as I used to, due to rising costs, but I really enjoy seeing what's popular, new color combinations, and being exposed to quilts that may not have been my style, but still peak my interest. I've made enough quilts over the years, that I have a pretty good idea what I enjoy doing, and what became not fun soon into the project. That knowledge is powerful, when going through quilting books and magazines. For example, I know how to foundation paper piece. Do I enjoy it? No, I do not. Can I do hand applique? Yes. Do I enjoy it? No. I prefer traditional piecing techniques. If I'm going to do applique I'm going to use a fusible and raw edge. I'm comfortable with all types of traditional piecing. I love triangles of all shapes and sizes, but making log cabin quilts is probably my very favorite. Rare is the year where I don't make at least one log cabin in some variation.
The thing about quilting magazines, or any magazines really, is they can really add up quickly. I had one and a half shelves on a wide bookcase dedicated to magazines. My goal is to get my magazines and books all on the same narrow bookcase. To accomplish that, I not only have to cull my magazines mercilessly, but I also need to cull my quilt books. I'm tackling the magazines first.
I've already gone through over 100 quilting magazines, and so far I've only found three that have a large enough percentage of patterns that I would make to warrant saving the whole magazine. What about the other patterns I really love?
I'm ripping the patterns I love out of the magazine, putting them in page protectors and making a curated quilt book of only patterns I can actually see myself making. I'm limiting myself to one binder for these, so I am really trying to be practical. There are lots of patterns I could make, but how many patterns will I realistically make? My quilting area is over capacity, it's time to start purging what isn't making my quilting journey better, and is only weighing me down. I'm recycling the rest of the magazines, no I'm not donating them, I'm recycling them, and I am OK with that. I do have a couple like Quiltmaker's 100 block issues, that I will bring to a used book store along with any quilt books I decide to cull. Whatever the used book store doesn't want I will donate.
I'm not finished going through the magazines, but I am past the halfway point. You know what else has happened? I got those two fabric bundles off the floor! The fabric isn't where I actually want it to be, but it's off the floor, easy to get to, and out of my way! I'm calling that a win.
It's a pretty ambitious January for me. Quilting is a pretty sedentary hobby, and I know I need to move more. I'm not going to go to the gym, it's too hot most of the year for me to keep up with an outdoor walking program, and I am not one to enjoy exercise. One thing I have had some luck with but got out of the habit of doing is the Body Groove program. I have a couple of the DVD's I bought a while back, and I really like the founders attitude. If something hurts to do, you are free to modify it to something that works for you. Right now I'm dealing with a knee injury, but I can still do the program will some modifications.
Since we've been traveling a lot, DVD's aren't something that's going to work for me, so I bought a year subscription to the app. With the app, I can watch any of the many exercise sessions on my TV, phone, or tablet. Starting a new habit is always hard, so I'm utilizing habit pairing. I already have the habit of FMQ an hour each day I sew. Normally, I do some housework after that initial hour. Now, I am exercising right after that hour of FMQ, and doing housework after that. The Body Groove sessions have a lot of stretching, which I'm finding really nice after an hour of FMQ. It's a good time to stretch out your back and shoulders after a session of FMQ. I'm really liking the app, and it has a huge variety of activities on it. One of the things I can really appreciate, is that you aren't watching a bunch of pretty, young, super fit people. There are old people, overweight people, middle aged people, and sure, some young and fit people. It's a lot easier to get into exercising when you aren't being presented with some ideal you feel you'll never achieve. I know this sounds like a commercial, but believe me, no one could pay me to exercise. I paid for the program, and they have no idea who I am. This is not a solicited endorsement. I just know I'm not the only one out there who isn't moving around enough, so I thought I'd let you know what is working for me. I'm overweight, but I'm not doing it with a weight loss goal, I'm not doing it to drop sizes, I'm just trying to MOVE MORE.
I don't FMQ every day, but I do FMQ more days per week than I don't. I'm hoping to get the habit established enough, so that by the time we take our first trip of the year, I'll still be able to get some exercise in even in a hotel. Stretching out and moving after long travel days would be a smart move.
I've got a lot of goals for 2026, but I'm trying to keep them fairly simple. Move more, Finish More, and Simplify things.



