Can I Become a One Project Person? Podcast #106

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

4 Responses

  1. Rebecca says:

    I’ve thought about your one-project-person musings. I like to be a one-project-person but I can’t always be so. I think the difference lies in things I want to do and things I have to do.

    In things I want to do, I am generally a one-project-person because I am really motivated to finish that project and I don’t mind what stage it’s at. I finished a quilt this weekend that I started in January. The only part of the quilting journey I don’t particularly like is the cutting (partly because I’m trash at it for some reason that I haven’t figured out yet). I’m excited about my next quilt and even though the cutting is my next stage. I’ll push through that knowing the fun parts are still ahead. I’m a big believer in feel the fear and do it anyway so I don’t tend to get hung up on the hard parts. Instead I research and learn the new skill I need so I can continue on. With this quilt I had a couple of weeks where I practised FMQ before I set to on the quilt. My hobby is supposed to be fun and if I start and never finish projects, it becomes a burden and not a joy.

    In things I have to do, it’s a different story. Since I started that quilt in January, I’ve also made three dresses for my daughters, one tee-shirt (with another just needing hemming – today’s sewing), a child’s sunhat, and a doll’s quilt, mattress, pillow and sheet. I still have to make a pillowcase (hopefully this week) and paint the doll’s bed (waiting for a fine weekend in the middle of winter!). If my children come to me and request clothing or they need something, I make it even though I’d rather be making my quilt. Sometimes I gaze longingly at my incomplete quilt but I try and console myself that I’m improving my skills as a sew-er and it’s an act of love towards my family.

    • LeahDay says:

      Thank you so much for sharing this Rebecca! Yes, I completely agree and I love how you put this because it’s also how I feel. I have things I have to do for my business and things I want to do and I need to figure out how to bring those in closer alignment.

  2. Louise Deveault says:

    Hello Leah, love your rabbits and I hear you when you say it would be nice to have one project at the time. When I started quilting, that’s what I did. Only one quilt at the time. I was also hand-quilting and it took me about 7=12 month to finish one quilt. At first, it was fine as we didn’t have much of internet interaction or I didn’t go to a guild. But now, I want to have MORE than one project at the time because I want to try a technique, learn a new skill, and some project like paper piecing or English paper pieces just take time. Meanwhile, I can sew about a dozen or more top-quilts and have fun with my fabric. So it all depends HOW much time you want to spend in your sewing room:) I usually am more productive from September-June. The rest of the summer I spend outside:)

    • LeahDay says:

      That’s a very good point Louise! I’m wanting only one or two projects because with the rabbits and the book, anything more feels very overwhelming. But you’re right, this does change depending on the time of the year and what I have going on. Very good perspective to keep in mind!

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