quilting

Around the block, patchwork, quilting

Turning blocks into tops

During the big patchwork shelves tidy during second lockdown last year I lamented that I had ‘lost’ my practice blocks from the Around The Block quilting bee I took part in during 2009/2010 (yes, that long ago and my quilt top still isn’t a finished quilt).  I really was a novice patchworker/quilter when I took part in the quilting bee, and many of the participants were super experienced. Because of this, I sewed practice blocks before I cut into anyone’s good fabric. I would do a block in scraps, then I’d do a couple more in Kaffe Fassett fabrics that I would keep to eventually make my own quilt. In January I found them all my practice blocks!

Using old practice blocks

They were stored in a pizza box safely tucked away pretty much where they were expected to be. I have no idea how I overlooked them so many times! I quickly joined nine blocks that had been made from scraps into a rather eclectic little quilt top.

Using old practice blocks

Two larger practice blocks, both from Kaffe Fassett fabric, were the perfect size to become cushions.

Using old practice blocks

I quilted them on to some scrap batting that was in stash, then turned them into cushion covers with a lapped back zip opening. I used Kaffe fabric for the back as well. The quilting has given them plenty of dimension!

Using old practice blocks

Then it was time to join the Kaffe blocks. My theory by now was ‘better done than perfect’, so I didn’t agonise much about how I would join them or in what colour. I just sashed them together, in a fairly neutral colour that I had in my stash. I have been trying to use more of what I have.

Kaffe practice blocks become a quilt top

There were also four Dresden Plates in the pizza box, along with some yo-yos. They needed to turn into something too!

Using old practice blocks

I figured that if I appliqued the Dresden Plates to a plain background, and sewed up another five patchwork blocks, I’d have nine blocks which should be enough for another small quilt top. I raided my stash, bought a couple more fat quarters that coordinated, then got as far as sewing up the extra blocks. However I still need to do the applique and join these blocks together. I’ll probably sash them in a colour similar to the carpet!

Using old practice blocks

Then in February Emma Jansen started another sewalong, this time for her Bronte’s Stars pattern. Once again I raided my fat quarters stash!

Brontes Stars quiltalong planning underway

I really enjoy playing with colour and pattern, and thinking about what will actually work best in a quilt where scale and value and contrast really come into play. I’m still more used to looking at fabrics from a garment perspective, which doesn’t always work for patchwork and quilting where fabrics are cut up into much smaller pieces! I have bought a blue/grey solid to use as the plain contrast for this quilt, and have got as far as washing and ironing all the fabrics. But that’s as much progress as I’ve made thus far! There is still a lot of pairing of fabrics to do, and there is also a fair bit of precision required to piece this quilt top accurately. I will need to be in the right headspace before I actually start on the blocks.

Brontes Stars quiltalong planning underway

patchwork, quilting

Quilt top explosion – Value quilt and Scrap quilt

I think that I mentioned a couple of blog posts ago that I’ve been spending time in the sewing room organising and tidying.  The entire process was kicked off when I decided that I really needed to progress my many quilt tops and tidy up the quilting section of my sewing room cupboard. One of the first boxes that I pulled out was full of Japanese fabric squares that I had collected from Kimono House some years ago. My original plan for these squares was to turn them into a Japanese Kaleidoscope quilt, which is entirely hand-stitched. I looked at them, acknowledged that the hand-stitched quilt was never likely to eventuate, and began to turn them into a Value quilt.

Value quilt progress

There are some wonderful examples of Value quilts on the internet and Instagram. They all follow the same principle of using the value – how light or dark a colour/print is – to form the overall design, rather than the actual colour. Looking at the fabrics in greyscale really highlights it.

Value quilt progress

I sorted the squares into three piles of light, medium and dark fabrics. Then sewed them into half-square triangle blocks. After that they were trimmed to be exactly the same size.

Value quilt progress photos

Then I started playing with layouts. Here are some of the ones that I experimented with.

Value quilt progress photos

Value quilt progress photos

Value quilt progress photos

I really wanted to use all of my blocks, so in the end I went with the last one of the three layouts above which utilised every single one of them. I didn’t agonise too much over this project; it was all experimentation and play. I was aiming for done, rather than perfect! Time to sew them all together and see how the final product looked.

patchwork quilts in progress

Ta-da! Done. Let’s take a look in greyscale.

Values quilt in Japanese prints - black and white

This quilt top is pretty small. I’ve since added a border to it, which you can glimpse in the next photo.

Quilt top explosion

After sewing the Value quilt I pulled out every single quilt top that I have, along with whatever batting that I could find, and started piecing together backs for each quilt. I wanted to use stash fabrics only for this, and was able to put together a back for each one from both the scraps left over from sewing up the front, plus coordinating fabrics that were already in the cupboard. Some of the quilt backs took many hours to piece together, and I think that they look like modern improvised quilts in their own right! I also cut binding for each quilt. Now I have two quilts all basted ready to quilt, and more with the quilt top/back/binding all ready to go once I have more batting. There are two quilt tops that need my Mum’s sewing machine and it’s lovely little embroidery stitches to finish off. I feel that I’ve made loads of progress toward turning all these quilt tops into quilts.

patchwork quilts in progress

The next thing that I did was ferret through my scrap bin and cut all the scraps into squares – either 2.5″, 3.5″ or 6.5″. These are now pre-cuts, just waiting to become quilts once there are enough. I still have another shelf to sort through and cut up in a similar fashion (maybe I need some strips as well as squares). I feel that this will be really effective quilting stash management for me – thanks to Kellie from Cutting Cloth for sharing how she’s managing her leftovers. Basically, after you’ve cut out a project, turn the scraps into useable pieces such as pre-cuts.

patchwork quilts in progress

Of course, I couldn’t just leave these squares in nice piles, and decided to turn some of the 2.5″ squares into a scrap quilt top, by mixing them with a small amount of quilting cotton solid that was also in my stash.

patchwork quilts in progress

I had cut out enough 2.5″ squares from the solid to make thirty blocks. So more decisions! How should I arrange them? I wanted to sash them, but the amount of solid was quite limited. I popped a photo up on Instagram, and Stacy suggested that I add cornerstones. Excellent idea! So this is what I ended up with.

scrap quilt top

There wasn’t enough of the solid for another row of sashing (and cornerstones) around the outside, which would have been my preference. But this is still pretty sweet! I have enough fabric in stash to back it, and have cut a striped fabric for binding. It will be a cute knee rug, all from scraps/stash.

Now the quilt tops/backs/binding are all folded ready for quilting. I also did a huge tidy of my sewing room, finally clearing out the ‘kids craft cupboard’ and rearranging many of my supplies in more useful, easy to access ways. I think it’s time to sew a couple more garments, then pull the sewing table/cabinet out, put it in to quilting mode and get cracking. I’d like to finish off this blog post by sharing this amazing quilt that my sister-in-law recently completed. Jeanette has only started to sew garments and quilts in the past couple of years, and she’s absolutely fearless! She imagines something that she’d like to make, and just goes for it. It’s awesome.  That’s her mum (my mother-in-law) Adri you can see holding it in the photo below; she’s really enjoying doing craft with her daughter since recently moving to Melbourne.

Jeanette's landscape quilt

patchwork, quilting

Whirligig Quilt Top

You might remember the Wake Me Up quiltalong that Emma Jansen ran during Melbourne’s first lockdown.  She ran another for her Whirligig quilt pattern during Melbourne’s second lockdown.  I chose to make the largest size, working with fabrics that were already in my quilting stash. Most of my quilting fabrics were bought when I first discovered sewing and quilting blogs. They date between 2007 to around 2012. Many of these fabrics were bought with the eye of a garment sewer more than the eye of a quilter, and that creates it’s own challenges when trying to make effective quilt tops. This pattern uses a decent amount of solid as a background, so I figured that I could make it work without having the issue of not enough value and contrast difference that I had with the quilt top I made in the first quiltalong.

Whirligig SAL progress photos

Whirligig SAL progress photos

Whirligig SAL progress photos

Whirligig SAL progress photos

Whirligig SAL progress photos

I ran into a problem when making this quilt top – because I ran out of the white solid fabric that I was using for the background. I had a couple of other white fabrics in stash, but they weren’t the same white. There are so many variations in shade! Luckily, Cutting Cloth is in my 5km lockdown travel radius, so I was able to do a contactless drop off of the leftover solid fabric for them to match. Another metre was all that I needed to be able to complete the quilt top. While I was waiting for the additional solid, Emma had fun playing with the photos of the blocks that I’d shared on social media to see how they might look in a finished quilt.

Whirligig SAL progress photos

This photoshopped quilt really inspired me to keep going and get this quilt top finished – I knew that it would be so pretty! And here is the actual finished result.

Whirligig quilt top done

Each block is slightly different, and I have oriented each one to keep the windmills turning. As you can tell, it’s a decent size! I have now pieced together backing, using as much of the leftover fabric from the quilt front as possible plus some of the non-matching white solid that was in my stash and some more fabrics that coordinated. I’ve also cut the binding. It’s getting closer to it being a finished quilt!  I plan to quilt this myself on my domestic machine, and have been watching some Craftsy classes to refresh my memory on how to quilt.  I’ve took a couple of classes on it years ago, but I am definitely in need of practice.

patchwork quilts in progress

patchwork, quilting

Wake me up quilt top

Finishing off some quilt tops a couple of months ago reignited my interest in patchwork and quilting.  When Emma Jansen started a sewalong I was powerless to resist!  I really like simple quilts where the arrangement of print and colour creates secondary patterns.  Her Wake Me Up quilt is a perfect example.

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

The first step – and in many ways, the most important – is to choose your fabrics. I had plenty of fabrics in stash, but discovered that although they were in a variety of colours, they were pretty much all medium tones. There wasn’t much at all that was dark in colour, and even less that was light. I eventually decided that I would have to focus on different colours in my quilt top, and narrowed my options down to these ones.

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

I decided to do the smaller throw sized quilt top. The next step was cutting out all the squares. Thank goodness for a quilting mat, quilting rules and a fresh new blade in the rotary cutter!

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

Then over to the machine to chain piece half square triangles. I have to admit that I am not very competent with using patchwork tricks and techniques that can considerably speed up the whole process, but am starting to give it a go.

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

So now I had all the basic elements to put the quilt blocks together! There are two basic block shapes in this quilt top – a cross block:

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

And a ‘circle’ block.

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

There are also ‘part’ blocks that go along the edges of the quilt top. Emma does give another construction method for this quilt for those that prefer to work across rows with the same type of block, which I suspect is possibly a faster construction method. I did these blocks slowly, with bits of chain piecing but most just constructing one row of each block at a time. Then I laid all the blocks out on the spare bed, trying to vary the placement of the different fabrics as much as possible between block, but not always succeeding. Then I sewed them all together! Ta-da!

Wake Me Up quilt progress photos

The finished quilt top is pretty, but really suffers from having too many fabrics in the same depth of colour.  You can see how well those darker ‘circle’ block centres pop.  If the grey fabrics had been much lighter you’d have a much better sense of the other interlocking shapes and secondary patterns that make up this quilt top.  Do take a look at the many marvellous and varied creations on Instagram to see just how terrific it can look.  This quilt top is now with the rest of the pile of quilt tops waiting to become quilts.  I’ve located backing fabric in my stash (it might require a little pieceing) and that’s now on my to-do list.  Time to get back to garment sewing for a while!

other people's craft, patchwork, quilting

happy hexagons

Do you remember when I showed you my Mum’s hand-pieced hexagons in progress?  Well, now I can show you the finished quilt!

Happy Hexagons quilt

I am so incredibly impressed that Mum hand-pieced the top of this quilt. I think that the borders might have been attached by machine, but otherwise it was many an evening of needle and thread.

Happy Hexagons quilt

Mum learned to hand-piece hexagons in a class taught by Kath Gale of Patchwork Charm. The long-arm quilting was done by Sue Evans of Quirky Quilter. I think that the swirls complement the hexagons beautifully.

Happy Hexagons quilt

And here’s the back!

Happy Hexagons quilt

Mum is already working on another hand-pieced quilt, also hexagons, but entirely different to these ones. I am really enjoying watching her progress (and thinking of the beautiful family heirloom quilts that will grace my daughters’ houses one day). Size wise, the quilt that she just completed is almost the size of a queen sized bed.

Happy Hexagons quilt

I also love watching the way that Mum operates when she is making a quilt. She buys just enough fabric, never any more than needed. In fact, with this quilt she bought small pieces of fabric at a time, only buying more as she ran out and wished to vary the palette a little. There is no leftover, no waste. She gets just the right amount for each part of the process. It is entirely the opposite of the way that I currently sew.

Happy Hexagons quilt

Congratulations Mum – this quilt is absolutely wonderful, and you should be very proud of your work!  (And by the way, Mum does have a name – it’s Alison).

adult's clothing, embroidery, family, quilting, sewing

in progress (and a huge thank you)

The instructions for this pattern have you sew each piece together, then topstitch.  Instead of topstitching by machine, I decided to do a hand running stitch.  But which colour to use?

IMG_8697

You’ll have to guess – the front of the dress is already done now, and now I’m working on the cuffs and neck band!

We haven’t heard anything from the Under 35s Quilt Competition, so assume that Clare didn’t win a prize. Although we’re a little sad about that, both Clare and I want to say a huge THANK YOU to all those who left such beautiful, encouraging comments! I don’t think that I’ve ever had as many comments on one blog post, and your wonderfully positive response has had a big impact on Clare.  She has had a grin from ear to ear after reading each and every one of them! Clare was also thrilled to see a photo of her quilt hanging in the exhibition – thanks to Amy for helping out!

Clare's "Ripe & Blooming" hanging on display

Entering the competition has been a terrific experience for Clare, and she’s looking forward to hanging her quilt up in her room once it comes back later in the year.  In the meantime, she’s busily working on a cross-stitch while spending time with her grandparents for the first week of school holidays.  She is definitely a winner in our eyes!

family, other people's craft, patchwork, quilting

Ripe and Blooming

Some months ago I read in Quilter’s Companion magazine that the Quilter’s Guild of NSW were running an Under 35s Quilt Competition.  Being more than a little over 35 myself, I mentioned it to Clare.  She was keen, and after reading the requirements and theme of “How Does Your Garden Grow” she started a concept drawing.

Ripe and Blooming - original concept drawing

Then I let her loose on my stash! Clare chose all the fabrics for her project herself, and I was impressed with her appreciation for value, shade, scale and pattern. She started by piecing the background. I gave some minor assistance with the rotary cutter and the iron (although she rapidly took over the ironing) but that was all – absolutely every other stitch and decision related to this quilt is Clare’s.

Ripe and Blooming - pieced background

Once the background was done, it was time for the applique. She started off by cutting out shapes in paper and arranging them, before moving on to cutting and fusing the shapes in fabric.

Ripe and Blooming - petals ready to be appliqued

Clare did what many of us do as they are making a quilt and allowed it to evolve and vary from her original design as she worked. There are elements that she left out, and others that she added. She drew all the shapes free hand, including the fruits. Pretty good for a nine year old! Then before we knew it the applique was done, the quilt sandwich made, and Clare quilted around the appliqued shapes close to the raw edges to give them more definition.

Ripe and Blooming - stitching on the binding

She quilted long diagonal rows through the background, like the rows that you plant in the garden. A number of binding fabrics were auditioned before she decided on a stripe.

Ripe and Blooming - stitching on the binding

A hanging sleeve was added to the back and the final touch was a label that Clare carefully wrote and hand-stitched into place. Ta-da – Clare’s first ever quilt! And just in time too!

Ripe and Blooming - done!

She named it “Ripe and Blooming”.  Clare says “I’m really proud of myself. At first I was taking it slowly then I found there was no time left! I did the last few things quickly but also being careful.”

I’m really proud of her too! Clare has been to many quilt exhibitions with me over the years, and has watched me quilting and listened to my mum and I talk quilts. It’s amazing how much information is absorbed! I did give suggestions and guidance throughout the process, but Clare was fairly definite about what suggestions she was interested in or not and mainly used her own common sense. The competition quilts will be on display this Friday, Saturday and Sunday from 10-4 at The Newington Gallery, Newington College, 221-235 Stanmore Road, Stanmore, New South Wales. If any of my blog readers are planning on going I’d love to see a photo of Clare’s quilt in situ! The winners of each section (Primary, Secondary, 18-24 and 25-34) will be announced on Saturday. Fingers crossed for Clare – but whether she wins anything or not, she’s definitely a winner with designing, planning, cutting, piecing, sewing, quilting, and binding this wonderful quilt all on her own at age nine!

patchwork, quilting

loving Thursdays

It’s Thursday again – my day without kids – well, for six hours or so anyway.  My day for trying to squeeze in all those tasks that can be done much more quickly without  the company of a four year old or a nine year old.  So while I am doing the ironing/visiting Medicare/visiting the travel agent/paying bills/getting petrol, I will be dreaming about quilting this work-in-progress.

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I put this together during the holidays back in January. It took very little time, and was lots of fun to do. I have backing fabric, I have batting, I have binding fabric. I just need some time to baste it and quilt it!

IMG_5156

Size wise it’s a small lap quilt, perfect for in the car, on your lap, or for a baby. I’ll possibly make another for my niece Leah – because she’s having a baby in July! I’m going to be a great-aunt! Who’d have thought it…

You can get the pattern for this quilt from the talented Kate.  Go on, make one!  But I’d better get back to that to-do list. Now!

medallion quilt-a-long, patchwork, quilting

medallion quiltalong – round 3: applique

Round 3 for the medallion quiltalong was applique.  Applique is not usually my scene.  It involves detailed design work and precision, not just sewing  bits of fabric together according to another clever person’s pattern.  So I decided on simple, large, bold, raw edge applique.  Except I’ve only fused it in place and haven’t appliqued it yet.  That will take my mother’s fancy schmancy sewing machine during the January holidays.

Medallion Quiltalong - three rounds done

Birds! As you can see, this quilt is getting big. Fast. Those eight inch blocks will do that. Anyway, the applique round was for November, so I am up to date. Sort of – the December theme is circles. And I don’t have enough fabric left to do them justice, so I’m going to sit out December. But I’m loving how this is coming along!

Round 3 applique in progress

books, patchwork, quilting

modern blocks (and a little giveaway)

I’ve finally got a copy in my hot little hands!  Modern Blocks, published by Stash Books.

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Of course, I’m excited because I have a block in there:

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But I’m even more excited because there are a couple more Aussies I know with blocks in there as well! They’ve been more prolific than me – Kate has two blocks in the book and Louise has four!

aussies in modern blocks

Kate‘s are the top two and Louise‘s the bottom four. But there are many, many more blocks in this book – in fact, there are 99 in total! It’s beautifully presented with a photo of each block and instructions on how to make it on the adjoining page. There are plenty of blocks in there from well known bloggers and quilters, and I think it’s a wonderful resource for anyone looking for some block designs that are a little bit new or are presented in a fresh way. It’s given me lots of ideas about the next quilt I could make…that is, once I finish the four (or five, or six, or is it seven) that are currently in progress. These are all twelve inch blocks, so translate nicely to sampler quilts, dolly quilts, or to cushions, placemats, table runners and similar. Or to fully blown quilts!

And because the nice people at Stash books actually sent me two copies and to celebrate my 1,111th blog post today, I’m going to give one away! I’m going to make you work for it – leave a comment saying what your favourite things to read about on my blog are – the garments I sew myself, the garments I sew for my girls, my crochet projects, vintage crochet Friday, stash building, pattern purchases, book purchases, patchwork and/or quilting, bags, my occasional blitherings, or something else entirely. I’m interested! I’ll draw a winner on Thursday 1st December.  I am happy to post overseas so everyone is welcome to enter.

EDITED TO ADD: The giveaway is over – thanks to all the people who entered!

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