Sunday, November 18, 2018

Jelly Roll Rug


Jelly Roll Rug    27" x 41"

Start with a roll of batting 2 1/4" wide by Bosal called Katahdin On-A-Roll, and the Jelly Roll Rug pattern by RJ Designs then add......




.....one jelly roll of pretty fabric Kaffe Fasset by Free Spirit.

The strips of fabric are sewn together end to end. As I did this I wound them onto an empty toilet paper roll.

To keep the batting and fabric tidy while unwinding I hung a dowel rod off the back of my sewing table and slid the fabric and batt roll onto it.

The fabric and batt came up from below.

Fold both sides toward the middle and sew.

I let the sewn "rope" puddle on the floor.

When the fabric was gone I still had a little batting left on the roll.

Since green was the last color off the spool it became the center of the rug. Zigzag stitch going around and around and around.

This rug is for Sasha to sleep on while in my sewing room.

She loves her rug.

She loves it more when it's in the sunshine.




Wednesday, May 23, 2018

Beach Road Coverlet

"Beach Road" coverlet 60" x 72"
 designed by Susan Holman, 2018



Fabric needed: 
1 set of 40 fat eights. (I used Beach Road by Jen Kingwell)
3 yards of complimentary solid color (Aqua Infinite Dots by Victoria Findlay Wolfe)




From each print cut 2: 2" x 22". From solid cut 40: 2" x Width Of Fabric.
Sub cut the solid into 22" lengths.
Sew the prints to the solids. Press seams toward the solid.

Cut each strip set into 6 units each 3 1/2" square.

Make separate piles with 40 units each--1 of each print.

Sew each pile into a Block with 8 rows of 5 units each.
Start upper left with the solid color, alternate each row to get the pattern.
Press vertical seams toward the solid. Press horizontal seams all one direction.
Make 12 Blocks. Each should be 15 1/2" x 24 1/2". Each Block will have 40 unique fabrics.
Sew the Blocks together in 3 rows of 4 Blocks each. It should then be 60 1/2" x 72 1/2".

I layered the quilt top with a pieced backing (NO BATTING) and quilted it along all seam lines.
(I chose to eliminate the batting to purposely make this a lightweight coverlet.)


Quilt along the seam lines.

Add binding. Machine wash and dry. Done!

I pieced one of each fabric and added beach footprint fabric.

The label has a selvage from the Beach Road by Jen Kingwell fabric and I added a solid blue fabric with my name and the year finished.

Label.
The back has seashells and foot prints.

This is half the Beach Road coverlet.




Tuesday, April 10, 2018

Jelly Roll Scrap Buster


I have a large heap of scrap fabric that needs to be whittled down. This block is sometimes called Puss In The Corner. It uses a surprisingly small amount of fabric. My scrap pile isn't shrinking at all.

I don't know what the quilt will be called yet but here is the beginning of it.

Since jelly roll fabric is 2 1/2" wide it's perfect to use for this block. Cut 2 identical squares for the sides and one square for the center and one square for the corners. ALL cut 2 1/2" SQ.

Cut the pair of matching squares in half. So each piece is 1 1/4" x 2 1/2".
Cut one of the remaining squares into 4 pieces each 1 1/4" SQ.

Arrange it with the big square in the center and little squares on the outer corners.

Sew all the rows together.

 90 blocks on the design wall, not sewn together yet.
I have no idea how big this quilt will be. 
But I do have a piece of woven fabric I'd like to use on the back of a quilt,
 so maybe I'll make these blocks fit to that fabric.....


Friday, January 19, 2018

Home Sweet Home Fairy Godmother

Who is your Fairy Quilt Godmother? The website Paper Panache has free fairy godmother patterns. If you answer some silly multiple choice questions and hit the enter button you'll get links to each section of your fairy godmother. This is paper foundation pieced so all you've got to do is print the patterns and sew them up. All the fairies are different so you never know what you'll get! This is Lynn's fairy.

I like to use colored pencils to color the pieces. It's SOOO much easier to get the colors right and not accidentally put background where hair goes plus you get an idea of what she will look like. I'm adding the fabric license plate SWEET HOME from a quilt shop in Alabama. (My daughter and I love the movie Sweet Home Alabama and this fairy is for her.)

The necklace is a thimble but I just had to sneak a gecko into the quilt.

And she is doubly blessed to have this extra fairy in her quilt.

I heavily quilted the background so....

.....her face would pop out!

This brown/orange batik was absolutely perfect for her frame.

Home Sweet Home Fairy......for Lynn. 
May you have many happy years in your new home.

Link to Finish it Friday at Crazy Mom Quilts.


Monday, January 8, 2018

On Ringo Lake 2017 Quiltville Mystery

The 2017 Quiltville Mystery "On Ringo Lake" designed by Bonnie Hunter began the day after Thanksgiving with clue #1. I didn't change the colors she used I just intensified them.

9 patch blocks was clue #1.

Orange flying geese was clue #2.

Clue #3 had a different scale of unit. These were destined to be sashing pieces but I made them into the outside border on my quilt.
Clue #4 was the aqua square plus 2 brown triangles.
Clue #6 added the orange triangle to make it square.


Clue #5 was brown flying geese.
In clue #7  we sewed the orange and brown geese together in pairs.

Clue #8 was assembling the blocks using the previous clues.

Clue #9 was the reveal on the setting. This was where I jumped ship and did my own thing with the setting. I used her sashing units and sewed them together to make this cool zig zag for the outside border. I used a narrow brown sashing fabric cut 1" wide to frame the blocks and help with the bulky seam joints.
I only used half of the blocks and did a straight setting 5 x 5 plus the border. My quilt top finished at 57"x57" but after quilting and washing it was 54" x 54".

This is Bonnie Hunter's "On Ringo Lake" quilt setting.


I like the intense oranges and browns in this quilt. It is almost 100% batiks.
( I did add one gecko face for fun.)
I'm not sure what I'll do with the other half of the blocks yet.




Monday, January 1, 2018

Plaid Strings UFO Finished


Several years ago I started this plaid quilt which was a Bonnie Hunter design called The Quilt That Love Built. I used yellow pages as the paper foundation to sew the plaid blocks. Once all 81 blocks were done I worked on the sashing units. I had all but 30 finished when I packed it away in a UFO box. This fall when my quilt bee had a mini quilt retreat, I took this UFO to work on when my On Ringo Lake (Bonnie Hunter 2017 Quiltville Mystery quilt) clue was done.

All plaid fabrics!

Here are all the units for the 100 9 Patch posts. One thing I've learned from doing the Bonnie Hunter mystery quilts each fall is that I can sew an enormous amount of units in a short amount of time if I keep at it.

When looking for backing fabric I found this 108" wide red that I already had!

I assembled the quilt quickly and quilted it on a snowy day in early December.

All done with binding too!!

Before washing it was 84" x 84".

I love how it looks woven. 
My mom is a weaver so she was the recipient of the quilt this Christmas.




Plaid Strings finished! 
The quilt on the quilt rack in the corner is Celtic Solstice the 2013 Quiltville Mystery quilt by Bonnie Hunter.