Quilters Lead Pieceful Lives.

Saturday, July 29, 2023

Baby Blooms

This quilt is for baby Isabella, sister to William (whose quilt I made exactly 2 years ago). 

The parents asked for a flower theme, with pastel colors.

We looked around and found this pattern on the internet at Sew Fresh Quilts. However, as written, the finished quilt would be 63" x 83"!  That's a tad too big for a baby quilt.  The odd size is also a result of each block finishing at 8" x 15". Definitely not your normal square block!!!

Initially, I thought I could just scale down the blocks, to maybe 4" x 7.5". But with all the pieces in each flower, that would have been very difficult to make and the effect of the different colors / patterns in each flower would have been practically lost. 

Instead, I just reduced the pattern from a layout of 5 across and 4 down to one of 3 across and 3 down. This gave me a finished size of 38" x 60". Five feet is still pretty long for a tiny girl to drag around, so maybe they will just hang it on the wall.

The petals of each flower are made of 4 different fabrics. So we decided to make two sets: 5 of the flowers have one grouping of the same four fabs, and the other 4 flowers have a different set of fabs. The leaves and stems are the same for all nine flowers.

I free-motion quilted each of the blossoms using a pastel variegated thread. For the leaves, I used a modified zig-zag stitch and sort of randomly eased my way across each (twice) to simulate the ribs.

The sashing is white-on-white with tiny stars (we were not able to find white-on-white with flowers!). But the outer border does have tiny white flowers on a light teal (mint?).

And on the bottom, I added an "Isabella" monogram, also in variegated pastel threads.



A very happy quilt! Hope you love it, Isabella!  

Monday, March 6, 2023

Moby Quilt

Paper piecing!  Curves!   3D - Op Art!

What could be better!

This excellent pattern from Audrey Esary was actually pretty easy to do. 


Each black and white strip is cut oversized, sewn into place, and then trimmed.  You basically do two mirror-image sets of the same half-spiral. Then they are joined around the central "eye", with just a little bit of partial-seam finagling. 

The only really "tricky" part was then getting the center circle "embedded" into the outer border. YES! That is one solid piece of fabric with a center hole cut out. I had to flip the pieced center and work backwards and around the border, easing into the curves. It actually worked!!!

For the quilting, I did not want to detract from the visual impact of the mobius itself, so I did parallel vertical lines using clear mono-filament thread. But to reinforce / echo the expanding bands in the mobius design, I gradually increased the distance between the stitched lines, going from .5" at the central section to 1.25" at the edges.

The finished piece (26" x 26") was then mounted on stretcher bars.