Showing posts sorted by relevance for query quilt. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query quilt. Sort by date Show all posts

Friday, October 29, 2010

Olivia's 3-D Bow Tie Quilt

Amy's Creative Side - Blogger's Quilt Festival
I'm stepping out of my comfort zone a bit and joining the Blogger's Quilt Festival.   Inspiration for this quilt came from the arrival of a special little girl, Olivia.  If you'd like to read her story, hope on over here, where this quilt first began. This quilt was the source of much joy, prayer, tears, and mutterings, along with many trips to see the Quilt Lady.





  I first saw a 3-D Bow Tie quilt while attending a quilt show in Dallas over 15 years ago.  There was a booth set up for fellow quilters to complete a square and it would be added to a special quilt going to a charity. I was intrigued and asked if I could complete an extra square so I could take it home.  It sat dormant in my idea box until Olivia was born and it really seemed the perfect quilt for her. Using scraps from two quilts I recently made and a new fabric added in, Olivia's 3-D Bow Tie Quilt was created from the heart.
Mostly because of inspiration from Tracy
I wanted to add some personalization 
words that represented


She is surrounded   by

and she is so very


and most of all, there is




Olivia's hand prints along with her 2 siblings are hidden in the quilt




















Introducing Miss Olivia and her quilt.
Isn't she beautiful!
Since this was my first real quilt (my others were rag quilts), I learned a lot  along the way. My own machine is not able to handle free-motion quilting. I was so thankful to The Quilt Lady, who allowed me to borrow her sweet machine to finish Olivia's quilt.  This eliminated much stress and ripping out thread bunched up on the back of the quilt.  It didn't matter how much I or Tracy adjusted my machine, it wouldn't do it.  I even took it to the shop and had it worked on in hopes to solve the problem.  I love going over to the Quilt Lady's place - to me it was a comfortable place, where I can sit down, talk, and she would take time out of her busy day to guide me along, encourage me, and show me how to solve a problem.  What a blessing and dear friend she has been in letting me borrow her really cool machine, which made finishing this quilt more stress-free.

I entered this in the Spring Bloggers' Quilt Festival
Now if you don't already know about this, please visit Amy's Creative Side because she's hosting her 4th Blogger's Quilt Festival this week!



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Monday, February 8, 2010

Making a Rag Quilt - Free instructions

Recently I started making rag quilts.  My first venture was to make a rag quilt for a friend who is expecting the end of March.  I saw my first Rag Quilt at Just For Fun Fabrics and decided I just had to try it.  The great thing about Rag Quilts is the more you wash them, the softer and more comfy they get.

After a lot of research, and visits to the fabric store, this is what I did. 
Here's what you need: sewing machine, matching thread, 4-8 types of coordinating fabric, batting or filler material (used Warm & Natural), rotary cutter & mat or scissors, ruler or template of the size squares you need to cut.  I recommend spring action Micro-tip Scissors as they will save your hands and time.

1.  Determine the size of quilt you want to make and select your material. At Learning to Quilt, I found some handy charts that tell you what standard sizes are for quilts and Block Math Charts (takes all the guess work out of how many squares you can get depending on the size). Here is an awesome Quilter's calculator that I found after I killed my brain thinking it all out.
  • I used 6 different fabrics with 5 inch squares for the baby quilt.  12 rows wide and 15 long. If you do 5 inch squares, you can get almost 60 squares from 1 yard of material.
  • For Only's Twin size, I am using 5 inch square - 20 square wide and 24 squares long.  This makes it about 4-6" bigger than a regular twin comforter. For a Twin sized quilt I used the following to figure out how many total fabric squares.  I can only hope it makes sense for you because this is the only way it makes sense in my brain! For example:
    • 20 x 24=480  480 ÷ 8 (or the number of different fabric patterns) = 60 squares each
    • 20 x 24 = 480   480 ÷ 5 types different fabrics = 96 squares each fabric.
    • For the queen size denim rag quilt, I'm using tons of misc denim from old jeans and heavy decorator type fabrics with 6" squares. I wanted our quilt a little bigger, so I'm making it 18x18 squares, so I will need 324 squares.  Because it is so big, it is taking me a while gather that much material and cut the jeans up. You can make a quilt like this with square up to 10" so you will need less total number of square. I don't recommend making a large quilt with squares smaller than 6" or it will take FOREVER!
    2.  Cut your fabric squares for the front. The size of your squares depends on the size of quilt you want. I used my rotary cutter, mat, and ruler to make it a breeze.  If you use this, you can cut multiple layers at one time - a real time saver. You can make a template from an old cardboard box if that is what you have.  You can buy a heavy quilt ruler template at your local fabric store/Hobby Lobby etc. or if you are lucky you may find a fabric store has an AccuQuilt GO!™ Fabric Cutter that you can use.

    3.  Cut the squares for the back of your quilt.  It is easier if you keep this one type of fabric.  It can be flannel, a matching print from the top fabric, or something totally different.  If you are using 480 squares to make your quilt, you will need to cut 480 - 5"squares for the back.  For Only's quilt, I used the brown with pink polka dots, so I bought enough material of this to cut 480 squares.



    4.  Cut your batting/lining squares 1" smaller than your fabric squares - I made mine an easy 4". I made my Rag Quilt out of quilter's cotton and used Warm and Natural batting.


      5.  I then made an “open sandwich” – place one batting square in the center of the wrong side of a fabric square. Next I “quilted” the two layers together by sewing an “X” on the right side of the fabric block.  I repeated this process until I had all the blocks "quilted".  A handy hint:  If you stop the stitching just before you reach the end of the square, this will help when you sew the rows together and also when you snip the seams later.

    56.  Arrange the pieces.  You need to see what pattern you want your quilt to have.  Maybe a diagonal, or no specific pattern - a little crazy and unpredictable.  I chose to do a diagonal for simplicity. If you have fabric that have a definite pattern and not just random dots, decide if you want them to be horizontal or vertical or both.

    7. Now let's put those two sandwich pieces together.I like to stack my pieces in the correct sequence within easy reach so I can grab and back and front and sew them without having to think too much if I have something out of order.


    8.  Now it's time to start putting it together!
    • Take a quilted back and a plain back (wrong sides together).  Make sure the edges match as it will make a difference when you are constructing your quilt.  (pix on right)
    •  Do it again, using the next pattern piece.  Put the backs together and sew a neat seam 
       9.  The next step is to join the rag quilt sandwiches in rows,       attaching the back to the front, and sew the rows.  This isn't as complicated as it seems. Let's take it step by step.   
    • Take a quilted front piece and lay a back piece (wrong sides together). You have a small sandwich. and use a 1/2″ seam allowance. You’ll need the larger seam allowance – this becomes the raggedy edges. Take care to make sure all the exposed edges will be on the same side. Open this up and you'll see the exposed seam
    •  Keep going with this until you have an entire row of however many wide you need it.  
    • Sew another row just like the last one.  If you are doing a particular pattern with the quilt squares, make sure you are beginning with the correct one. After you finish the 2nd row, sew it to the 1st row, making sure you continue to sew them together backside together = seam showing on the front of the quilt... Which is exactly what you want
      • Something that helps with making it look great is to make sure the seams from each square match.  This will make sure you don't have too much left over in the end. Which is something you don't want!
    10. Sew a stay stitch or a decorative stitch around the outer edges to stabilize you quilt and "seal" the edges so they don't unravel all the way.  You want to make sure this is the same seam allowance as you used on the rest of the quilt.

    11.  Clipping the seams.  When you have all the rows sewn together and it is the size that you want,  the fun begins.  If you don't have spring-loaded scissors that I talked about earlier, you need a pair of gloves to wear to protect your hand.  You are now going to clip all the seams.  Caution: Do not cut through the seams! 

    When you have all the seams clipped, throw it in the washer and dryer. The more the rag quilt is washed the more soft and cuddly it gets.


    Wednesday, January 2, 2013

    Miss AB's Just Growing quilt

    When Miss AB's birthday began approaching, I knew I wanted to make her a quilt.  Something fun, with bright colors that alluded to her sparkling and energetic personality. 
    JellyBean jumble
    I had a plan in my head that I wanted to use Jellybean quilt pattern by Thimble Blossom.   Had my material all picked, blocks pieces cut and assembly started.  Then I realized I was doomed.  I had grabbed some white pieces from a previous quilt, Raine's X-rated quilt.  It really messed up the whole thing! Wonky to the seams and no matter how hard I worked, ripped, re-sewn, and adjusted, it just wasn't working out, so literally, I scrapped it. While it may look okay in the picture, the cute little white turned squares were not matching up, which threw off the rest of the points and seams. 
    Cute dots on applique
    Plan B:  New material, different pattern:  LeAnne Ballard's Just Growing from Moda Bakeshop.  I've had this in my "going to make this quilt someday" book (everyone has one right?) and loved the cute personalized flower applique.  It really seemed like the right choice for Miss AB!  Easy construction and layout, thought I made two major layout errors, Honey and Only said no one would know.  Well, now the whole world does!  I left off a white square on the second row and I completely flipped the last two rows. I can't follow directions worth a hoot!  I decided to only add one strip of fabric instead of two, like LeAnne directed, mainly because I wanted it to fit the quilt batting I already had in my stash. 

    personalized flower
    Cutting out the applique letters and flowers took some time and some thinking power, but Oldest took that evening to introduce me to Duck Dynasty... life will never be the same (can you see me rolling my eyes). Honey said the flowers needed a little something, so I added some "star" dots to the center of the flowers and voila! 

    Personalization on the back
    Using soft baby brown corduroy for the backing, I appliqued her name in Polaroid type frames, making sure they were purposely wonky, then added another flower underneath, using a blanket stitch for all the applique.  Because my machine was acting up, I decided to get out my walking foot and quilt straight lines, connecting the corners, leaving the strip of fabric across the stop un-quilted for an added focus on her hand prints (brought together to form a heart).  I wish I had a picture of that, but I don't at this time. This is the first time I "went beyond the border) and did not add a border and I must confess I liked the idea!  I'll have to do this one again as it was such an easy and fun quilt to do! 
    The front before quilting
    Ready to be snuggled with





















    The doomed quilt pieces?  I'll have to save their final purpose for another day.  I'm so glad you stopped by today!  Have you ever started a project and had to "scrap" it because it was a total fail?  I'd love to hear how you "saved" the day!

    Thursday, December 9, 2010

    Izzy's Sparkling Gemstone Quilt

     Someone just turned two!!!  
    What am I to do?
    Make a Princess sized quilt, of course! 

    Searching high and low
    fabric with just the right pizazz
    pile of inspiration
     Finally found some Izzy-like fabric 
     and I mulled over a pattern
    there are so many wonderful ones out there

    Through the Blogger's Quilt Festival
    and the wonderful ladies there
    I found a pattern that caught my eye

    Layer Cake, Jelly Roll & Charm Quilts
    The Sparkling Gemstone!


    strips become blocks
    and blocks became a quilt
    colorful mosaic pathway

    Keeping the quilt a secret was hard,
    but getting Izzy's hand and footprints
    was messy and fun
    "Yucky mess" she says.


    Thanks to the Quilt Lady
    who took on the quilting
    I was able to finish
    hand sewing the binding
    (as QL predicted)
    on the way to the party...
    *Can you hear the White Rabbit now?
    "I'm late, I'm late for a very important date!"


    Hidden word in the quilt describe The Princess
    "Izzy, Sassy, blessed, Princess, Spunky"


    Center flower
    From the backside things are more clear

    A toddler sized quilt




    Lovely Sleeping Princess
    taken by her sweet momma
    The colors in the pictures are not that great, but it's winter and slightly blah outside. It was below freezing when I took these pictures!  Have you ever done something in secret for someone else or finished a project on the way to when you needed to turn it in?  Please tell me I'm not alone on this one!

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    Wednesday, January 23, 2019

    For Ava Maria - a little quilt

    A close friend's daughter,  who was close friend's with Only in highschool, was expecting her first little one, last Fall (she is a year old now), and I wanted to make a  little quilt for her.  

    I needed it to be fast and quick, but wanted to make sure it was unique for them.  Building on her love of Classic Pooh, I tried to go with basic water colors, and it took on a mind of it's own.  I certainly was not in love with it when I started, and the back of the quilt soon became the front. 
    The front of the quilt
    Back

    I was able to make the applique flowers on the embroidery machine and applique them on the quilt, which saved me a little time.



    I love adding some details - adjectives and a Bible verse on this one, finishing up with FMQ, free motion quilting.






    Little Ava Marie
    In the end, I loved the quilt and almost hated to give it up, but Needless to say, she and her husband loved the quilt! Each month, they took a picture of Ava on her quilt, next to her sweet rabbit. 










    Until next time!

    Lynnet