Finally. After much procrastination, it's done.
I put off the backing and binding for weeks. It's my least-favorite part of making a large quilt. It's just so hard to get the fabric completely smooth. At least the front was already quilted, so I knew that part would look wrinkle-free. I don't recommend the use of quilt basting spray. Yikes. What a mess. Just ask my poor husband, who really tried to help me with that part. By the end, our socks were sticking to the floor, and the quilt was crooked and creased. But we emerged victorious!
This came out exactly as I envisioned it, which nearly never happens to me. I kinda made it up as I went, with the intent of having large enough pieces of the prints to be able to fully appreciate them. I just love this fabric! (Indie by Pat Bravo, in case you missed that part.) I sewed up the strips first, and then quilted as I sewed them together into rows. The top corner has a blank navy rectangle, which adds a fun bit of asymmetry.
I detest hand-sewing binding, so I wrapped the edges of the backing around to the front and machine stitched the whole thing.
The backing is a couple of large pieces of my favorite prints from the front.
Showing posts with label quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilt. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 15, 2013
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
What I'm Working On: Indie Quilt
I have been hoarding my stash of lovely Indie fabric by Pat Bravo ever since it arrived in my mailbox many months ago. I knew I wanted to make a quilt for my bed with it, especially after seeing Maureen's. But I wanted to take my time with it, making sure that I think it through enough beforehand so that I love it in the end. The fabrics are a mix of florals and geometrics in gorgeous jewel tones. To ground them (and make it a bit more "manly") I am pairing them with a navy Moda Bella solid.
I've been saving ideas on a Pinterest board and collecting some fun coordinating accessories to tie the quilt in to the rest of the room. The hard part is that I don't know what the room itself will look like--by the time I get this project finished, we will be moving to a new house/town/state thanks to the good old US Coast Guard. But I want to have it ready to go when we get there, wherever there may be.
I started cutting the fabric this week. I don't want it to look too planned, but I am just not the type of person who can dive in with no plan at all! I am basing my design on the Uneven Coins quilt in Block Party. But I want my "coins" to be large enough to showcase the large-scale prints of the fabric.
I'm going to try out a method for making the strips that I found in my new book from Tula Pink. I think it will be a real time saver.
The plan is to make 5 columns of "coins", each column quilted as I go using the method I learned in Rachael's stocking pattern. Wish me luck!!
I've been saving ideas on a Pinterest board and collecting some fun coordinating accessories to tie the quilt in to the rest of the room. The hard part is that I don't know what the room itself will look like--by the time I get this project finished, we will be moving to a new house/town/state thanks to the good old US Coast Guard. But I want to have it ready to go when we get there, wherever there may be.
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Birch-inspired prints by Alaskan artist Katie Sevigny |
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I snagged two of these awesome wall hooks in the clearance room at Blackbeary Bog in Homer. |
I started cutting the fabric this week. I don't want it to look too planned, but I am just not the type of person who can dive in with no plan at all! I am basing my design on the Uneven Coins quilt in Block Party. But I want my "coins" to be large enough to showcase the large-scale prints of the fabric.
I'm going to try out a method for making the strips that I found in my new book from Tula Pink. I think it will be a real time saver.
The plan is to make 5 columns of "coins", each column quilted as I go using the method I learned in Rachael's stocking pattern. Wish me luck!!
Sunday, August 12, 2012
Quilt Top Complete!
I have made several quilts in the past, but this is the first one that I have attempted without the use of a specific pattern. I like following patterns and having things turn out exactly how they are "supposed" to, so improving a quilt is very much out of my comfort zone.
I started with the New York Beauty quilt-a-long at Sew Sweetness, but I only made the blocks that I liked the look of. I ended up with 15 blocks. Then I decided to try some scrappy improv chevrons. I followed these directions at Six White Horses, but I cut all of my wedges at the same angle, because I wanted them to go well with the precise points on the New York Beauty blocks, and attached them all together in a long strip. I cut the strip lengthwise and made two chevron stripes on either side of my New York Beauty blocks. I saved the scraps from my chevrons and sewed them all together, then chopped them up again and mixed in some solid gray to create a fun scrappy border.
Not having a plan was really difficult for me, but really fun at the same time. My daughter loves the result and has claimed this quilt for her bed. Now I need to quilt it! I think I may try to do it myself, since it's a twin size.
Not having a plan was really difficult for me, but really fun at the same time. My daughter loves the result and has claimed this quilt for her bed. Now I need to quilt it! I think I may try to do it myself, since it's a twin size.
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