teaching sewing confidence, tip by tip
Showing posts with label Kona. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kona. Show all posts

Tuesday, 25 November 2014

Giant HST Quilt Tutorial - (AKA My Turn To Be Queen Bee)


Hard to believe it's almost December again and that means it's my turn to be Queen Bee in our NYC Metro Mod Quilt Guild Bee.

When my daughter Flicky went off to uni she took her quilt with her (My Very First Ever Quilt) so I want to replace it for her trips home and I'm asking my Bee friends to help me.

My inspiration is this 3.5'  x 3.5'  box framed copy of Warhol's Marilyn Monroe hanging in our apartment over Flicky's bed.


I want a quilt that’s abstract, bold and bright so I've designed this Giant HST quilt.  At this extra busy time of year, I like to make my Bee Blocks super quick and easy and it really doesn't come much easier than HSTs plus they have such great impact.


I’ve sent everyone a fat quarter (fq) of Charcoal Kona Solid and asked them to add a fq from their given colour group to make me two giant HST blocks.  Colours are divided into four groups so I’ll hopefully receive blocks across the full-colour range and not 22 blocks of one colour!

Bee Members are to choose a colour from their colour group:
Group 1: Red/Orange/Yellow - Earamichia/Judith/Kim
Group 2: Pink/Purple – Andrea/Maria/Rossanna
Group 3: Lime/Green/Turquoise – Brian/Ariana/Maren
Group 4: Blue/Aqua – Emily N/Emily K

I've asked everyone to keep fabric colours rich – I’m looking for saturation and intense colour and brightness within these colour palettes.  They can use solids or tone on tone prints – brights with an intensity of colour, trying not to use pastels or white.  I’ve used a tiny amount of white in a handful of my sample blocks but the overall feel of these fabrics is still of vibrant colour and the white isn’t the main player.

I also want seams pressed open (so the finished blocks will lie as flat as possible) and blocks returned to me untrimmed.


If you've stuck with me this far you might be looking for the tute here it is!!!

Giant HST Quilt Tutorial


Materials:
For my quilt Kona Solid Charcoal is the 'main' fabric used in every HST block then I've used a selection of brights.  For each block, you'll need 2 fqs - 1 x main and 1 x bright.

To make this 36 x HST square quilt top you'll need:
 4.5 yds main fabric and 18 bright fqs (equivalent to 4.5 yds)
The finished quilt top size will be 96" x 96".


Making The Blocks:
Cut your main fq and your bright fq down to two 17.5” square blocks.  This is a slightly larger square than you need to make a 16.5" finished HST block but cutting at 17.5" is visually easier and will give extra wiggle room when trimming down to size, by all means cut smaller if you're confident in your cutting and sewing.


I'm cutting through 3 layers at a time here as you can see above.


To cut my 17.5" squares I've lined up my 12.5" square ruler along it's 11.5" line and then placed my long 6" wide ruler next to it - giving me a 17.5" line. 


Above you can see how I've used the 11.5" line of the ruler along the edge of the fabric.


Draw a pencil line across one diagonal of the 17.5" square.  If your ruler isn't long enough then use another ruler to extend fully across the fabric as I have above.


Place the two fat quarters right sides together (consider the drawn line to be the ‘wrong’ side of your main fabric block).


Sew a ¼” seam on one side of your drawn line using your drawn line as your guide.


Then repeat a 1/4" sewn seam on the other side of the drawn line.


This is how your sewn blocks will look with two parallel lines of stitching.


Cut along your drawn line to create 2 giant HSTs.


Press seams open to create a flatter block and subsequent smoother quilt finish for this modern quilt.


Trim blocks down to 16.5" squares.


Below is a photo of the blocks I've made - I need 36 blocks in total and my fellow Bees will be making me 22 (hopefully!) so I've made 14 blocks myself to finish the quilt.



Completing The Quilt Top:
Joining the blocks - use a 1/4" seam to join all blocks in a row, then join all rows to form the quilt top.  Pay particular attention to the seams, nesting and pinning as necessary to ensure accurate seam joints - (see my Easy Scrappy Nine Patches tute to learn how to nest seams).  Press seams open.


As always you can check out all the blocks that our Bee make for my Giant HST Quilt on my Quilty - Giant HST Block Pinterest Board - I'll add more pins as each person in the Bee posts photos of their finished blocks and you can see my NYC Mod Quilt Guild post here too.


Clicking on an image will take you to through to the new page of crafty goodness :)


Disclaimer: This post is for informational purposes only, no payment or commission is received on click-throughs and opinions are my own.




Saturday, 16 August 2014

The Rockin' Robot Laminate Backed Picnic Playmat

   

Not long now until my grandson, Oliver, will be with us and son, Jack and Ana have been busy planning and equipping their nursery.  A few weeks ago they sent me this pic of Jack, and my daughter, Flicky, painting the room


and when they sent this finished paintwork pic they said they were going with a space theme.


In my stash was this panel - same colours and a space theme - all robots, space ships and rockets - Blue Sky Studio "Rockets and Robots" for Benartex


Sending back this pic we started discussing what I could make it into - a wall hanging, play mat, picnic blanket - the final consensus a waterproof playmat/picnic blanket - softening the wooden bedroom floor and perfect for outdoor picnics.


The panel wasn't wide enough on its own so I added red rocket fabric borders, also from my stash - Out of this World by jill mcdonald for P&B Textiles.

Once the top was complete I attached fusible batting and free motion quilted it without a backing using Aurifil 40/2 #2770 - Very Light Delft.


The background and borders are stippled while I've framed and outlined each image - you can see the fmq easily here on the batting side.


Once complete I spray basted the batting with Odif 505 temporary fabric adhesive spray and attached a red and white polka dot laminate backing (Riley Blake Designs Pattern C350-80 Dots by The RBD Designers) then bound the playmat with Kona Solid - Jade Green.  Finished playmat size 39" x 48".


Time for the photo shoot.


Oh and here's a couple of robot friends that I couldn't resist buying for Oliver too.


I did the photoshoot before carrying out the part of the process I was dreading - washing the playmat.  I had no idea what would happen given it's a quilted top and non-quilted laminate backing.


I'm delighted to report the playmat washed perfectly.  Obviously the backing is now only attached to the playmat by the bound edges and no longer firmly attached to the complete top as the temporary spray glue has washed away but that doesn't affect the finished playmat at all. In fact it was better the back was no longer attached as the top crinkled and shrank in the wash - the way quilts do - and the back remained the same size and flat.

I hung the playmat over the shower rail until it was half dry and then I ironed the quilted top (not the laminate side!) twice with a nice warm iron (taking care not to stay too long on one place - didn't want to melt through the back).  The quilted top went back to size and completely flat again.

Such a relief - no point in a baby play mat that can't be machine washed!!!

And here's a pic of the washed playmat - can't make it bigger because it's a phone pic and too blurry, it's the pic I sent to Jack and Ana the moment I knew all had gone well, but trust me it's perfect!


I simply can't wait to see Oliver playing on it :D



 
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Monday, 8 April 2013

Woven Star & Woven Chevrons Blocks - Skill Builder BOM: March/FMQ


Can't believe it - I'm totally up-to-date finally with the Skill Builder BOM, and I seem to have got the hang of this fmqing lark as I don't need to have my shoulders surgically removed from my earlobes this month!

WOVEN STAR
Kaffe Fassett - Baba Ganoush


WOVEN CHEVRONS
 
Kaffe Fassett - Millefiore


Had a bit of a disaster with my Water Erasable Marker by Clover - I tried out a couple of fmq designs and changed my mind, but they wouldn't erase properly.  I've never had a problem before, and I'd have highly recommended the pen to anyone and everyone. Still, for some reason, and only on the Kona Solid red and orange fabric that I've used in my Woven Star block, it didn't disappear this time when I wet the fabric.  I took some photos to share with you:


I soaked the fabric and gently rubbed it a few times (this has always done the trick with any stubborn marks before) but the lines stayed put.  In the end, I've just quilted my new designs over them, which has made the pen marks far less noticeable, but I'm hoping they disappear properly when the quilt is washed.  I've got a long wait to find out as the quilt won't be finished/washed until next December when the Skill Builder BOM is complete, and that's concerning me a bit as I reckon the ink will be well and truly set into the fabric by then - any ideas/tips anyone???

  
Here are a few photos of my March progress to date; of course, none of the blocks is in the correct order as yet - we're jumping around the quilt each month doing two blocks that use similar techniques rather than building the quilt a row at a time.


and it occurred to me that maybe you'd like to see how the back is coming on -

Next Time: We'll be doing some hand pieced English Paper Piecing, but Alyssa @Pile O'Fabric's going to share a different method with us that involves an applique foundation that stays in place and when the quilt is washed, it becomes part of the fibres in your fabric/quilt - sounds really interesting, looking forward to finding out more.



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