Showing posts with label spools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label spools. Show all posts
Friday, March 5, 2021
An epic finish
It feels like an epic finish. I started this quilt in 2004 maybe at least that is when the Kim Diehl book was published. I made this with a group of friends, we each made our own but most followed Kim's directions for half square triangles in the spools. I did them with the y seam. (click for step by step how to) I started hand quilting this because that was the overwhelming consensus to hand quilt. So I did until a couple moves ago when it ended up in a box and then on the top shelf of my art materials closet. I pulled it out this winter and studied it for a while. Finish hand quilting this or just finish it?!?! Only 3 spools left to quilt but all those geese.... .....and then somthing traditional in the plain borders. Will it ever get finished if I hand quilt it? In all honesty, probably not, then it will end up on a rummage sale when I am gone. I really love these colors and the pattern. Its my quilt..... finish it by machine and finish it. So I did and I feel so go to finish a quilt that I started 17 years ago. --Ann--
Labels:
hand quilting,
machine quilting,
pastel,
quilt,
spools,
Y seam
Wednesday, May 14, 2014
a favorite color combination
I love pink and green together I found some more in the yarn shop.
Come back tomorrow to see the quilts and Friday to see what the yarn is going to be. Until then blissfully happy with sticks and string.--Ann--
Come back tomorrow to see the quilts and Friday to see what the yarn is going to be. Until then blissfully happy with sticks and string.--Ann--
Tuesday, October 2, 2012
The Erin Quilts VII
Erin's Fish and Aquarium When Erin was 3 I took a sampler class with the intention of making a pastel quilt for her big bed. As I was looking at the pinks and yellows she was tugging on an Alexander Henry print with tropical fish. I finally said what about these fish!??!! She completely pushed me out of my comfort zone. I learned about using orange in this quilt. I love orange now. A little orange goes a long way but it is like turning the lights on in a quilt. With the left overs I made the attic windows quilt my philosophy at the time was why buy a little fabric when you can buy a whole bunch. The red sashing is the back of the feather fabric I used up in the August color challenge quilt. Why did I buy so much of that? I was using the folded accent strip in the border back in 1995 I was free motion quilting back then on my Elna, I did a lot of stitching in the ditch I quilted around each of the fish in the borders. I learned many techniques in the sampler class, curved piecing, Y seams, hand applique, and formulas for triangles. Wow I mitered a lot of corners for both these quilts. --Ann--
Labels:
9 patch,
color challenge,
hand applique,
lady of the lake,
spools,
star,
tri rec star,
Y seam
Monday, May 21, 2012
Y seam tutorial spool block
Mitered corners, Y seam, spool block I just love spool blocks
I cut 2 inch wide strips for this spool and a 2 inch center square. Using leftovers from previous project. Use the Companion Angle (CA) designed by Darlene Zimmerman to cut the spool ends and background pieces.
Cutting both strips at once here
For a 2 inch center square line up the strip with the top dotted line on the CA and cut, flip over and cut another.
The five pieces of the block the short edge of the spool ends and background pieces are a tiny bit shorter than the center square but it works better that way.
Mark a 1/4 inch seam for each corner. I made a template from template plastic with a 1/4 inch square cut out. other angles don't mean anything for this block Center the square on the background fabric
and sew from dot to dot
1/4 inch mark to 1/4 inch mark sewing second piece to the center square
sew background, sew spool fabric, sew background then spool fabric 1,2,3,4
sewing the last piece to the center square
It looks like a spool sorta but it will background fabrics across from each other and spool ends across from each other so far so good even though they are getting in each other space right now. ha ha
Fold square in half diagonally from the corner of the square, match edges carefully. Very important to match edges and fold in half and finger crease.
Sew from stitching line 1/4 inch seam
first seam so good so far whew............ wipe brow and on to the next.
Fold center square exactly in half again match up diagonal edges and sew from the seam to the edge. We are on a roll here repeat with the last 2 corners you will be an expert by the 4th corner.
Drum roll please there should be an X in the center of the spool
back side pretty messy but its the back side
Press
I like to press the background over the spool fabric so the spool stands out a little and the square flat.
front side
trim all the dog ears and sew a bunch more.
Happy sewing spools,
Ann
I cut 2 inch wide strips for this spool and a 2 inch center square. Using leftovers from previous project. Use the Companion Angle (CA) designed by Darlene Zimmerman to cut the spool ends and background pieces.
Cutting both strips at once here
For a 2 inch center square line up the strip with the top dotted line on the CA and cut, flip over and cut another.
The five pieces of the block the short edge of the spool ends and background pieces are a tiny bit shorter than the center square but it works better that way.
and sew from dot to dot
1/4 inch mark to 1/4 inch mark sewing second piece to the center square
sew background, sew spool fabric, sew background then spool fabric 1,2,3,4
sewing the last piece to the center square
It looks like a spool sorta but it will background fabrics across from each other and spool ends across from each other so far so good even though they are getting in each other space right now. ha ha
Fold square in half diagonally from the corner of the square, match edges carefully. Very important to match edges and fold in half and finger crease.
Sew from stitching line 1/4 inch seam
first seam so good so far whew............ wipe brow and on to the next.
Fold center square exactly in half again match up diagonal edges and sew from the seam to the edge. We are on a roll here repeat with the last 2 corners you will be an expert by the 4th corner.
Drum roll please there should be an X in the center of the spool
back side pretty messy but its the back side
Press
I like to press the background over the spool fabric so the spool stands out a little and the square flat.
front side
trim all the dog ears and sew a bunch more.
Happy sewing spools,
Ann
Friday, May 18, 2012
Blogger's Quilt Festival Spring 2012
Pink and green, pink and yellow two of my favorite color combinations. A couple moves ago I was part of a small group of quilters; we met every week for conversation, coffee and stitching. We worked on our own projects but we also did some round robin quilts and sometimes chose a pattern and we each made our own inturpertaion of that quilt. This quilt is from Kim Diehl's book Simple Blessings we each made our own quilt with our choice of fabrics. Kim's directions use half square triangles for the spools. I used the Y seam because it isn't that difficult come back again for a tutorial next week. There are 100 spools I used more than 50 fabrics, there are pairs of some spools but not all. When I am old and feeble and curled up in this quilt I will play brain games and try to match all the spools. I puzzled for a long time over how to machine quilt this and a couple years ago I took a machine quilting class and asked the instructor, a professional quilter, she said I really should hand quilt it in each of the spools. So I am hand quilting. Last winter I hand quilted every Tuesday night during NCIS and White Collar but some nights there was just too much action to get much quilting done, it is amazing how much I can do during a commercial break. I only have 18 spools left to do but then I wonder if I should quilt the background fabric and I have all those geese to stitch inside. I will probably do a chain design or a rope in the borders.
Linking up to http://amyscreativeside.com/2012/05/18/bloggers-quilt-festival-spring-2012/
Happy Quilting, Ann
Labels:
flying geese,
hand quilting,
Kim Diehl,
mitered corners,
pastel,
spools,
Y seam
Monday, November 14, 2011
scrap pile V
Log Cabin Spools is made with scrappy log cabin blocks with triangles sewn to each corner to create the spools. The spools were all made from the same fabric for unity.
The pattern is from Kim Diehl's book Simple Blessings, she calls it buttons and bows and has a button sewn in the center of each log cabin.
This quilt has found a permanent home on my dining room wall and yes that is another quilt on the table and we do eat on it. My kids used their nice table manners when the table was set nice or maybe the quilt just muffled a lot of the noise. The quilt on the wall also softens the noise.
Happy Dining,
Ann
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