Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Preparing the applique for one block


I think I will try to finish at least one block a month. I still have 6 background blocks to put together. As I worked out earlier they take 15 mins to do. So I will do a couple before doing an applique block each month.
As with all my quilts so far I will be putting the wadding on a block at a time so I can easily quilt each block.
I am going to use machine buttonhole stitch and dark purple embroidery thread to go around the applique pieces.
Since my machine with the buttonhole stitch is in for service I have just done the sticking on this month. I put together one border strip and did two background blocks.
I have piles of this fabric on my table. I want to be able to see all the fabrics to choose from for the applique. I need a big box to store this WIP.



I feel like I am making good progress.


I will need to do a bit of block juggling before I finally sew them together so the fabrics are distributed evenly. Those dark strips should be mellowed a bit when the flower goes on top.

Speeding up the applique process


I wanted a way to speed up tracing and cutting of all the applique pieces. Hang on a minute. I better cut out all the 4 1/2 squares I need for the border before I cut up the fabric for applique pieces. It has been a while since I worked on this quilt so I was pleased to find a stack of 4 1/2 inch wide strips already cut. I must have been thinking straight when I cut the strips earlier because I ended up with 4 or 6 squares of each colour and a nice even mix of dark, medium and light fabrics.

I had sewn one side together when I took this so only 3 piles.
I sorted them into 3 piles then into the different fabrics. I wanted 21 or 24 in a pile so I just started picking up one dark, one medium, one light until I had 4 stacks for the borders. I don't like having to think too hard about keeping them in order as I sew them together so I just sew one square at a time for each side. If I tried chain piecing them I know I would get in a muddle.

To facilitate tracing the applique pieces I fit as many as I could onto an A4 sheet. I only had two pieces left over. I then cut an A4 size piece of fusible webbing paper and traced all the pieces. I had to cut them all out so I could use them on all different fabrics.

The dotted lines are where I cut out the fusible webbing before putting it on the fabric. I keep the pieces to use one day. I figure I will prepare one set of pieces then make up one block and sew it. 8 blocks go one way and 8 block face the other way so I had to

  • scan my page as a jpg;
  • open it in Preview; 
  • flip it horizontally to reverse it;
  • file print then scale to 100%, and
  • print it out.


I need lots of leaves so

  • I traced one leaf and scanned it as a jpg. 
  • After scanning I cropped it close to the lines. 
  • I then inserted it in my word processor (Pages) and sized it to the right size using the metric inspector in Pages. 
  • I then copied and pasted it many times. 
  • I had to set the images to floating and then arranged them close together. 



The overlap hid some of the lines but it was easy to trace over the single leaf to fill in the blank spaces. I cut out the A4 piece of fusible webbing paper and traced on the leaves.


I trimmed away the excess webbing paper. I will put all 16 on one piece of fabric. The next 16 on a different piece.


It only took about 10 mins to get them ready from tracing to cut out.

If you have any questions about how I scanned or made my sheet for tracing feel free to ask me.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Another row

I managed 4 more block bases with the daisy piece on the left hand side this time.


I cut out 32 bee bodies in one light floral. I glued on 16 along the top row.
I can see that I will have to do quite a bit of block juggling when I get them finished to make sure the balance is right. Perhaps I shouldn't have used the darker patterns for the backgrounds. Ah well, I am sure it will turn out OK.


Sunday, June 30, 2013

4 Background Blocks

I did bit at a time to finish 4 blocks. I worked out the time for one background block is 15 mins of sewing. 15 mins to make the 9 patch ( I have finished them all) and 15 mins to add the other pieces.


I cut out all the pieces for the backgrounds all at once. I cut wof strips the right width for the pieces I needed then cut a full set of background pieces out of the one fabric. I had 16 different fabrics lined up.
I then mixed and matched until I thought it would look alright. I now have a pile of sorted background block pieces ready to sew together one block at a time. I have to do them a block at a time or all my sorting would get mixed up.


A new quilt



I loved this quilt from Lynette Anderson's book Country Cottage Quilting and had to start it. I bought a whole new range of fabric in colours that I don't usually use. A bit darker but still nice. I was going to buy a fat quarter bundle of Audra's Iris Garden but the one I was looking at got sold. I searched around for more and found a half yard bundle at Craft Town at a really good price.




I used up some on my Nanna's Farm quilt and then cut out all that I needed for the background blocks of Go Wild Garden. The mix of plains and florals and darks and lights was just right. I used all the florals in the 9 patches. I divided them roughly into lights and darks then matched up 5 lights and 4 darks to make each 9 patch.



I am using the lighter and plain fabrics to make the background blocks with the florals in the 9 patches. The florals will be used for the applique. I have quite a lot left over for other small projects too.