Tuesday 17 March 2015

Orphan no More!


Oftentimes when we finished a project we end-up with extra blocks, and we don't know what to do with them or don't care about it or we do not have the heart to discard it in the garbage. So we stash it away at the bottom of a drawer never to look upon it again. It becomes unloved. Abandon. Another orphan block amidst so many other ones. Oh dear!  Okay, too much drama. Let's move on!





So what can we do with the "orphan blocks" that have different sizes, colours, and pattern?
You can play with them until you make a beautiful scarps quilt. It can be love or given as a community quilt. 

I did just that with the hundreds of orphan blocks left by our members at our quilter-guild and brought all those blocks at home and played with them. After an entire evening sorting them out by colours, some by size, I squared them.

 

 If you have a design wall, that is a good time to use it. Or like me, use a large white-flannel sheet and place it on your floor in front of your TV. You can listen or watch something has you do this; otherwise, your mind will go numb with all the scrappy blocks you have in your hands and nothing seem to match with anything. Just focus on making as many quilts, small or big, with the orphan blocks that look nice. Play around with them. Add sashing between rows or blocks if there is “a gap” between the spaces
If you have an EQ, it makes it easier to lay the proper dimension on the foundation paper. Still paper and a pencil are great too. I used both. Also, I took pictures with my iPod for further reference and to remember how I set the blocks.


 It's fine when you do only one quilt, but I designed seven in two evening, so I wouldn't remember exactly how I set the blocks together. It was very helpful.


Once those blocks are put together into small kits, they are easier to manage. I sew all those top quilts in a week. One a day as I listened to something encouraging. Try it out!



The results are amazing!

               













Monday 2 March 2015

Project 6: Block of the Month

Another block was added to my simpler quilt. As you noticed, the blocks don't have the same size and will have to be square before assembling.



























Participating in a quilter guild can be fun and rewarding. Like this the block-of-the-month. It provided plenty of opportunities for me to use my fabric from my old stash to make a simpler quilt. Also, the second block is used to make a Community Quilt.

Cheaters Drunkard Path

Last Saturday at a Quilt Day Out, I sewed block #5- Cheaters Drunkard Path. That it the one in the above right corner. I couldn't figure the instruction on the pattern, so I went and check Leah Day's instructional YouTube video and said, "Ahhhh...so easy."


  Using the template, I traced the pattern at each corner, then sewed right on the tracing line. After that, I trimmed the fabric away. It leaves a raw edge on the top and that is okay too.

#1 Four path fun
#2 Nine path party
#3 Fantastic rail fence
#4  Basic building block

Leah Day gave the traditional blocks a fun name to it.

Garden Petal

Hello , my quilting friends,     Starching   On this sunny and breezy day, I starched all the fabric for the Garden Petal and hung it on th...