Tuesday, June 25, 2024

red and white patience corner, top completed

 

Red and White Patience Corner
top completed 2024
80 by 64 inches
Block size finishes 8 inches (8 1/2 inches unfinished)
80 blocks
set 8 across by 10 down

I thought I posted this but found it in my to-do list. I finished it last month.
I love the Patience Corner block and have made variations of it over the years.
Here is one I made in May 2023 with more of a white emphasis.


This current one is scaled to feature the wonderful reds. I pushed the reds from burgundy to nearly orange. One piece is from my mom's scraps of a dress she made for my sister in the mid 1950s.

My directions of a traditional block. Use at your pleasure.

Block cutting
Red:
Four 3 1/2 inch squares (320 for the quilt)
White is Kona Snow
Four 1 1/2 by 3 1/2 inch rectangles (320 for the quilt)
Four 1 1/2 by 4 1/2 inch rectangles (320 for the quilt)

Make 320 quarter blocks
Press to the white

Make 160 half blocks
Press to the right

Flip one unit, sew together into block
Do not press horizontal seam yet
Make 80 blocks


Sew blocks together into units of 5 blocks, keeping horizontal all seams
Make 16 units
Press half of the units seams north, half of the units seam south
Sew the units into eight 10 block units
Lay out quilt with four units for each half of the quilt
Press one half of the quilt east, one half west
Sew together 

Two blocks, on its way to being a 5-block unit



Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Fragments: Jamie Siel's Floating Fragments, top completed

Fragments
(Floating Fragments pattern by Jamie Siel)
top completed 2024
78.5 by 65 inches
(pieced area 72 by 58.5 inches)
12 blocks

White is Kona Snow
Red scraps

Jamie Siel of Sew Brainy Designs has a delightful pillow pattern series she does for Riley Blake. Her October 2023 "Floating Fragments" pillow begged to be scaled up to quilt size.
Her description of it is HERE.
The pattern tutorial is HERE.

The pillow pattern makes an 18 inch block.
It is a sophisticated design, not random. Note there is an underlying structure of every other unit being a bullseye. 
Cutting directions are a bit fiddly as she is using specific color placement. I cut my scraps to size and made the units, carefully followed her block pattern for a sample block, then used that as a guide to place my units onto for the rest of the blocks. I wanted to keep fabric orientation consistent in the quilt, so my own added fiddliness was managed by using that sample block for patch and unit placement.

Block A

Block B

I used my 2 1/2 inch square bin for the bullseye units. I pressed all these seams away from the red square.
Cutting for the other unit: I am planning another quilt with 3 1/2 inch squares, so I cut a strip of 3 1/2 inch wide fabric, cut off a 1 1/2 inch piece and a 3 inch piece that I cut down to a square. Made efficient use of my cutting time.
(Then I cut remainder of the strip to 3 1/2 inch squares for that future project.)
For this unit I pressed first seams away from the white. I pressed final seams towards that insert plain white piece.


I used Julie's tutorial directions with a couple of changes to make it into a quilt.
One, I decided to make the quilt a bit wider than three blocks would yield, so I added one extra unit at the edge of each row in the four blocks that would be the right side of the quilt. These units were the same that would have been there if I made it a whole block wider.
This resulted in me making 8 of Block A and 4 of Block B.
Second, I maintained a pressing plan. As I made the rows for each block I pressed the the units towards the bullseye units so all rows nested. I waited with the horizontal pressing until column assembly.
And third, I added a simple border.

Layed out the quilt, and sewed the blocks into columns, pressing the outer two columns south and the center column north.
Sewed columns together (all row seams nest).

To aid stability and to let the reds float, I added a border:
Sides cut 3 1/2 by 72 1/2 inches
Top and bottom cut 3 1/2 by 65 inches 
I will bind with the Kona Snow

Jamie's wonderful design sized for a pillow.
Use my modifications to make a quilt at your pleasure.

Backing is from a bolt I bought over 20 years ago. I had used from the bolt in the distant past and thought there would not be enough, but there was!
A sweet winter scene called Blessings of the Season by RJR Fashion Fabrics.
As a nurse, I seek good nurse fabrics

Saturday, June 08, 2024

Chinese coins, framed blocks: top completed, construction details

Chinese coins, 1930's repros framed blocks
Top completed 2024
70 by 50 inches
35 blocks
Blocks finish 10 inches

Scraps are 1930's/40's repros, plus a few vintage scraps of my mother, all from my bins of cut down scraps. 
(One of the bins I sort scraps into is 30's repros rectangles 1 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches. So no cutting needed for this quilt other than the blue frames.)
The blue is Kona Harbor (love the 1940's feel this color gives to the scraps)
Block A

Block B
Block A (18 blocks)
18 scraps 1 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches (((324 for quilt)))
Frame: two rectangles 2 1/2 by 6 1/2 inches, two rectangles 2 1/2 by 10 1/2 inches (((36 each for quilt)))

Block B (17 blocks)
50 scraps 1 1/2 by 2 1/2 inches (((850 for quilt)))

SO,
1174 scrap rectangles total for this quilt.

Process:
I sewed into 587 twos
I set aside 139 of the twos.
The remainder, 448, were sewed into 224 fours.
(This is not how I actually work--I sew twos until I am tired of it, then fours, etc. I count up when they are at the fours stage. I always think I am way over; I am always under and need to make more.)

Block A
I took 54 of the fours and added a two to each making 54 sixes.
These units were pressed with all seams going one direction.
I sewed these into 18 blocks of three units, flipping the center unit so all seams nest.
I added the frames onto these.
The short sides frames were pressed to the frames.
The top and bottom frames were pressed north (this helps with nesting later).



Block B
The remaining 170 fours were sewn into 85 eights. 
A two was sewn onto each of these to make tens.
These units were pressed with all seams going in one direction.
5 units were sewn into blocks, flipping every other unit so all seams nest.

Joining blocks
Orient the Block B so the outer seams are pressed south and it will nest into Block A with its sashing seams pressed north.
Sew in rows and press rows north.

My design, use at your pleasure.

I am trying to make smaller quilts so my initial sketch was for 63 blocks coming to 70 by 90. I scaled back to 34 blocks coming to 50 by 70.
It is hard for me to work smaller.
 Backing is mainly the wonderful Jane Sassaman's Spring Fever Mini Queen of May for Free Spirit (Jane and my children attended the same school back in the 1990s).
And to get to the right width,
a length of Color Pop Studies for Blank Quilting Corp.

My  beloved Bernina 830 take-up lever broke off. I gently packed it for repairs and brought out this lovely Bernina 930 I had in reserve. I wisely purchased it a few years ago during the lock down from a man moving out of town. $350. At the time I tested it to make sure it worked, bought what was missing (case, flatbed, accessories box, manual) and it went into the closet.
I needed to get to know the machine so I chose this project from my sketchbook as I knew there would be lots of repetitive sewing. 
I already had the scraps cut to size, so this was a pleasant sew.
And I fell in love with this machine.