I'm Liz from Virginia and I'm your Queen Bee for the month. I'm an affordable housing Architect and mom to a busy 4 year old.
I just recently conquered 2 of my biggest sewing fears by participating in a New York Beauty minim-quilt swap. Those fears: drafting my own paper piecing pattern and curved piecing! Joining a swap and wanting to impress my swap partner was the push I needed to dive in. My next sewing fear is making a quilt for my hubby and you all are going to help me do that. So for our question of the month; What is your biggest sewing fear? What would help you overcome it?
For this month, I'd like you to make an improv 1/4 log cabin block. See this free pattern from Robert Kaufman for the idea and directions:
http://www.robertkaufman.com/quilting/quilts_patterns/half_way_home/
Size: Please make either a 12x12 or a 12x16 block. Your choice!
Colors: I'd like you to use neutrals similar to the RK example for the stripes. For the dark stripes, medium / dark grey, black, chocolate brown, and navy blue are all ok. For the light stripes, white, cream and light grey are all good. These can be tone-on-tone, solid, or a small / medium scale pattern that still reads as a neutral color from a distance. Please use a fully saturated yellow or orange for the center "hearth" square.
Fabric: I'm looking for fabrics that say "men's clothing." If you have a great fabric in your stash that is not a quilting cotton, I'm giving you permission to use it here! I'd recommend you stick with woven fabrics that are a typical clothing weight (as opposed to knits, upholstery, etc.) I'm planning to use some lawn, chambray, linen and a cotton/linen blend. Avoid fabrics that are not machine washable though. If you use one of these, pick a traditional quilting cotton for your other 2 colors in your block to help with stability during sewing. You'll need between a fat 1/8 and a fat 1/4 of each stripe color. If you need to work in some scraps of other fabrics, it's ok as long at the colors still fit the bill.
A word on improv piecing: I like to use the grid side of my cutting mat and a rotary cutter without a ruler for cutting. I alight the fat quarter / eighth with the grid, pick a line to cut on and then go for it. If things get a bit off - no big deal - it's improv! If free-hand cutting is too far out of your comfort zone, use a ruler but don't necessarily cut all parallel lines. I like this tutorial for improv piecing, but there are many others out there: http://www.lovepatchworkandquilting.com/quilt-tutorials/quilt-school-improv-piecing
Cutting: Stripes should be about 1" to 3 1/2" wide - depending on your fabric length, you'll probably need 3-5 strips of each color. Your center yellow/orange piece should be about 3" to 6" on each side.
Here are my sample block photos:
Fabric is cut |
First few rows of stripes added |
Trim extra seam allowance AFTER sewing seam - if needed |
Finished square block - measures about 12 1/2" x 13" before trimming |
Finished rectangular block - measures about 13" wide by 16 1/2" tall before trimming |
I will arrange all pieces with the yellow/orange in the bottom right corner, so keep that in mind as you piece. If you make a 12" x 16" block, it should be 16" tall. Please send untrimmed. I'll do the final trimming after I see all of the pieces together.
Thank you so much and Happy Sewing!!!
Liz Chapman
Hi Liz, this block is going to make a great quilt! I am looking forward to seeing it come together! Question, did you want the hearth square? thanks, Dawn
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