Would you believe I've had these done for 3 weeks but am only getting around to posting now? April has been a crazy month! It was fun to look through the dark section of my stash for these. In the mail ASAP!
Julia
Would you believe I've had these done for 3 weeks but am only getting around to posting now? April has been a crazy month! It was fun to look through the dark section of my stash for these. In the mail ASAP!
Julia
Here’s my April block! I wasn’t sure which end to square the triangle template with when I trimmed the shadow side, so I hope I did it correctly! I can make a new one if needed!
I see that you seem to like Asian prints, so that's what I used for my 2 blocks for you. This will be a dramatic quilt.
Kathie L in Allentown
Looking for stars in my stash was as much fun as making these blocks. They are going in the mail today. Thanks for the fun & striking pattern. Karen
Hi Carolyn,
This block came together quickly!
Hope to be sending some sunshine your way with it.
The blocks are going in the post this evening.
Take care,
Rita.
Dear Carolyn,
Your block was a pleasure to sew! I went ahead with dark blues, as I did not have any purple/lavender that were deep enough to be worthy of the "shadow" side. I knew right away my starry fabric was for you:)
I will mail this on Monday!
Carolyn, this is going to make such a lovely quilt! I LOVE the colors you've chosen for your sunshine and shadow! Can't wait to see everything together. Wishing you all the best!
-Julia D.
Hello All,
This is my first bee and I am so excited to be here!
I would love some Present Blocks for this month. I don’t have a plan yet for the quilt, but I have always wanted a Christmas quilt and thought this would be a good place to get my creative juices going and I will use the present blocks mixed in with other blocks to make a big family Christmas quilt.
FABRIC PARAMETERS: Please make your blocks in a mix of red, green and white. I am open to you using solids or pattern fabrics.
For patterns I prefer a more
modern fabric; nothing too traditional please.
They can be christmassy or not. I trust you, if you think that the
fabric could live in a modern christmassy’ish quilt, then go ahead. The only
ask is that if it’s a pattern, it sticks to the colours; red, green or white or
any combo of those. No other colours, please.
For this block there will be a
“ribbon” fabric, a “gift wrap” fabric and a background fabric. Please feel free to make the ribbon and the
gift wrap fabric either red or green, but the background fabric needs to be
white.
Reds: I like more richer reds like a
cherry, cardinal, crimson or scarlet red rather than something more on the
coral or light red side.
Greens: I am more flexible in my green
preferences, anything from a minty green to a forest great would be great.
Whites: For the whites I would prefer a
true white, not cream or beige. If you are going to use a pattern for the
white, can I ask that it please be white on white?
These are some of the fabrics
that I feel fit the look that I had in my stash. None of them are “Christmassy” but they could
all be used as Christmas wrapping paper and look cool under a tree.
“Ribbon” Fabric:
● 2 - 3" squares
● 2 - 2" x 4.25" strips
●
1
- 2" x 7" strip
“Gift Wrap” Fabric:
● 4 - 3” x 4.25"
○
If
you are using a directional fabric, the piece is 4.25” wide, 3” tall
Background Fabric - White:
● 2 - 2.5" x 3" strips
● 1 - 5.5" x 3" strip
● 2 - 2.5" x 9 strip (border)*
● 2 - 2.5 x 12.5 strip (border)*
○
*For these
four pieces I have .25” for wiggle room.
Step 1: Cut out all your pieces
Step 4: Next we make the bow. Take the 3" x 5.5" background
strip, place one of the 3” x 3” ribbon fabric, right sides together, along the
right edge of the background fabric.
Mark a diagonal line from top right corner to bottom left corner of the
wrong side of the ribbon fabric square. Sew on that line. Trim off a 1/4" from the seam, and iron
open.
**Everytime I made this block, the bow piece was either too long or two
short. I have given you extra fabric allowance so you can line up the middle of
the bow with the centre of the ribbon stripe and sew together; then once you
have a finished bow piece, trim it down to 9” wide.
The block should now be 9” wide
and 9.5” tall.
Step 8: Next add the 2.25" x 9” border pieces to the
top and bottom of the block. Then add the 2.5” x 12.5” strip border pieces to the left and right sides of the block.
The block should be 12.5” x 12.5”
Thank you so much!!
It is Kelly here from Hive 6. This is my 3rd year though I did take a break for a bit. When joining, I had always planned to use a tutorial I'd used in the past because I still need more blocks. ;)
I was originally inspired by this quilt found on From Martha With Love. Everything about it is just so pretty. And scrappy!
This quilt will be for me. I made this quilt before for my daughter but it was Shadow on the large half and Sunlight on the striped half. I am coming out of a dark time in my life. I want this quilt to be coming out of darkness into the light. My life recently has been topsy turvy, culminating in a divorce after 25 years of marriage. I joined this quilting bee to keep busy and inspired. A new block every month for friends I have never met sounded perfect to give me something to look forward to. And it’s going to be exciting to see what you send my way.
Please pick out:
1) four different darker fabrics for the “shadow” striped dark side. No solids preferred.
And
2) one sunshiney fun (no neon brights) subtle-patterned fabric for the “sunshine” light side. No solids please, tone on tone is fine though. (I used a buttery yellow tone on tone for some of mine already.)
PALLET:
For the dark Shadow side: purple, gold, burgundy, rust, lavender, navy, blue, brown, black. Something with stars is good on the dark side, but it’s not necessary. Any dark patterns in those colors. The dark fabric can be fun and colorful with a little bit of light accents just so long as it reads dark.
And for the light Sunshine side: buttery yellows, cream, light tan, cream and a little accent color will be fine so long as it’s not neon bright. It’s ok to use a printed fabric with a bit of dark on it just so long as it reads light. No neon brights please! a little softer colors here.
Tutorial-
1) cut a Manila envelope (or parchment paper or some stiff paper you have) into an 11” square, draw a line on the diagonal and cut it in half diagonally.
2) For the light fabric lay the triangle on the light fabric and cut with your ruler and rotary cutter, or draw around the pattern with a pen and cut with scissors.
3) For the dark fabric pick 4 fabrics.
Cut strips in 4 different lengths:
16 1/4” long x 2 1/2” wide
12 1/2” long x 2 1/2” wide
9” long x 2 1/2” wide
5 1/2” long x 2 1/2” wide
the longest 16 1/4” strip will be at the wide base of the triangle, and the shortest 5 1/2” strip will be at the point of the triangle.
4) Lay the 16 1/4” strip on your ruled mat. Take your 12 1/2” strip and line it up and center it to the longer strip. I use a ruled mat to lay this out so that you can easily find the middle as you are joining the pieces. Once you have found that your strips are meeting in the middle, turn it over so that right sides are together and sew on the top so that when you open it you have them stacked up so as to start creating the triangle. Then do the same with the 9” strip and the 5 1/2” strip. Iron towards the large edge. You will end up with a triangular piece that steps up on the sides
5) Lay your paper triangle pattern on top of the strips. Cut along the pattern with either a ruler and rotary cutter, or draw around pattern with pen and cut with scissors.
Join the 2 triangle pieces together, iron towards the light triangle.
Finished block 10.5” square. Do not trim, no need for that, I’ll do that if it needs it. Thanks.
You are done. Thank you for your quilty goodness coming my way.
Carolyn