I take no credit for this pattern, and have cited in the title
the woman from whom I received the pattern.
There that should take care of that business :)
I did not follow the number of fabrics that she used - I used a multicolored dark blue, swirly pale blue-green and teal.
When I ran out of the multicolored blue - I switched to purple as I wanted a large quilt (can't see doing little quilts when most everyone's beds are bigger these days.)
The above quilt is 10 x 11 blocks for a quilt measuring 105 x 115 inches roughly
The purple fabric came into play when I didn't have enough
of the multicolored blue and
I had already committed to the larger quilt.
It calls for a busy backing and I chose this one.
of the multicolored blue and
I had already committed to the larger quilt.
It calls for a busy backing and I chose this one.
Tutorial :)
Materials: This is a rough estimate as I didn't think I would be doing a tutorial
Fabric A - multicolored blue - 5 yards (remember I had to swap in the purple to complete the quilt) I would buy 8 yards if I was doing it again.
Fabric B - blue green swirly 4 yards - it was an older McKenna Ryan that I got out of a discount bin. I would get 5 yards if I was going to do it again.
Fabric C - teal it came out of my stash and I am guessing maybe 2.5 or 3 yards.
Backing - I had 10 yards and used just about all of it up.
Batting - A king size very FLAT batting - I used the cut off ends from other quilts that I had made. Warm and Natural or any 80/20 batting would be suitable.
Sashing - I used black on the front (2 inch strips) and lime green on the back (1.5 inch strips.) I really like the solid colors from Connecting Threads and bought 5 yards of each and have left overs - likely I used under 3 yards of each color. I used the lime green for a 2.5 binding
Prep work: Get ready to start cutting
From fabric A cut the following:
3.5 inch square - 110
5 inch square - 110
From fabric B cut the following
3.5 inch square - 110
6 1/4th inch square - 110
From fabric C cut the following
4 1/8th inch square - 110
8 inch square - 110
Backing cut 11 inch square - 110
Batting cut 11 inch square - 110
Draw an X on the back of all squares except the largest 11 inch backing square and the smallest 3.5 inch center square. Make a small snip in the center exactly on the line.
Draw an X and a cross on the batting squares.
Place a batting 11 inch square on the wrong side of a backing 11 inch square
See examples below for placement of X's and crosses
This is what it will look like once it has been sewn all around the edges. I want you to see the placement of the squares, so I put it first.
1. Place a 3.5" A square right side up on the batting. Place it "square" (the tips of the center square touch the diagonal lines.)
- Place the 3.5 " B square right side down matching the center square. Be sure all points touch the diagonal lines.
- Stitch around the square 1/4" from the edge. Pivot at the drawn line and do not leave an opening.
- Cut only the top square exactly on the diagonal lines completely to the corners.
- Flip the triangles points out and finger press. The tips should touch the X lines drawn on the batting.
It should look like this when you are done :)
Below is showing how to snip the center so you can easily cut the X on your top fabric after sewing around the edges.
4. Place a B 6 1/4 " square on the
previous square as follows and
stitch, cut and flip.
5. Place a C 8" square on the
previous square as follows
and Stitch, cut and flip.
You are done the block!!!!
Finishing:
- Square up all the blocks to the same size 10" is good (I tried 10.5 and ran into some trouble I don't want you to have those worries) if you can square to 10.25 go for it - I can't do 1/4 inches. Remember all the points are blunted - maybe some a bit more than others but all it good.
- I used You Tube to learn how to do the joining of the blocks. Here is the link - she does a bang up job of teaching the method I used so why re-invent the wheel.
- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ji8BLS2rNHA