Paper Piecing Monday

May I present the Washington Star from Carol Doak’s “50 Fabulous Paper Piecing Stars“.

modern scrap paper pieced star

I went with scraps again – I have so many little bits and pieces I feel obliged to use what I can.  The scraps combined with the background fabric (from Aneela Hooey’s “Sherbert Pips”) has made for a very busy but modern block.  I think this is a paper pattern you could really play with to get very different blocks depending on your fabric/colour placement.

The actual block segments were an easy piece – just 64 fabric bits make up this complete block.

paper pieced star block

I am now heading back to the sewing machine.  I have 5 different projects in various stages spread out around our living room.  I have to do some sewing and then some cleaning before the husband gets home.  Does anyone else have little bits of thread scattered all over the house?

Sun & Sea quilt finished

I have just finished my sunshine and sea quilt that I started just after I came back from Australia… and I am really pleased with how it turned out.  I keep looking at it and smiling.  It reminds me so much of the fun time we spent at the beach, when the sun was shining and the water was warm.  On this cold and over cast Portland day it reminds me that sun does shine, somewhere!  Summer is not going to come quick enough for me.

blue orange finished modern kids quilt

The overcast day does have one advantage – it is great for taking photos (as long as it is not raining!). Okay,  enough about the weather… moving on.

With this quilt I have been struck by how a quilt pattern can change when you sew the whole quilt together.  I rarely map or sketch out the finished quilt.  I really like to just see where it all takes me, for better or for worse.  So I started the process with an easy block that looked like this.

blue orange quilt block simplified modern Iowa star block

The pattern in the block is like a simple star with four points.  I mirrored the block pieces to give it a more interesting effect.  When I look at the quilt now I struggle to find the stars, all I see is a pin wheel.    The original pattern is in there, I just have to search a little harder for it.

modern bright kids quilt detail

This quilt was  really quick and simple to make but the interesting part came when I was sewing it all together.  There are sections of the quilt where 12 block pieces meet which causes a little bit of bulking, even with sewing seams flat.

To help with the bulking I chose quilting that would go through and around the center of this join.  In having so much quilting through the bulk it helped flatten and strengthen this area.  It also made for a lovely pattern of quilting.

detail ofsimple straight quiltingA pieced back and scrappy orange binding finishes the whole thing off.

sun & seaback of quilt

I must admit it had been a month or so since I had hand stitched the binding on a quilt and in that time I seem to have forgotten how to do it.  The stitches at the start are a little big and a little rough, but by half way through the process I was back to invisible stitches.  I was tempted to unpick it all but decided to leave it be.  Looking at the small section where the hand stitching is visible reminds me that the quilt is hand-made and that a lot of effort has gone into the finished product.

Square in Square fun – wip Wednesday

This week I have been playing with the  “square in square” quilt block (also known as a diamond in a square block).  I stumbled across the pattern on the weekend and decided that I had to see what I could do with it.    The first experiment is  with colour –  navy, emerald and pink/purple.

square in square quilt block

I am excited about how this quilt is coming together. The colours work well together and the pattern allows me to use those scraps I love so much!  To make the square in square blocks I used the paper piecing pattern below.  There is some good instructions on how to make this block using traditional piecing on the web, including some great instructions from Why not Sew? which you can find here.

square in square block

I also used this simple pattern this week to start a 1001 Peeps quilt.  I have a stash of Lizzy House fabric including quite a collection of her Arabian Nights themed fabric.  I have used little bits and pieces here and there but I wanted to use one of the lines colorways to make a quilt for Project Linus.  It is such fabulous kids fabric.

1001 peeps squrae in square block

This pattern makes it easy to use fussy cut bits and pieces.  I love how it really frames the wonderful prints  in this range.  I am half way through making these blocks and the quilt is coming together so quickly.  I have used a few prints that are not from the line including some tone on tone fabrics and a couple of prints from other Lizzy House lines.  Too much fun.

1001 peeps block pile

I am now off to buy a new ironing board.  We somehow managed to put a hole in ours which is making ironing and quilting a little more challenging than it should be!

Paper Piecing Monday with a twist

Today’s paper piecing block is a tiny bit different.    At last month’s Portland Modern Quilting Guild we were given a sampling of Michael Miller’s fabulous  new Neon range.   It was love at first sight.    The fabric came with the challenge to make a 12 1/2 block or a sewn item out of just the Neon line and Couture cotton bits we were given.    After pre-washing the solid fabrics I lay out my Neon bits and played.  I do not usually wash my fabric before I use it,  but the intensity of the dye to get the neon colours means that pre-washing is a necessity for the solids in this line.

After lots of arranging and re-arranging I came up with this block.

paper pieced star block

The pattern is the Connecticut star from Carol Doak’s “50 Fabulous Paper Pieced Stars” (my favorite book at the moment but I promise I will move on soon!).  I played with the pattern in the book a little, to get the effect I wanted.  I am relishing the freedom that these paper piecing patterns encourage.

paper piecing star blcok pieces

I LOVE THIS BLOCK!

I have such fond memories of the 1980’s, they were pretty good years for me, bad hair and questionable dress sense aside.  I swear I had a shirt back then that was in the same fabric as the center part of the star!

I had so much fun with this fabric  line that I  just ordered more Neon from Fabric.com.  Please don’t tell my husband!