Paper Piecing Monday

For this weeks block I present Carol Doak’s “Montana Star”, another fabulous pattern from her  book “50 Fabulous Paper Pieced Stars“.  Yes I am addicted.  Yes I should move on, but when there are such great patterns to work with it is hard.

finished paper piecing star block

This block is a nice simple pattern with just 56 pieces that make up the eight parts to the block.

star block pieces

Making this block was not without its “issues”, though.  I may have had a slip of concentration during construction – I am not sure if I can still blame jet lag.  The result was this interesting block section and a lot of unpicking…

mistake block

I maybe onto something with this mistake….it could make for an interesting quilt.   I will however, leave experimenting with this for another time.

Sun and Sea Quilt – WIP Wednesday

We have returned from Australia to a wet and cold Portland.  Last week we were on the beach enjoying the weather and now we have freezing rain.  It is meant to be spring but definitely feels like winter.  To get myself out of my weather rut I decided to make a sunshine and beach inspired quilt this week.

Too start I raided my stash and pulled all the golden yellow/orange and sea blue fabric I could find.

sun sea fabric

This bright a cheery collection was then cut to make block pieces for a simplified Iowa star block (Block Central has an Iowa star paper piecing pattern that can be used) .  I am not sure what the official term for this block is, so if you know please enlighten me.

sun & sea block

In my jet lagged haze this block was about all I could handle.   It is made up of four 5 inch blocks and all I had to do was sew down the two sides of the central triangle.  Easy peasy.  I managed to make quite a few block pieces before the sleepy haze took over.   Going back to Oz is fun but the time difference is a killer.

sun & sea blocks in progress

There was, however,  one advantage to the 14 hour flight back to the USA – I had some time to do some hexies.  I had never done English paper piecing before but I had been drooling over other people’s hexies for months.  Then, just before I flew out the Portland Modern Quilt Guild did a tutorial and I was hooked.  To prepare for the flight I:

1.  printed a pile of 1 inch hexagon blocks (I used the Hexagon creator at http://incompetech.com/graphpaper/hexagonal/) ,

2.  cut a stack of fabric squares – lots of fussy cut bits a pieces; and

3.  found a pair of small travel scissors that would not freak out the airline security guys.

So in between sleeping I managed to make this wonderful collection of hexies…. 51 down, 549 too go.

my hexies

I am not sure what I am going to do with them.  My husband is encouraging me to work out what I want to achieve before I get to far into making hexies (he is concerned by my lack of a plan!).  I have been toying with the idea of doing the classic hexie flower and  I may try to a couple to see how they look.

Now it is back to sunshine and the beach…..

Paper Piecing Monday part….

Okay I am loosing count of how many Paper Piecing Monday’s I have done (could be jet lag!).  It does not seem to matter too much…. the more the merrier right.  So this week I mixed up the patterns again from Carol Doak’s 50 Fabulous Paper Pieced Stars to make this.  paper piecing star block 15

I went back to scrappy this week, using part of the Oklahoma block and part of the Ohio block from the book.  The block took 92 pieces, some of them very small.  It was a great way to use up more bits and pieces I had collected.

paper piecing star block pieces

I am not looking forward to pulling the paper pattern off this star, but that is the price you pay for paper piecing accuracy.

paper piecing star 15 back

Paper Piecing Monday

Back again for another Monday of paper fun.  I worked again this week from 50 Fabulous Paper Piecing Stars but shook it up a bit.  In the front of the book the author outlines how to make the 50 patterns in the book go a little further, by using two different patterns to make one block.  Here is the results of my first experiment.

paper pieced star 14 finished block

This star uses one half of the Utah star and one half of the Nebraska star, to make a fabulous new star using  just 52 pieces to make.  I did go less scrappy this time – keeping the attention on the pattern and not the individual block pieces.

star 15 block pieces

I am still not sure if these pointy stars will fit in with the compass stars I have already made but I am having such fun making them all.  So see you next week for the next installment.