Scout Quilt


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Meet my Scout quilt!  It’s been a year since I finished it, but somehow I managed not to share it here.

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The pattern for the quilt is Scout by Cluck Cluck Sew , and you can purchase it here .  It’s a strip pieced quilt and comes together very quickly. For my version I used mostly Art Gallery fabrics with a few other favorites added in.   Lots of saturated color and flowers in this one!

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For the backing, I took the leftover pieces of my strips and made them into a scrappy strip to add to my backing.  This large music notes print is an IKEA print that I stumbled upon.  I haven’t seen it there before or since, but it makes a great quilt back!  As you can see, I quilted it in a simple chevron pattern horizontally across the quilt.  Nothing fancy.

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The binding is a scrappy one and makes me smile.  I think it compliments the quilt well.

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Much as I loved it, I chose to gift this quilt to an old friend of mine, who also taught violin lessons to my daughters for a couple of years.  It felt like an appropriate gift of gratitude to offer her, especially with that quilt back!

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As the days grow short and the weather more blustery, I’m grateful for warm quilts to wrap around loved ones.  I really love this hobby!

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Thanks for visiting!

Jennifer

Friendship Star Mini Quilt


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I posted about the American Glory quilt top I pieced, and as I was working on it I wondered what the pattern would look like if it was smaller.  I also thought it would be interesting with a scrappy spin on the fabric choices, so I reduced the blocks and pulled out some scraps.

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This version required more planning and careful piecing, but I really like the results.  I started with my fabrics for the stars.  For each star I cut:

1 – 1.75 inch square (center square) 2 – 2.25 inch squares (HST squares) The background fabric for these blocks required:

4 – 1.75 inch squares (corner pieces) 1 – 2.25 inch square (HST squares) And finally, I needed:

1 – 2.25 inch square of the fabric I wanted to use for the stripe behind the star friendshipstarmini7 Next I decided to have each vertical strip be consistent, but to alter the fabrics in the strips.  I selected fabrics with grays and yellows in them, to offeset the bright colors of the stars. Where possible, I cut long strips and pieced them the same way I did in my large version of this quilt.  Once again, I used a tiny polka dot for the background.  These strips were all cut at 1.75 inches wide.  For strip piecing I cut them 18 inches long; where I had to find scraps I needed pieces that were 1.75″ wide by 4.25 inches long.  My mini quilt is made with 7 rows of 7 blocks, so some vertical columns needed 4 stripe blocks and others needed 3.  From each of these fabrics (the stripes) I also needed 3 or 4 – 2.25 inch squares for the half square triangles in the star block.

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Once the stripe blocks were finished, I placed everything where I wanted to be certain I was pairing the proper background stripe with each star to make the half square triangle blocks.

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I chain pieced as much as I could without confusing myself too much, and it came together fairly quickly.  I will say that the arranging of all the fabrics did make this version take much longer than the larger version did, where I had only two fabrics to worry about, but the results were worth it.  As with the larger quilt, I found it far simpler to piece the the top together in vertical rows.  Joining the rows together was fast with fewer seams to match because the stripes were already taken care of.  The results, however, were worth it!  I like this pattern much more in miniature – the negative space doesn’t bother me so much, and the stars really stand out against the more neutral stripes (another change from my first version).  These scraps are also a reminder of a special project, and of thoughts & feelings I don’t want to forget, so I’m glad to have them in this mini quilt.  It now hangs in my laundry room, where I’ve claimed a wall for hanging minis.

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I quilted it in loopy horizontal rows.  The backing is an alphabet print from Maude Asbury which I think compliments the Cotton + Steel fabrics nicely.

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Once again, a black and white binding is the perfect finish for this colorful project.

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This mini quilt measures almost 27 inches square.  Each block is 4.25″ square, so they’re nice and little!  This is the second mini quilt I’ve made, and I’ll admit that before I made one I wasn’t sure I thought they “counted” as a finished quilt (why do I do things like that?!?).  They seemed too small and easy.  Having made this mini quilt and my mini hexagon beehive quilt (one of my favorite projects ever!), I’ve learned that tiny means time, and both of these quilts took honest effort to make.  While the quilting of them is very quick, dealing with such little pieces requires patience and careful piecing for accurate results.  SO, they totally count!

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Hooray for a finish!

Jennifer

“American Glory” Pattern Review


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I really enjoy my membership in the Utah County Modern Quilt Group (UCMQG).  You won’t find a nicer group of women anywhere, and it is always fun to see what everyone is making.  I feel like I’ve had very little time to sew in the past few months, so I haven’t been sharing much at our meetings.  In September I had the opportunity to pick a pattern/tutorial on the Moda Bakeshop site, make it and review the pattern.  We shared what we did at UCMQG.  I was assigned the holiday section of the website, and one of the first things I realized about that category is that really, the majority of the projects aren’t strictly “holiday” projects.  Most of them are made from holiday fabric, which is why they’re labeled as such, but the actual design could be used in many other ways.

Knowing I was very low on time for sewing, I chose something that looked really fast and simple to make.  This pattern comes from the 4th of July sub-category, and is called “American Glory.”

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If you check out the original post, you’ll see that the stars are a beautiful blue paisley, and the stripes are a red solid.  I was tempted to go in search of a lovely blue floral and replicate the color scheme of the quilt, but decided in the end to practice what I preach and try it in a non-holiday color scheme.  I’m really loving this green floral fabric by Jennifer Paganelli for JoAnn’s, so it was my starting point.  I found a small scale blue floral for the stripes and went to work….

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So, here’s my review:

1.  The pattern is well-written and easy to follow.

2.  This is a very fast project, made with only two kinds of blocks, especially with the adjustments I made in piecing it.  It would be a great first quilt for teaching someone the basics of quilting, and would also be a good introduction to half square triangles.  Learning to choose two fabric prints that pair well in color and scale would come with this project.    This would also make a really quick baby quilt (at 5 x 5 blocks).

3.  The more rows I added to the quilt, the more I liked it.  I ended with seven rows of seven blocks.  There is a lot of negative space in the quilt, which made me happy I used a tiny polka dot print instead of a solid.  For some reason I noticed the negative space more in my own project than I did in the photos on Moda Bakeshop.  I’m hoping that quilting it will make me like that more.

4.  IT’S MUCH FASTER AND EASIER TO PIECE THIS QUILT IN VERTICAL ROWS THAN IN HORIZONTAL ONES!  Make each vertical stripe separately and them sew them all together.  You’ll have fewer seams to match as you sew your rows together, making accuracy easier to achieve.

Hints:

1.  Sometimes the Moda Bakeshop tutorials don’t use the most effective fabric cuts, because they are designed to use Moda precuts.  I felt that this quilt fell into that category.  It called for a layer cake of both the stripe fabric (in my quilt, the blue stripes) and the background fabric.  However,  if you use layer cakes, you’re cutting two 3.5 inch strips from the ten inch square, leaving 3 inches of wasted fabric.  In my opinion, that is not the most effective use of fabric.  I think this quilt makes more sense using yardage, which was what I did.  Because I did that, I could do a lot of strip piecing.  Half of the blocks in the quilt were finished in just a few minutes by sewing together three strips and then cutting the blocks down to 9.5 inches square.  If it helps, I got 4 blocks out of every strip set (2 – 3.5″ strips x WOF background and 1 – 3.5″ strip x WOF blue).

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2.  I also chose to chain piece my friendship star blocks together, which helped with speed.

3. I chose to make my quilt to square in size because I wanted to have a star in every corner of the quilt.  I like the symmetry of it.

So, the top is done and backing & binding are waiting.  This will make a great play quilt for my daughters, who love to play outside with their neighborhood friends.  I’m also excited to practice my free motion quilting on this quilt top.

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I am grateful to have had an assignment and a deadline, which meant I did a little sewing!  Also, stay tuned to see another, miniature, scrappy version of this quilt – I really loved how it turned out!

Jennifer

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