Lone Star Tree Skirt Sew Along

My new Lone Star Tree Skirt pattern launched recently and due to the great response I’m hosting a Lone Star Tree Skirt Sew Along .  I intend to give you the little push you might need to make yours before the holiday season.


The tree skirt is a fairly quick project to make.

Our Sew Along will run for five weeks, with the kickoff on Monday October 7, 2019.


I will post a video every Monday with detailed tips and instructions for completing the week’s steps.

You may sew at your own pace, but if you keep up with us you will have a finished tree skirt in early November!  It’s going to be lots of fun!

If you’ve already purchased the pattern, choose your fabrics now.  If you’d like to join in, you can purchase it here.

Sew Along Schedule:

Before October 7:  Purchase the pattern and select your fabrics October 7-13:  Cut & Sew Strips October 14-20:  Piece Diamonds October 21-27:  Piece Star & Add Background October 28- November 3:  Quilt Star November 4-10:  Cut Tree Skirt and Bind November 11: Share finished tree skirts To follow along, visit the Lone Star Tree Skirt Sew Along page for links to each week’s post and video.


If you haven’t made a lone star, this is a great way to start and if you have made one, you will know that one star is not difficult.

In addition to the weekly videos here on the blog, you can follow along on Instagram @hopefulhomemaker, and follow the hashtag #lonestartreeskirt.  Links will also be posted on the HopefulHomemaker Facebook page.  Right click on one of the images below to save and share on social media.

Purchase your pattern here
, select your fabrics, share that you’re in, and let’s get ready for some fun!



Trinkets from the Beach: A Trinket blocks update



I mentioned here that I’m participating in the Alison Glass Trinket Sew-along and I’m making not one, but two Trinket quilts.  One of them is this enlarged version made using Tula Pink’s Zuma fabric colletion.  I’m calling it my Trinkets from the Beach quilt and today I’m sharing a Trinket blocks update.


A big goal for me with this project is to improve my skills – and my eye – for fussy cutting.  It amazes me to see the work that others do when they fussy cut fabric in ways I hadn’t considered.  Then there is the skill of doing it so the seams line up just right.  I love it, and it scares me, so it was time to try it.  In the two blocks above, I was working on it.  The pattern matching with the waves isn’t perfect because I’m working with a layer cake and didn’t have a perfect repeat of the fabric, but it’s close enough for your eye to understand what I was doing.  Cutting the seahorses so they would mirror each other was another fun experiment.


I fussy cut the tiny stingray in the block above because it captures a memory.  When I look at it I see the tiny stingrays (about the size of a nickel or a quarter) that we found one summer all over the beach.  I see them resting in my daughter’s six year old hand, and it excites me to know I have that memory sewn into a quilt block.  Every block I’m making represents a memory or a feeling or something I love about the beach.


The orange block above reminds me of what it feels like to get hit hard by a wave you didn’t see coming – or at least one that was a lot more powerful than you expected.   Sometimes it was a little scary, but I learned.  My children have learned these things as well.  They have learned respect for the ocean, and also that they’re stronger than they sometimes think they are.


The two blocks below are favorites from the second two weeks of the Trinket sew-along.  The top one was another attempt at fussy cutting a shell to use in the hexagon.  I learned more from that block than I have from any other so far about fussy cutting and foundation paper piecing.  I also made it to resemble a sand dollar (although a pentagon would be more accurate).  The block below it is one of my favorite memories ever from our early morning discovery walks along the beach.  My daughter Marian discovered a tiny, perfectly formed, magical octopus.  Sadly, it was dead, but it was perfect in every other way, it’s body less than two inches long.  We were speechless as we marveled at it.  That octopus block has been in my head since before I started this quilt.  I think it’s my favorite.


I have become increasingly preoccupied with learning, or at least trying, to tell stories with my quilting.  Much of life is stitched into my quilts – something I believe happens to all of us.  I can look at certain quilts I’ve made and I’m transported to the things I was experiencing or wrestling with at that time.  Lately I want my stories to stay with the quilts somehow.  I don’t want the quilt to live it’s life as a quilt independent of the story it has inside me.  These Trinket quilts are my first experience with making each block to represent a specific story/memory/feeling.  The thoughtfulness while sewing is not new to me, but trying to translate the thoughts into quilt blocks is.  If you follow me on Instagram (@hopefulhomemaker) you can read each memory as I share my blocks.


Sewing anchors me in good ways.  This is a fun quilt to be making!
Question for you, though… How would you keep the story with the quilt?  Have you ever done this?

-Jennifer

Tone It Down Quilt


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My Tone it Down quilt blocks have become finished quilt #3 for the year and given how busy life has been, it seems amazing that I’ve finished anything at all.

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I love this quilt for several reasons.  First, it has pieces of so many fabrics in it.  I love the scrappy look it has, and having so many little bits I love in one quilt makes me smile.  There’s also a distant memory that kept coming to mind as I worked on it.  Many years ago my mom’s sister made her a quilt and I remember looking at it in awe.  The pieces were so small and I remember wondering if there would ever be a time in my life when I would be capable of making something so complex.  Twenty (or more?) years later I look at all the little pieces of this quilt and think “maybe I’m a real quilter, after all.”

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The navy and green together remind me of an outfit my mom bought me in high school.  I was running for class president and we found the perfect thing for me to wear when I gave my speech.  I’ve always loved navy and green together but when I see this combination the first thing that comes to mind are those clothes.   I’m so glad navy is back in style.  I never stopped liking it.

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The backing was pieced in an attempt to “use it up” without worry of running out (something I’ve always struggled with).   The Pillow & Maxfield prints were a gift from my sister, the veggies print by Maude Asbury reminds me of Broadbent’s quilt shop where the Utah County Modern Quilt Group meets.  There’s a piece in there that I’ve had for at least 15 years because I loved it and couldn’t even explain why.  I have very little of Denyse Schmidt’s Katie Jump Rope but used it anyway.

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There is a funny story about one of the blocks in this quilt.  When I was half done I suddenly felt that I couldn’t bear to make another block.   I wanted to do something else, but this project had taken over my space and I’d committed myself to finish it.  I started working faster, trying to crank them out, but 97 pieces only go so fast, even when you’re chain piecing.  If you look carefully at the top right corner of the quilt, you’ll see in there a bright aqua fabric that’s not very “low volume.”  That was the block on the sewing table when my desire completely fled, so I fussy cut a little “keep calm and sew on” piece to swap into the block in place of what I had planned.  It would be the reminder block – the one that would make me smile when I remembered how badly I wanted to put it away.  In fact, when I had the quilt top finished the first thing my children wanted to do was find that square.

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What really makes me laugh about that block is the fact that on the top row of the block, the green pieces are upside down!  In my lack of enthusiasm I completely failed to notice that I pieced it incorrectly.  In fact, I didn’t notice it until the quilt was bound and finished and one day I looked at it and it was the ONLY thing I saw.  I guess that’s what happens when you look at something too much.  So there’s an imperfect block in there that will stay as it is, and the whole thing just makes me laugh. I guess a mistake like that is a great way to make sure your quilt is one of a kind!

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Every time I piece a quilt top I think to myself “I’ve got to have this one professionally quilted” because I love it so much.  And then I finish it and hang it in the closet and get back to work around the house.  I look at my children, how quickly we get holes in shoes, how much they eat, how much their activities cost, and remember that we’re in our most expensive years – and will yet be in this stage for a while.  So I go back to the quilt, baste it and take a deep breath, and do my best.  My quilting leaves much to be desired, but I’m trying and I’m slowly improving.  On this quilt I tried the loopy pattern that Denyse Schmidt made so popular with the release of her most recent book, Modern Quilts, Traditional Inspiration .  (A paragraph in that book provided me with a life lesson, shared here .)

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The rows vary in height (I did that on purpose) and it’s full of mistakes but I suppose that means it has even more of me in it.  For the binding I hunted down the diagonal navy stripe from Bonnie & Camille’s April Showers collection and it was the perfect thing.

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A finished quilt is better than a perfect quilt, and this beauty will always be a reminder to me of where I am right now – my skills, my tastes, the craziness of life, my sudden desire to quit, the popularity of low volume fabrics (a trend I’ve totally fallen for) and even a reminder of other quilters, well-known or not, whose work influence me at this point.  The evening walk we took as a family to take these photos and the afternoon my kids spent crawling all over it playing “I spy” are memories already wrapped up in it, too.

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Thanks so much for visiting!  For more information on the source of this pattern see this post .

Jennifer

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