rough circles quilt along part 3

If you have been quilting along with me, you have put in some good quality time with this quilt and I know you are looking for the finish line soon.  I promise, it is near!  By the end of this post you will have a nice stack of squares that look something like this!

To get to this point you need to take all those circles that you worked so hard on and press them.  After you press them so they are looking oh so crisp, it is time to cut them to shreds!  Cut each square into four equal squares with your rotary cutter.  Remember this does not need to be done one at a time, smart quilting is using your time wisely, so don't be afraid to stack a few up and then cut!

Once you have these cut into perfect little squares, pull the circle slice (blue above) back and cut off a triangle of the base fabric (orange above) with scissors in order to keep the quilt from becoming too bulky.

Next week we start piecing the main squares back together, before you know it you will have one snuggly quilt ready for the rest of winter!

Missing something?  Here is rough circles quilt along one and two.

quilt gift card for a dear friend

You know those friends that you meet and you just click immediately.  You are not sure why, you may not even have too much in common, but you just click.  I have one of those and today is her birthday.  We have worked together, been in bible studies together, book clubs, she is the one that I call when the husband is out of town, I have a fever and I am afraid to hold C because I am dizzy.  She is the one that will drive two hours with a screaming baby in the car just so I have someone to go crazy with.  She is great. She has wanted a quilt for some time, and she never seems to get one.  She has not had a baby recently or been married recently, so she has not received any quilt action.  Well, with me reflecting on how much she means to me and our family, I think it is about time.

I have a major problem though.  I am currently making two other quilts for birthdays and babies and I knew a couple of weeks ago that it was not going to get finished in time. So I decided to not even start it.  I thought I would really like for her to pick out the color scheme and the pattern so as it would be one of kind, just for her.  But what do you give someone saying I am going to make you a quilt?  A nice card?  A letter?  Nah, that is too  normal..how about a gift card of sorts?

I whipped up this simple and very small quilt in one Sunday afternoon.  Here is how it is done.

sew strips together...

cut strips into triangles...

match striped triangles with same sized solid triangles...

sew triangles to create squares...

sew all four squares together...

add side trimming...

print off message for back of quilt...

using an office lamp, trace message onto fabric using water soluble marker...

after embroidering back, quilt and bind...

enjoy...

 

Happy Birthday Beth!

rough circles quilt along part 2

You have done all the hard work, picked out some great fat quarters, pressed all your fabrics and the most daunting task...you have cut out all those squares and circles. You have completed part 1, now you are ready for part 2!

After all of that cutting, everything hereafter will seem to go very quickly!  Before you begin matching your squares to your circles you need to find the center of both shapes. Iron all of squares in half and then in half again.  Do the same with the circles.  By doing this you will find the perfect center of each.

Next, match all the circles to the squares, lining up the centers of both pieces.  Once this is done you can begin sewing all of your circles down.  This may seem intimidating to sew 160 circles, but it is so very simple.  I found it best to use a walking foot (this is the standard foot on your machine).  Using a 1/4 inch seem allowance, place the sewing foot up against the side of the circle.  Slowy start sewing, placing you hands as shown below, pressing down with your left hand causing the circle to "pivot" (anyone seen that Friends episode?).

Before you know it you will have all of the circles sewn.  You will be amazed at how quickly this will go.  Things that I am sure you are not amazed with:

1. my black nails

2. my machine being held together with painters tape

No one ever said this quilt along was going to be pretty!  Good luck and get sewing! After this week you are almost to the halfway point!

See you next Saturday morning for part 3.

-melissa

rough circles quilt along part 1

I have been an admirer of quilts, quilting stores and quilting blogs for a couple of years now.  I have spent hours meandering through quilt shops, touching all the fabrics, matching fabrics together and buying more than I care to admit.  I have always wanted to have a blog that I share all of my craftiness and I have decided that this year I am really going to go for it.  So, drumroll please................ introducing my first Quilt Along!

For those of you who do not know what a quilt along actually is, it is a step by step guide on how to make a quilt.  Many times people will post it in real time, so we can quilt along with each other.  I decided to make this my first quilt along, because I have recently had a good amount of people ask me to help them make their first quilt or to teach them to quilt.

This quilt that I am working on is fairly time consuming, not difficult at all, and really a high impact quilt.  You do not need many skills to complete this quilt, but you may need some time and some stamina.  I first saw this quilt on one of my favorite blogs.  I showed it to Jay and he loved it and decided that was the quilt he wanted.  I have devoted one hour a night after C goes to bed to work on it.  I really want it completed in time for Jay’s birthday, and I think I might get it done before!

So....Sewers, grab your scissors, load that machine up with thread and get started.

In my version of this quilt we Jay has chosen 41 different fat quarters. (This is one of the many reasons that I love my husband, such a great designing eye.)  The original quilt calls for at least 20, but we want it to be a larger quilt (7'x5.5') and want it to really have some diversity in the fabrics.  If you do not choose enough fabrics the quilt will not have as much visual interest as it should.  For this quilt we were sure to have plenty of all colors represented.

Quick Hint!  Fat quarters are those square folded pieces of fabric.  They are precut for you and generally fold up to be about a 5 inch square.  At bigger stores like JoAnn's, they are kept on the wall with all of the fabrics.

Once you have all of your fabrics chosen you need to cut, you are ready to begin!  Many people wash and dry all of their fabrics first to avoid shrinking.  I have never washed and dried my fabrics first, and I have never had any shrinking with cottons.  (If you are sewing clothes, curtains or pretty much anything else, I would suggest a W and D first.)  Before you start cutting I would recommend that you iron all your fabrics to get the best cut.  (V, that is for you!)

Okay, now you are going to cut a one square to one circle ratio.  I was able to get four seven inch squares and four five inch circles out of almost all of my fat quarters.  To cut the squares you will want to use a rotary cutter (pizza cutter for sewers), a cutting matt, and a clear acrylic ruler.  You really need to cut straight, and if you try doing this by hand, it will take a really long time and your results may not be that precise.  For the circles you can do one of two things: grab a cd, large cup, bowl from around the house and trace the circle onto your fabric and then cut these out with scissors by hand.  Your other option is to have a GREAT husband that buys you a accuquilt for Christmas.  I used my handy dandy machine to crank out my circles.  At the end you need roughly 160 squares and circles.  It seems like a lot, but I promise you really get into a groove and will have everything cut out in no time!  Cutting is the worse part of quilting, once you are finished it is all downhill from here!

Part two of the quilt along will be next Saturday morning.  We will start to do some major sewing.  I will also share some of my best tips for sewing circles on your machine.  In the meantime get to your fabric store, pick out some great fabric and get cutting!