Wednesday, October 28, 2020

A Finish

I have finished the second Framed 9 Patch. This one is smaller than the first one by 2 blocks in each direction. F9P 1 is 9 x11 blocks and F9P 2 is 7 x 9 blocks.  This one was a little easier to handle physically. 

This is the back of the quilt and I was happy to see that the pattern of the floral stripes worked out the way I planned. The pattern is symmetrical and straight along the sides and where the quilted sections are joined. It was quite an effort to get it layered up straight. After the first section I gave up trying to do it in my sewing room on the plastic top Lifetime tables and put another leaf in my dining table and put my big cutting mat on the table and used my bulldog clams on the ends to get the backing taut and smooth and I used masking tape along the sides to tape it where the sections were too narrow to reach the sides of the table. I could move my cutting mat to protect the table under the whole layered section when I was pinning. It was frustrating but it was worth the effort to make the floral strips work. 



I cut the inner border fabric 2 1/2 inches wide so it finished 2 inches and I like the 1 1/2 inch better on the first quilt. It seems to me the narrower looks better when the quilting is in the ditch. I made 5 inch Nine Patch blocks for the corners using the green from the inner border and four of the prints that have a white/light background.  

I thought I made all the corner blocks the same. I had cut the strips at the same time even though I didn't make them all at the same time. I never notice there was anything wrong when I layered up the borders. I had concentrated on having the length of the piano keys exactly the right length because the corner blocks had to line up with end of the inner border to which I added a 2 1/2 inch wide strip which would appear to be part of the side border. I measured and measured again and then again before adding the piano keys to the inner border. It all looked good and I proceeded to layer it up and quilt it. The first end border was good. The second end border had a block the was a half inch too big.

Here are the two corners on the second border. I just trimmed it square so it fit and sewed the binding on. Because the border was already quilted and sewn on to the quilt, I decided I can live with it.


I like this quilt and I am keeping it. I don't mind that there are similar solid colors close together.  I didn't pay much attention to that aspect. I laid it out  alternating light and dark blocks. That checkerboard pattern is not so apparent because the value range is somewhat narrow. There is not any really high contrast.
For the most part I relied on contrast between size and density of the prints for contrast.

This shows two of the darkest blocks and they do not really appear dark except in the photo.


The areas where similar colors are close or lumped together don't bother me. I did spend some time arranging the blocks but I didn't agonize over each decision. I only wanted each block, in some way, to related to the adjacent block. 




I wanted light, bright and cheerful and that is what it looks like to me. There are a few other issues, like that corner block, and the binding is folded over a little too wide on the back in a couple of places. Overall the workmanship is good and I make no apologies for the things that didn't turn or quite right.
As I was nearing completion of this quilt I knew it would be the last large quilt I would ever make.  I had to push myself to work on it. From now on, I will not make anything larger than a baby quilt. I will make only things that do not require moving furniture to accommodate each step of the process. 

I am scaling back on the amount to supplies I need to keep on hand. I am still paring down my scrap stash. After all, you have to make sure the people who receive your scraps will use them well. As I write this I am laughing at myself.  I have never given a second thought to what has happened to what I have given away. I love seeing how someone has used my leftovers but I never worry or wonder about them once they are no longer mine.

I do have something in the works now. I needed thread and I went to the quilt shop and saw an alphabet panel and some coordinating fabrics and they came home with me. I almost walked out of the shop without my thread. So I will still be quilting for a while but only the small stuff and only when I feel excited to make it.

2 comments:

Hubblebird said...

Hi Ruth. Another gorgeous framed nine patch. I’ve learned a lot from you on this quilt journey and I am very grateful. My quilt has stalled a bit with the arrival of my first grandchild. I’ve been knitting like mad. But it’s time to give it a rest now and finish mine up. You’ve inspired me again! Looking forward to seeing your smaller quilts soon!

Lori said...

Very pretty, Ruth. You have such beautiful scraps. I still keep the scraps I got from you in their own box. I use them but, when I add, I try to be very thoughtful (as you would) to ensure that what I add has the same feel. I hope the box of scraps still reads as "Ruth" after my additions because you have great taste.