Once I started working on the blocks it went pretty well. After not doing any quilt sewing for a while I seem to have developed some better habits. I have done more planning before jumping in and starting to cut without a solid plan.
I knew what I wanted to do before I cut anything and I knew what I needed to shop for. One trip to shop for solid fabrics beforehand was way better than starting and then finding I needed something I didn't have and that I had wasted some to my focus fabric.
I knew that not all of the squares would have one whole recognizable object but I didn't see that as a problem. Partial objects would work if little people where looking for certain things, like signs and wheels and cranes and the shovels on front end loaders.
After I cut these 36 squares I tried to sort them but I came to the conclusion that the best way was to put them on a design board in the order they were before cutting. That seemed the best way to avoid the headache of trying to keep from having too many of the same things too close together.
I started laying the squares out by lining up the squares the way they were cut. That went well for the first few rows but then I started a row that didn't line up perfectly with the row above. I probably got interrupted at some point and maybe misplaced a square or two or maybe a few. I stuck with the plan after only a few shuffles. I knew once I sewed on the solid strips no square was going to line up along the cut lines. I kept all of the squares in this order and started adding the short strips to the correct side, right, left, top or bottom. As I pinned each solid strip I moved it to my design wall.
This photo is the bottom three rows with the 4 1/2 inch strips pinned to the side where it needed to be sewn on. I saw the pattern of every other strip in the row being in the same position and every other row was the same. I only realized there were 2 only different rows when I got to the third row. I just didn't see it looking at the photo of the whole layout.
This is the printout from EQ that I used to layout the short solid strips. I use these little sign holders with a printout or picture of what I am working on. Sometimes I have a printout of the cutting directions
and sometimes a printout of block construction.
In the background you can see some of the mess in my sewing space which is undergoing a redo. Going along slowly but going along.
This is how I made sure I was looking at the correct row. Masking tape is an essential tool in my sewing room. That square with the short strip pinned on the is the next one that got sewn on.
This is how I made sure I was looking at the correct row. Masking tape is an essential tool in my sewing room. That square with the short strip pinned on the is the next one that got sewn on.
Everything went together without a hitch. Well, after I sewed the very first strip to the wrong side on the very first square..
After all the short strips were sewn on, the long strips were fast and easy, in spite of many interruptions.
When I started sewing the rows together I kept them up on the wall until i was ready to sew any particular rows. it seems like with only six rows I could just take them down in pairs and sew them together. I have come to recognize that even with only a few things to keep in order I have mixed up the order, even when there have been no interruptions. I accept my shortcomings. The rows went together with on problem.
Here is the finished top. The borders are different that any of my EQ borders, which I only added in EQ as place holders for size. I never make decisions about borders until the body of the quilt is finished,
unless some times the border is designed first.
I knew from the beginning, the focus fabric was not going to work for the size border. I knew I would use solid fabric but I didn't know what I would use until I auditioned the fabric. Yellow seemed the obvious choice. I didn't want the yellow to look chunky in the corners around the yellow blocks. I solved that by adding red strips sewn on at right angles to the yellow border strips. The binding will be red.
It is layered up and pinned and ready to quilt. I am contemplating the options for quilting while I straight up the sewing space. I have learned that I need to have some sort of order around me as I move from one step of the process to the next. Otherwise, I am pushing things out of the way and making another mess that gets in the way of everything I do.
2 comments:
This little drag around quilt is so fun looking, Ruthie! I love the colors and I love how you solved the corners situation. I never would have thought to angle the color borders. I sure know the feeling of mixing pieces up...even when I just take a couple or few from the design wall to the sewing machine. I get frustrated with myself. LOL
This is a lovely child’s quilt. Adding the red corners in the border is inspirational! And I really like the idea that a small child can spot different ‘lil pics’ in each focus block.
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