Showing posts with label Flying Geese. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flying Geese. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 December 2020

Bonnie Hunter's Grassy Creek 2020 Mystery Quilt - Part 5

 

Bonnie Hunter's Grassy Creek 2020 Mystery Quilt - Part 5
Bonnie Hunter's Grassy Creek 2020 Mystery Quilt - Part 5
The week between Christmas and New Year is usually my most productive time for doing my own sewing. As you know I am following Bonnie Hunter's 2020 Mystery Quilt - Grassy Creek, so my priority has been keeping up with the parts as they are released. 

Part 5 has used up lots of the scraps that had built up over the past few weeks, so that was very satisfactory. I had a bit of a false start with the small 9-patch blocks, getting all my colours mixed up, which required some unpicking, but otherwise OK.  Flying Geese blocks are not my favourite, but I pushed through and have even trimmed them.

I am up-to-date, besides trimming the squares from Part 2, which I am about to do now.

How is everyone else doing?

#quiltvillemsytery #grassycreekquilt

Wednesday, 15 January 2014

Nearly Insane Quilt - Block 22


Block 22 - Nearly Insane Quilt Block
Block 22 - Nearly Insane Quilt Block
It feels like this block has taken a long time to do.  The six inch block has about 133 pieces in it, so it is not surprising it took time.  As it was coming together it was looking a bit messy, but now it is completed and pressed, I quite like it (do I say that about all of them?).


Block 22 - Nearly Insane Quilt Block Flying Geese
Block 22 - Nearly Insane Quilt Block
When I was making the colour selections in my Electric Quilt software, I wanted to create a different pattern from the traditional flying geese look.  I think the result is quite interesting, a bit like an optical illusion. The border is made up from flying geese blocks which are just over half an inch deep, which you can see from the detail, but the impact of the pattern is quite different from a distance.
 
BTW: Did you see that Bonnie Hunter is on her way to England?  The trip she is on covers most of the key quilty places in the UK, and ends up at the Festival of Quilts in Birmingham, where I exhibited my Red and White Pinwheel quilt last year.  Knowing she will be there in August I feel the pressure to get one of her mystery quilts quilted and entered into the show!

NUMBER OF PIECES:  133
DIFFICULTY: 4/10
SMALLEST PIECE: Square 1/2" (13mm) x 1/2" (13mm)
LARGEST PIECE: Strip, 1/2" (13mm) x 2 1/2" (77mm)
TECHNIQUE: English Paper Piecing (EPP)
FABRICS:
Calico
Cream Bias Check Mama Said Sew by Sweetwater for Moda  #5495 11
Cherry Sketch Basic Collection by Timeless Treasures #C8224

Somerset Shirtings c 1890 by Julie Hendrickson and Nancy Gere, Windham Fabrics # 35205
"Berry Falling Snow" by Kate Spain for Moda #27127-11

Sunday, 29 December 2013

Nearly Insane Quilt - Draw 18

Nearly Insane Quilt - Blocks 39, 59, 85
Nearly Insane Quilt - Blocks 39, 59, 85
It's time to catch up with myself, as miraculously over the past few weeks, all the Nearly Insane blocks from Draw 17 have been done.  Draw 18 marks the 3/4 stage of the quilt, and with this in mind, I am starting to build myself up for the next project.

Without further a do, I had better get you up to date with the impending blocks, which are

22 - 69 - 74 - 90
 
I have already made a start  finished Block 69. Block 22 is a Flying Geese fest and I am testing out some different combinations of fabrics for different effects in Electric Quilt at the moment.  Block 90 is one of the small edge corner blocks, which usually take no time at all.

I am still looking for edge Block 98.

Tuesday, 22 January 2013

Bonnie Hunter's Easy Street Quilt - Part 8 Backing

Redundant of having to add borders to my Easy Street Quilt, I moved my attention to the backing.  It's a big quilt, and big quilts need a lot of fabric on the back, as well as the front.  There were no decent sized pieces of fabric left after Easy Street that would do the job, and I was reluctant to buy more fabric, when the project had specifically been a 'scrappy stash buster'.

Fabadashery Easy Street Mystery Quilt Backing
Easy Street Quilt Backing
By the way, 244 quilters Linked Up with their Easy Street Mystery Quilt progress - I bet there were loads more out there working away on their masterpieces. With all the coloured fabric scraps of my Easy Street Quilt still draped around my workroom, it made sense to piece the back together from these pieces. 

Large Flying Geese Block with Cat
Is now a good time to teach me
how to use the Rotary Cutter?
Working out the sizes for the new sized blocks took a bit of time.  The squares and rectangles were easy enough to size up, but the Flying Geese blocks and Shaded 4 patches were more of a challenge. It really made me appreciate Bonnie's straightforward instructions. I used this opportunity to use the alternate Flying Geese method, using the two different sized squares, instead of cutting strips from triangles.  In addition to this, I decided to swap the red and purple, as I thought I might have preferred on the top.  I also extended the original Block A  outwards by a set of the smaller blocks, making a larger block which can be abstracted from the original Easy Street quilt pattern.  By making the block larger by a row it meant I could use smaller pieces.  I really was at the end of my fabric scraps, and by making the block pieces smaller, it meant I had a more scrappy background.  Going  'large' for the first time has convinced me that a large square cutting ruler from Creative Grids is now a necessity.

I admit I was in two minds about using the left over scraps. Part of me wanted to hold onto them, to use in future projects, then the other part of me felt it was time to move on - the fabrics would be better used in a quilt, than lingering in my stash, going out of fashion. By using them up it would be a good excuse to buy some more.  How do you feel about using up your fabric?

There are a few downsides to this pieced backing approach. With the additional seams, hand quilting is going to be a struggle to say the least, so I guess I have now committed myself to machine quilting the Easy Street quilt . Also, with a mix of lights and darks on the back, choosing a quilting thread colour is likely to involve a lot of deliberation.  I have not even thought about what sort of wadding I will use.

So this is what I have been doing with my time. When we woke up on Saturday, Suzi the cat and I had no idea I we would be piecing another quilt.  It has taken time, but I am pleased with the result. Joining up with Design Wall Monday.