Each quilt I make, I tend to learn something new. With the Butterflies Quilt being my first
large project, over a long period of time, it was perhaps my steepest learning
curve with regard to patchwork and quilting.
Looking back, I realise how naïve I was, and how this project really
opened the doors to the quilting world for me.
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Butterfly Quilt on the Bed |
English Paper Piecing
is Great!
As long as the paper is cut to the right size, you can get away with rough
cutting fabric, and along with hand sewing , you have much greater control of
what is going on with your quilt - this is why I love working with the English
Paper Piecing method. Also, cutting out the paper for quilts reminds me of
cutting out dresses for paper dolls when I was a child. I used to love this. It is a quiet, peaceful pastime. Sometimes I like to be on the machine, but
when you have no choice in order to get a project done, it can feel like you
are chained to it, and you really have to find a block of time to get the job
done - not easy when you work full-time.
In the two years it took to complete the Butterflies quilt, I never once
got frustrated with it. It is
portable. You can fit it in to small
gaps of time. Just make sure you have it
with you all the time!
Go With the Scraps
For this quilt project, the only fabric I bought was the cream calico and the
fabric for the butterfly bodies.
Otherwise, I kept to what scrap fabric I had.
This led to, what felt like, some heavily compromised colour
combinations, which made me wince as I sewed them together. However, once the quilt was together, it
looked perfect. Go with the scraps, in
general, they know what they are doing.
Thread
I used an off-white cotton to sew my pieces together, which worked for the
majority of the quilt, but not so well on the coloured fabric. As it travelled around with me A LOT, just having to worry about one reel of
thread, made it easier, however, with the quilts I have done since I have taken
more care to match the thread to the fabric.
Quilting
This quilt needs more quilting. I
look at it every day and think this, but part of me is happy to keep it as it
is, as a reminder that there is a ‘tipping point’ of too little, or too much
quilting on a quilt. I am still working
on the balance of this.