One step foreword, two steps back. I set out to make a quilt for my baby girl a few weeks ago, and realized I had much to learn before I should set out to design and execute my own quilt, having no prior experience. So, on wise counsel, I found a few quilt block patterns and pieced them together as practice. It took me ages to pick fabric, cut all the pieces, and piece it all together, but after much ado, I have a little something to show for my efforts in this new little hobby. Here are my first finished quilt projects:
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| Chicago Geese |
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| Four-Four Time |
As you can see, they are hardly perfect. I'm glad I did some practice pieces before diving into a more important project. I have some room for growth in choosing fabrics, sewing triangles so that all the corners are sharp, sewing straight lines, and I'm sure many other areas. But I also learned some good lessons. It was a fun challenge to figure out the order in which to piece things together. I think my corners got better over time. And chain-stitching [piecing several of the same cut together without in one line of stitching] was a fun skill I picked up from a book and applied during this process - it sure made things go faster!
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| Rolling Pinwheel |
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| Diamond Cross |
I found these quilt block patterns for free online. While I can't seem to re-find the website I got them from, I do have a pdf if anyone is interested, so let me know your and I'll be happy to send it to you if you'd like to give some of these a try as well.
At the same time that I've been getting into this actual sewing, I've been checking out a few books on quilting. For my baby, I want to make a quilt that illustrates where she's come from and represents the amazing people with diverse gifts and traits that have been invested into her genes. I found a book called Create Your Family Quilt by Barbara Brackman. It has you use state quilt blocks and symbols to compose a quilt design that represents your geographic history. It seemed like a fun approach to the idea of honoring our family's past, so I played around with a few design options using this program that comes on a CD with the book.
My weakness of indecisiveness and struggling to make a clear dominant piece in a design really comes through on the first quilt design:







wow, what a lovely project to do for you family and for your new little daughter. thanks for sharing! I feel so inspired now!
ReplyDeletei love all of your pieces and the designs you came up with... nice work. i'm inspired too. i've wanted to do a quilt but it intimidates me. the readers digest "crafts and hobbies" book has a good chapter on quilting. i love to hear about the process of learning something- I feel like that is so rare when it comes to crafting websites/books/rhetoric. it seems like people are just born knowing how to do this stuff even though I know it's not true. :)
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