It's been a while since I last reported on the teal project. The most recent progress photo is in this post. Since then I've been occasionally making blocks. Now my design wall looks like this:
Monday, March 31, 2025
Progress on the Teal Project
Friday, March 28, 2025
Urban Jungle Stacked Slabs
Last fall the PCQ community service chair received a large donation of fabrics. Among them were a lot of black and white prints. She handed me a big tote bag full of them and asked me to do something with them. We discovered that among them were two colors of a Marcia Derse print, and there was a dark red colorway of the same print in the donation as well.
I played around in EQ but I was never happy with anything I came up with.
Recently I was reminded that the local family services agency that PCQ supports occasionally has a need for comfort quilts for teenage boys. In years past, we've seen that there seems to be an uptick in need at the end of the school year.
So I pulled out the Marcia Derse prints and some others that read masculine and have colors that go together. Rather than fuss with a complex pattern, I let the fabrics do all the work with my Stacked Slabs pattern. (The fabric that looks pink here is actually red but if I try to darken it in the photo, everything else goes too dark.)
The result has kind of an urban vibe, but the featured prints had something about trees on the selvage, so for my own records I'm calling this Urban Jungle.
There was enough of the featured fabrics plus the other black and grey print left over to piece together a back. I'm certified on PCQ's new long arm, so as soon as registrations open up and I can book a time slot, I'll quilt this up.
Link Up: Alycia Quilts
Monday, March 24, 2025
A Little Dancing Plus Top
A quick little finish, a teaching sample (top only) for my upcoming Dancing Plus class.
Some dance to the left, some to the right, and a few are out of step....
I'll be teaching the blocks at a PCQ class in May but I needed a sample to display at the April meeting to promote the class. This was a quick finish, 42 blocks for a baby quilt top that measures 36 by 45 inches.
Scroll down to the post below for more info, and find the tutorial for the blocks here.
Link up: Small Quilts and Doll Quilts
Alycia Quilts 3/28/25
Quilting is more fun than housework 3/30/25
Monday, March 17, 2025
Dancing Plus
Recently in one of my color classes we were discussing the use of whites and creams together in the same project, and I showed my students this photo.
This was a bee project with the Sew Bee Its of STLMQG in 2015. At the time we had some less experienced quilters and everyone's quarter inch seam was different, so I wanted to give them a block that didn't require precision. This block is made oversized and then gets trimmed down to make the Plus motif "dance." Tutorial here.
In the color class, there was quite a bit of interest in having a Dancing Plus class, and since PCQ's education chair was one of my students, we booked the class for May. I've long since gifted the quilt in the photo above, so I need to make a new teaching sample.
This Plus motif can be made with one 5" charm* square or a 10" remnant of a 2-1/2" strip. When the trimmed blocks are set in a half drop layout, the dancing effect is enhanced.
I need to make a teaching sample so I'll make a small top and some step-outs. Time to raid the scrap drawers! Bright, medium to dark colors work best to contrast with low volume backgrounds. I have 42 different prints here for the Plus motifs.
I'll use a variety of backgrounds including whites, creams, ivories, and pale greys. I can see in this photo that the khaki background fabric is much too dark, so that one has to go. I still need to find about six more low volumes. No worries, I have plenty.
I'm using each background fabric in two blocks so I can scatter them around the quilt. Tip: Use the same background for two colors that are very similar. You won't want those almost-same colors next to each other in the top, so your background fabric will likewise be separated from itself.
These little blocks go together quickly, especially when paired up and chain pieced. Here are all 42 blocks.
I want to lay out the colors on my design wall before I trim the blocks. Then I'll number them and identify which direction each one should tilt. I'll probably trim them, kit them up, and assemble the top at retreat the first weekend in April. I need to show the sample at the PCQ meeting on April 14 to introduce the class, so If I get the top done at retreat it'll be ready in time.
My sample will be six columns wide by seven blocks high, plus half blocks at the tops or bottoms of the columns for a half drop layout. It will measure 36 by 45", easily do-able at retreat. This is a great project for beginners or for a group because it's so forgiving. And the result is a fun little quilt.
I have a much larger version that I kept for myself. It started with one charm pack, then I added fabrics from my stash that harmonized with the charm prints. This one is 143 blocks, 66" wide by 81" long, and lives draped over the quilt ladder in my family room. I'll share this one when I introduce the class at the PCQ meeting, too.
Linking up with Small Quilts and Doll Quilts
*Charm packs usually come with 42 pieces which will yield a 6 by 7 block layout, 36" by 45", perfect for a baby quilt.
Monday, March 3, 2025
A Failed Test Block
I cannot stress enough the importance of making a test block of an unfamiliar pattern or construction method.
I had previously cut a lot - a lot!!! - of 2" strips for a postage stamp project. I sewed them into strata and cross cut them to make checkerboards. This is what's left over after I cut all I needed for the blocks.
1. It was hard to cut through one strata with the ruler, awkward and didn't cut through in places. I tried several different rotary cutters. The pattern says to stack several strata and cut through multiple layers. Impossible for me.
2. I followed the pattern instructions exactly. They were somewhat confusing, so I reread them until I understood exactly how to place the ruler and make the cuts. I don't like the result. The points of the football shape are cut off, and the corner triangles extend inconsistently more than 1/4" into the seam allowances at the edges of the block. Upon close examination of the pattern, this is actually illustrated in the graphics. If I'm going to put all this work into something, I want it to look like it was made with skill. I want accurate points that meet where they're supposed to. It's just me, but I'm fussy that way.
3. My strata alternate dark and light stripes and I don't like how the light stripes disappear into the background. I don't think my strata are suitable for a ring design after all.
So, this ruler method is not for me, and this design concept is not working for my strata. I'll have to come up with a Plan B....
The original postage stamp project is kitted up for retreat in April. I have a few other projects I can take along to keep me busy. Plan B and the box of leftover strata can wait.
Linking up with Small Quilts and Doll Quilts
Belated February Stash Report and Goals Update
Monday, February 24, 2025
I Started Another Project
Last month I listed all my UFOs and WIPS, in hopes of getting something on the list finished this year. But instead of working on an existing project, I started a new one.
Some Kaffe scraps were donated to PCQ but they were smaller than we usually keep, so last year's chair passed them to me. They must have been a fat eighth bundle from which someone cut some chunks. I was able to cut a 7-1/4" square from each. I also added some of my own Kaffe scraps.
For now, the new project is just flying geese units. I also have a Kaffe jelly roll to do something with. I have a vague idea for where this is going, no actual pattern. It will evolve, I'm sure.
Linking up with Small Quilts and Doll Quilts