Showing posts with label My Quilt Infatuation Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label My Quilt Infatuation Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs. Show all posts

Monday, January 22, 2024

Happy Bubbles

I had planned on my Happy Bubbles quilt to be the first one finished for the New Year since I always like to begin with a colorful quilt, but Love 2024 took precedent. After Love 2024 was first finished, Happy Bubbles was ready for machine quilting since I had pin basted it before we left for the GP House. I know it’s way too early to say this, but Happy Bubbles is my favorite finish so far.
Last year, when I participated in Kelly Young, My Quilt Infatuation’s book launch of her Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs, I have been wanting to make her Bubble Bath quilt which was one of the 18 bonus quilt patterns. Besides being a fun pattern, I had purchased in. November, 2022, Carrie Bloomston Happy fabric collection of 24 pieces which was perfect to use for Happy Bubbles. I bet you can guess how I came up with the quilt name which I, of course, hummed “Tiny Bubbles” during the merry making. BTW, I’ve made several quilts with my stash of Carrie Bloomston fabrics but this is the first time I’ve made a quilt exclusively with just one collection.
I didn’t have enough of one light print to use for the background/sashing so I used the two above on the right. The grid print was used for the connecting corners and the scribble print was used for the sashing. The focus print on the left was used for all of the large bubbles.
There are three bubble sizes and I separated the fabrics i.e., prints were for the medium bubbles and the grid and colorwash colors were for the small bubbles.
Once the bubbles and sashings were laid out and segments sewn, assembling the quilt top was easy as the diagrams and instructions to do this was clear and understandable. What I like about Kelly’s patterns is that her patterns look complicated but really are simple. I will confess, that after all the bubble blocks were made, I did not want to sew another connecting square for awhile.
Once the top was sewn, I thought using two different backgrounds didn’t seem to blend as well I would have liked, so I added a 2.5” border of the grid print, which I think ties the backgrounds together better.
Of course, I had to make a pieced backing since I had leftover blocks. Luckily, the bottom half of the backing was already sewn for another project but ended up not being used and has been sitting in the backing vault.
I machine quilted with soft, meandering horizontal lines spaced 1” apart with silver Aurifil thread. Although I really didn’t want to use the main focus print for the binding, it was the right choice. Happy Bubbles measures 52” x 72”. The rainbow-loving, darling Granddaughter will be receiving this quilt as well as another one to be made with the leftovers. I have to confess that although I did say in a previous post that I didn’t want any fabric for Christmas, guess what, I did purchase, through the generosity of a gift card from Demando, Carrie Bloomston latest collection “Found” which is her first batik collection and would also look great with this pattern.
Kelly’s first book Stash Statement was released in 2018 and the quilt I wanted to make back then from this book was the Murrina quilt which reminds me of the Bubble Bath pattern. Kelly has announced that this book (originally published by Martingale and no longer in business, the rights have now been purchased by Fox Chapel/Landauer who published Kelly’s last two books Scrappy Improv Quilting and Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs) will be re-released in April with a new cover and in addition to the twelve patterns, there will be three new ones. Not an affiliate link, but I’ve already preordered a copy.
We’ve had real, real cold and snowy Winter weather, typical of January this week and there was no way I could ask the Master Quilt Holder if we could take a glamour photo outside. Also, I really didn’t want to go outside either. I think this inside pic looks nice. There’s going to be a warm up in a few days which will be much appreciated although I will admit cold weather always makes great sewing conditions. I do have a few more finishes before January ends.

Linking up with My Quilt Infatuation/NTT
 

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs Book Review and Book Blog Hop/Unruly Safari Moon

Today is the book launch  of Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs, the latest book by Kelly Young, My Quilt Infatuation. I was asked back in March if I would be interested in reviewing her book by making one of the thirty patterns designed specifically for quilt backs and participating in her Book Blog Hop. It was a  Big Yes from me. Kelly wrote the book for Quilters, like me, who aren’t comfortable with making pieced quilt backs or for those Quilters, definitely not me, who need new pieced quilt back ideas. 

It was rather serendipitous that I would be asked because around that time I was thinking my scrap fabric overload was caused by having too much leftover after a quilt finish and that I maybe ought to start making pieced backs which is something I avoid like catching Covid. Also at that time, Linda, Texas Quilt Gal, had posted about her latest quilt being a mullet quilt and since it didn’t remind me of Billy Ray Cyrus, I had to find out what she meant by that. Well, I learned that a mullet quilt means that the business or the seriousness is in the front and the party is in the back which I take it to mean the back of the quilt has the more “fun” fabric or approach. My quilt backs tend to be on the quiet or bland side and not much time is spent planning or making it, so in the terms of a mullet quilt, my backs are definitely party poopers. When I first started quilting over 25 years ago, quilt backs were not important to me, I didn’t want to use the same fabrics as in the front, especially at that time $9/yard and I used a fabric purchased on sale which is the reason for my backing fabric vault. Another caveat I had for backing was that it had to somewhat complement the top and not look like I sewed any old fabric(s) together.  

I was thinking the reason why Kelly asked me to participate in her Book Blog Hop was because several years I participated in her Book Blog Tour of Scrappy Improv Quilting but then I realized that she may have seen some of my backs and sensed that I needed to stop being a pieced back resister and come over to the party side. Like Kelly saids, she has your back.
It was no surprise for me to that Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs is just as inspiring and resourceful as Kelly’s previous two books, Scrappy Improv Quilting and Stash Statement.  It definitely is a Scrap-Smart Guide. The thirty patterns are divided into three sections depending on whether you want to use Small Scraps, Medium Scraps or Large or Mixed-Sized Scraps/Fat Quarters. It may have exceeded my expectations being that as you read my Post, I have been converted to a happy pieced backer and my days of whining and resisting are over. Planning  a quilt back beforehand and not as an afterthought is the way for me to sew now. As Kelly mentioned in her book,  a pieced back adds a little something extra or lagniappe as the French would say.
From the thirty patterns presented in Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs, I chose to make the Double Bar pattern, page 64, because it made the best use of my leftover blocks and scraps which were large or mixed-sized scraps and fat quarters.I just needed to purchase yardage of the dark blue fabric.
The leftover blocks and scraps were from my Safari Moon  quilt using a modified version of Kelly’s Unruly Pattern (not an affiliate link) and I made especially for the book blog hop. We had a choice of either making a quilt back for an existing flimsy or just a simple top but I saw it as another reason to make another Unruly quilt as it is one of my favorite patterns.  I was planning on making this quilt and have been stashing the fabrics for several years now. 
The name of this quilt is also the name of the Art Gallery fabric line designed by Frances Newcombe which I had yardage and fat quarters of the wonderful prints. I modified the Unruly pattern so I could feature the Zebra and some of the other larger prints. Little did I realize that this would also be enough to use for the pieced backing and it helped that I originally made thirty blocks and decided to only use twenty blocks.
Three Quilt Backing Sizes (Lap (72” square), Twin XL (80”x108”) and Queen (96”x108”) are given for each of the thirty Quilt Back patterns. You can easily modify the dimension to fit your quilt which is what I did for the Double Bar pattern since my top measured 60” x 75” and I needed a backing to measure 68”x 83”. Using leftover blocks and scraps, I made three panels measuring 15-1/2” wide by 83”long and I cut the solid blue fabric 12-1/2” wide by 83” long. 

I should point out that I may have made a mistake with the block panels made for the sides. I thought I was being smart for putting the bright rectangles vertically to avoid having too many seams on the outside but you can see once the backing was trimmed, these bright rectangles were almost cut off just leaving skinny pieces on the sides. At first I thought it was awkward looking but then as Kelly pointed out in her book, you are not making double sided quilt, to which I add, you still want to be able to tell which side is the front and which one is the back. Although my back is pretty, it still looks like the back but Unruly Safari Moon does have two-sided appeal.

Some of the things I learned from Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs are:
  • Patience as I used to think sewing a pieced quilt back was like sewing another top but it’s really not because you may just spend an hour piecing scraps and to me is it makes for a nicer finish. Rather than seeing the top and backing as two separate pieces, there is a connection now between the two with a pieced quilt back.
  • I was making my quilt backs too large as I was using the measurement of adding 8” to both the wide and length which is what you do if you were sending it out to a long armer which I do not do 99.5% of the time. I can get by with just adding 4-6” on both sides now that I’m…..
  • Taking the time to measure both the quilt top, batting and backing and marking the center of each piece in both directions.
  • I am no longer eye-balling centering the backing on my big 48”x76” table where I baste my quilts since I have now marked the centers on the table.
  • More confidence and less stress now that the layers of the top, batting and backing are centered and no surprises if one of the layers is  too close to the edge after the majority of the pin-basting is done. I may have been surprised more than once and salty language was definitely used.
  • Making pieced backs is fun and using up leftover fabrics does feel good.
Here’s a pic of the leftovers which could have been more if I hadn’t made a pieced back. This is  enough to make a pillow to go with Unruly Safari Moon. A fun thought is to send these to Kelly so she has an idea for her next book like When Quilt Friends Give You Scraps.
And just to show how much Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs converted or inspired me, after I finished Unruly Safari Moon, I made a pieced back for my Sushi Shuffle Quilt. It is a version of the Double Bar pattern but with only one pieced panel in the center. 

Sandra @mmm quilts
Diann @ Little Penguin Quilts
Laura @Slice of Pi Quilts
Jayne @Twiggy and Opal
Anja @ Anja Quilts
Nancy @Grace and Peace Quilting
Vasudha @Storied Quilts
Kris @Sew Sunshine
Leanne @Devoted Quilter
Rebecca @Rebecca Grace Quilting
Preeti @Sew Preeti Quilts
Susan @Quilt Fabrication
Kate @Katie Mae Quilts
Sarah @Sarah Goer Quilts
Linda @Flourishing Palms
Anne-Marie @Stories From The Sewing Room
Michelle @From Bolt to Beauty
Gail @Quilting Gail
Kat @Scrapbox Quilts
Julie @Julie’s Quilts and Costumes
Jan @The Colorful Fabricholic
Rose @something rosemade (that’s me!)

There are twenty-two (including me) Quilt Bloggers who are joining in the Perfectly Pieced Quilt  Backs Blog Hop by reviewing this book and making a pieced quilt which I can bet theirs’ will be perfect. We are all posting today so be sure  to check out their posts by clicking the links on Kelly’s Book Launch Blog Hop Post.
Besides the thirty quilt back patterns in Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs, when you purchase this book, you will be able to download 18 bonus quilt patterns for the tops which went with the quilt backings. I already have a collection of Kelly’s patterns (I already made her Tinkering quilt, which I named Kaleidoscope Krosswalk) and to think I now have 18 more just make this book so worthwhile to purchase.  Kelly’s patterns are fun and easy to sew. There are already a few that I want to check out the pattern because I may already have the fabric. I will say now that most of the quilt back patterns I would consider making them as tops. (Please note that the Unruly Pattern is NOT one of the 18 bonus patterns but is a pattern so worth purchasing—not an affiliate mention). You can purchased this book directly from Kelly, through Etsy, which you will receive a signed copy or from Amazon Prime, Barnes and Noble, Connecting Threads, Missouri Quilt Co. and Fat Quarter Shop. (Not an affiliate link).
Just some closing “glamour” pics from of Unruly Safari Moon quilt, front and pieced back which I enjoyed making for the Book Blog Hop. I want to thank Kelly for inviting me again to participate in promoting her latest book. You are always an inspiration to me.  Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs is definitely a book you would want to have in your library and maybe you want to mention it to Pieced Back Resisters or Party Poopers which I am happy to say that I’m no longer a member of this group.

Friday, May 26, 2023

Sushi Shuffle

In between two projects which were “must-dos”, I managed to squeeze in making Sushi Shuffle a “shouldn’t be doing” which some would say is a “dream” but for me turned into a scream because that’s what Quilt Karma does sometimes, especially to my aging Asian mind. I was tempted to name my latest quilt Screaming Sushi but thought Sushi Shuffle would give a better image.
Anyhoot, while I putting away my fabric purchases made from last month’s Maine vacation, I purchased yardage of the black/gray/white Stof print (lower left corner). I knew I could use it  as backing for a quilt I would someday make with the other Stof prints which are stored  in my box of Teal fabrics. For such a small box, this has been a start of many quilts made as I mentioned in this Post. And wouldn’t you know just opening this box inspired me again to make the Sushi Quilt so I stopped working on my secret project.
No surprise that I wanted to make another Staggered Strips and Brick quilt with my initial fabric pull. Except for the black prints, the other prints were stored with the Teal stash. I knew someday I would make a quilt using the two fish prints on the left which were the color inspiration for the quilt. I did end up pulling some more gray and taupe prints because you can never have too much fabric when making a Staggered Strip quilt.
I decided that the Sushi Shuffle quilt would have (4) panels measuring 8”x72” each of staggered strips and three panels of 4”x8” blocks each also measuring 8”x72” since I wanted to feature the Stof prints purchased almost five years to the day from The Fabric Nook in Granby, CO which are the green and black and the gray and black print. I had to find some other prints which would complement the Stof  prints and was lucky to find the black/taupe which is by Basic Grey and from the Basic collection. Even luckier was finding the wonderful Stof print I didn’t remember purchasing, on the right and it wasn’t with the Teal box but with low volume prints. The orange Fish print is a Moda print which was stored in the Teal box. Have you notice my use of “the Teal Box”? I normally would refer this as my Teal Stash, but after making Sushi Shuffle, I’m thinking it’s like Pandora Box, not evil, but it does unleash sometimes untimely inspirations.
I really thought the Sushi Shuffle was going to be an easy and quick make and was I wrong as soon as this crossed my mind. I had to include a photo showing the seven panels so you understand how this quilt went from a dream” to a “scream”. First of all, I thought I was being smart by remembering that the strip panels needed to be on the sides of the block panels because I don’t like the way it looks when the blocks are on the outside. I also was going to add strip panels on the top and bottom but remembered that I don’t do this when the strip panels are vertical.  When making lap size quilts, I like at least an 80” length since we are a tall family and  now would have to settle for a 72” length since I already cut them this length before remembering I should have cut them 80”. But what really started the screaming was when I was sewing the two panels, what should have been the final seam, one with #1-#4 with #5-#7 and it did not line up. It seems that whenever I make a vertical Staggered Strip quilt there is always a problem with the panels lining up evenly and salty language is always used.  This time there was a 1” difference and I had to take the two panels apart. I thought maybe the solution was to also take apart panels #4-#7 and resew them back together.
I was so happy after ripping out two long seams that the panels lined up (left photo) but there was a problem. I don’t know how I did this but panels #4 and #6 were switched and finally corrected it after ripping more seams apart like three-four times, I lost count (right photo). I will say that this was not the original layout since panel #1 and #7  somehow got switched in all of the shuffling. If you’re wondering how I came up with the name Sushi Shuffle, I did want a name that tied in with the fish prints but really settled on Sushi because I was saying the four-letter “S” word a lot, especially after realizing I had to rip seams out again and again. Sushi is a nice alternative word for a swear word to use especially around the darling Granddaughter. And Shuffle was what I did and I do like alliteration when naming my quilts. I did mention before Screaming Sushi was in the running but also Senile Strips because I had to be with the many times I sewed the panels together wrong.
I did end up sewing panels on the top and bottom and wonders of miracles I sewed them in the correct spot. I really did want this top to be 80” long and since the panels were already made I decided to add them. I do like the way this looks. After the flimsy was  made, I did set it aside for the secret project that needed to be finished.
It’s no secret now that I am participating in the book launch blog hop for Kelly Young’s, My Quilt Infatuation, latest book “Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs which will be released on June 21st. My quilt made for this book launch is a Finally Finished and I am very excited to share it along with the other quilters who are participating in this book launch. This is another great book by Kelly and has converted this once pieced-back resister.
And to show how inspiring the book is, instead of backing Sushi Shuffle with just the black and gray Stof fabric which was my original intention when I bought the fabric, I did a pieced backing using the leftover strip panels and fabric chunks. The way I see it, I needed to use up the scraps, as encouraged in “Perfectly Pieced Quilt Backs” and not put them away in the Teal Box because I don’t need another future project. I plan on staying away from this box for awhile. It feels good to spend just a little more time and thought into my quilt backings and making it a nicer Finally Finished.
Here’s are close-up pics of the machine quilting with straight and wavy lines using CT Essential Thread in Stone The binding done by machine was with the Basic Grey black and taupe print. Sushi Shuffle measures 56” x 80” (approx.)
I always like to close my posts with a “glamour” shot of the quilt and thought Sushi Shuffle would look nice in front of a Sushi restaurant. Unfortunately, there isn’t one close by so this one is made possible by PicMonkey. The colors in this quilt does go with the restaurant, doesn’t it? Knowing the reason why I’m using Sushi, I didn’t think it would be pretty if I used a photo of Outhouses, right?  Now that my May Misbehaving may be over, it’s time to put together my flimsy for my other mmmust-do, the Rainbow Neighborhood QAL parade scheduled for the end of June. We’ll be leaving soon for a vacation in the mountains and I’ll be visiting The Fabric Nook to see if they have more Stof fabrics to add to the Teal Box.

Wishing everyone a Safe and Happy Memorial Day Holiday.

Linking up with:My Quilt Infatuation/NTT