Amanda made this quilt for precious baby Gemma. Gemma is actually sleeping on
the back of the quilt – the front is a double pinwheel pattern. Pattern for the
letters is from the book “Spell it with Fabric!” which uses jellyroll strips to
make any letter of the alphabet.
Saturday, August 30, 2014
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Patchwork of the Crosses
Block 10
Love the intricate center of this block!
The fabrics used in this block have all been used in previous blocks, so dig back into your left-overs and see what you can come up with! These are the fabrics I used:
Carolyn, one of our customers (and a fellow Patchwork of the Crosses addict!), brought in her almost finished quilt top. She's been using fabrics from her own stash and has been working diligently on her blocks to make this throw-size quilt with only twelve blocks. Even with just a few blocks this is a spectacular quilt!
One of the things I really love about English Paper Piecing is its portability. With only a small sewing kit, I'm able to take my blocks along with me and sew in places where I'd never be able to sew with a sewing machine. I'm going on a road trip over Labor Day week-end and I'm really looking forward to getting lots of stitching done in the car and at the lake. I don't think I'll be as far along as Carolyn when I get back, but I hope to have a fair chunk of my quilt completed. I'll post a picture of my progress when I get back.
Hope you all have a happy, safe Labor Day week-end!
Check out our Pinterest board here to see the beautiful blocks being designed by our customeres!
Click here to go to the beginning of the Patchwork of the Crosses Blog Along.
Click here to go to our website if you need to order more paper piecing supplies.
Comment below to let us know how you're progressing with your blocks!
Monday, August 25, 2014
Big quilting week-end!
Mark your calendars, gather your friends, pack your bags and plan a quilting road trip for Thursday - Saturday, September 11 - 13, because there are three BIG quilting events happening all on the same week-end in our area!
For a hauntingly fun Shop Hop, visit Marietta for a tour of three great quilt shops. This year's theme is Halloween Treats!, and Little Quilts, Red Hen, and Tiny Stitches will all be featuring "spellbinding" quilts and projects for your fall inspiration. Free patterns will be available at all the shops as well as many fun demos. Visit all three shops and be entered to win one of these exceptional prizes:
- 1st Place Prize is a Silhouette Cameo Cutter
- 2nd Place Prize is a $50 Gift Certificate from each shop
- 3rd Place Prize is 20 fat quarters at each shop
While you're in Marietta, drive over to the Cobb Galleria Centre for the "Quilting Live!" quilt show and expo featuring many beautiful quilts along with quilting classes, demonstrations, and vendors. Click here to get more information on this great show.
Final stop of your quilting week-end needs to be the new AQS Quilt Show in Chattanooga! You won't want to miss this show of over 500 quilts including the incredible AQS contest quilts. Lots of workshops with world-class instructors, lectures and a huge vending area will round out the week-end. Click here for more information on beautiful Chattanooga and its first-ever AQS show.
It's going to be an action-packed three days, so wear your most comfortable shoes and prepare for an exciting quilting week-end. The dates for all three events are the same - three BIG events in three days! Mark your calendars for Thursday - Saturday, September 11 - 13.
Saturday, August 23, 2014
Blast from the Past - Twelve Days of Christmas Block of the Month
One of our customers visiting us from
Arizona shared a picture of her friend Cathy with a beautiful Twelve Days of
Christmas quilt. Several years ago, our store manager, Wanda Hizer, designed
the blocks for the “Twelve Days of Christmas” quilt and it was a very popular
Appliqué Block of the Month for our shop. Cathy participated in the Block of
the Month, but chose to reduce the size of the blocks slightly and then added
her own lovely machine embroidered border to the quilt she made.
Thursday, August 21, 2014
Patchwork of the Crosses
Today we'll work on the last units to be stitched – the
corner connector units. These are fun and easy to make and quick
to sew. Begin
by fussy cutting four squares for the center of the units. The squares are small so look through your fabric scraps from earlier months to see if there's anything you can use like I did on
this block. Remember the pink fabric from Blocks 5 and 6?
Or, look through your stash for something totally different.
Small prints or stripes work especially well.
Here are a few of the blocks I made.
Next surround the center unit with eight square sashing
units. I found it worked best to sew the
sashing squares together into units of two and then adding those units to the center
square. This allowed me to add the units
to all four sides with one continuous thread.
Don't forget to remove the papers from the center squares
when you finish stitching the corner unit. As soon as you've stitched on all four sides, the papers no longer serve a purpose and removing them will make the units more flexible for stitching into the quilt
You are now ready to insert the unit into the quilt top.
Isn't it exciting to see the quilt finally coming together? From now on, it's just a matter of staying on top of things and getting the blocks made each month!
Just a reminder - did you remember to pick up your August fabric pack?
For those of you new to Patchwork of the Crosses: Click here to go to the beginning of the Patchwork of the
Crosses Blog Along which started in April and posts every Thursday.
Click here to go to the website to order additional square
papers for the sashing and/or corner units or to order glue refills.
Don't forget to send pictures of your finished blocks to us
at littlequilts@mindspring.com. All the pictures we receive are posted on our
Pinterest board for everybody to “ooh” and “ahh” over!
Wednesday, August 20, 2014
Tula Pink fans..check it out
Dawn took the Super Simple One Step
Quilt class and finished this cute quilt featuring Tula Pink fabric. The class
teaches a technique for quilting as you go – piece the strips and quilt the
quilt all in one easy step! Dawn was thrilled to have a quilt finished in such
a short time!
Monday, August 18, 2014
Wednesdays Workshops...get out of the house!!
Quilting with friends is just so much more
fun than quilting alone as evidenced by our classroom which is a flurry of
activity every Wednesday when we host Wednesday Workshops. For a minimal fee,
participants can come and sew for a few hours or the whole day! Everyone brings
their own project and a staff person is on hand to answer questions or guide
through any tough spots. A great way to find some uninterrupted sewing time!
Friday, August 15, 2014
Can't believe this quilt came from four patches. Bet you can't make just one..
Our
Rug Braiding teacher Anne recently had her sister and a friend visit. They are
both weavers… and were taken with the Disappearing Four Patch Block, in the way that it
resembled weaving. Her sister’s friend purchased a charm pack of batiks and
started making four patches. She couldn’t believe how quick they went
together…she kept making more until she had enough for a throw size quilt. The
picture is a little blurry but you can see more samples on our website under
'free patterns'. Caution – it can become addicting…but could be a great stash
buster!
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Patchwork of the Crosses
Block 9
I love this block! When working with paisleys, you never know how the center design is going to turn out, but it's always great! Play with your magic mirror to see what different looks you can come up with.
These are the fabrics I used for this block:
Many of you will recognize this fabric from the "Pheasant Run" collection designed by Little Quilts. The vibrancy of the colors makes this an eye-catching block.
If you'd like to order a magic mirror, click here.
If you'd like to go to the beginning of this Blog Along, click here.
Check out our Pinterest board here to see pictures of the blocks our customers have been sending us. If you have pictures you'd like to share, email them ATTN: Muriel at our email address: littlequilts@mindspring.com
Thursday, August 07, 2014
Patchwork of the Crosses
Lucy Boston was not only a proficient quilter and popular author, she was a master gardener. When she first bought the Manor in 1939, the land in front of the house was a field. Designing the gardens was one of her first major undertakings upon moving into the house. Bordered by a moat on three sides and the River Great Ouse on the other, the garden is about four acres with a fifth deliberately left wild as a haven for wildlife.
Lucy began her gardens by planting over 200 trees and shrubs beside the towpath along
the River Great Ouse. In the 1940’s, in addition
to the gramophone recitals for the RAF that required so much of her time, she
managed to plant eight yew bushes on either side of the house which later
became topiary shaped into crowns, orbs, and the dove of peace to celebrate the
Queen’s Coronation in 1953.
In the early 1950’s, twelve more yew bushes were planted which eventually were shaped into chess pieces. These now stand in squares of purple-leaved ajuga and grey-leaved stachys to represent the squares of the chess board.
In the early 1950’s, twelve more yew bushes were planted which eventually were shaped into chess pieces. These now stand in squares of purple-leaved ajuga and grey-leaved stachys to represent the squares of the chess board.
After the war, Lucy concentrated on
her first loves – old roses, irises, and herbaceous perennials. The garden, today, is home to over 200 old
roses and award winning irises.
In her garden, Lucy enjoyed working with nature,
rather than battling to overcome it. She writes in the notes at the end of A Stranger at Green Knowe: ‘My
approach to gardening is to find out how the garden would like to be – what
wants to grow where. My chief pleasure in it is the interplay of sun and shadow
among trees and on the face of the house.’
Just so, a walk along through the garden might take you through large herbaceous borders full of scented plants with plenty of self-sown annuals intermingled with the forest and wild flowers just waiting to take over – the essence of informal gardening.
Just so, a walk along through the garden might take you through large herbaceous borders full of scented plants with plenty of self-sown annuals intermingled with the forest and wild flowers just waiting to take over – the essence of informal gardening.
Today, the gardens
are a mass of flowers, shrubs, trees, and topiary with leisurely lawns and
secluded corners that are a real delight. A kaleidoscope of spring iris and
stands of allium merge into a summer show of roses and drifts of white foxgloves,
before the mellow colors of autumn.
A majestic Huntingdon elm marks the passing of the seasons – in spring its seeds float down like a gentle fall of snow.
A majestic Huntingdon elm marks the passing of the seasons – in spring its seeds float down like a gentle fall of snow.
During the winters when she was
unable to garden, Lucy spent time writing her classic series of children’s
books. For those of you reading the
Green Knowe series, the Manor at Hemingford Grey and the gardens were recreated
and made famous as the house of Green Knowe in the books.
The topiary figure prominently in the books - especially the deer topiary- as does the statue of St. Michael which is also found in the garden.
All the secret paths and hiding places in the books are still there making a visit to the gardens especially enjoyable to both adults and children alike who have read the books. As the main character of the books says: ‘I like this house,’ said Tolly. ‘It’s like living in a book that keeps coming true.’ And so it is today, that all who visit the Hemingford Grey Manor and its’ gardens can step into the pages of Lucy’s books and travel in time with Tolly and his companions.
The topiary figure prominently in the books - especially the deer topiary- as does the statue of St. Michael which is also found in the garden.
All the secret paths and hiding places in the books are still there making a visit to the gardens especially enjoyable to both adults and children alike who have read the books. As the main character of the books says: ‘I like this house,’ said Tolly. ‘It’s like living in a book that keeps coming true.’ And so it is today, that all who visit the Hemingford Grey Manor and its’ gardens can step into the pages of Lucy’s books and travel in time with Tolly and his companions.
Tuesday, August 05, 2014
A blast from the past
Way back in October of 2002, shop owner Sylvia Johnson's pattern for an "Antique Churndash" graced the cover of American Patchwork and Quilting magazine. Sandra bought a kit for the quilt and, now, twelve years later, here is her finished quilt with hand appliqued borders and beautiful hand quilting! What a treasure and still a classic design.
Saturday, August 02, 2014
Family made quilt gift....
Marla inherited these cute butterfly blocks
that were stitched by her grandparents and aunts. She then made the patchwork
blocks and stitched the top. The finished quilt will be a gift to her
grandson. What a treasure!
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