Whenever I see a quilt and think,
Oh, I want to make one like that, I find that my results don't quite match up to the quilt I saw. I suspect that's going to be the case in this instance, too. This 9-patch and snowball is the quilt I saw that I'm trying to replicate.
Here's one more green block for a total of seven. I posted six last week.
And in an effort to catch up from January through April, I made some blue, red, pink, and one more yellow block.
When I see these blocks all together with their jumble of colors, they sort of turn my stomach. Thank goodness they won't be in rainbow-color order in the quilt and will be separated by white/off-white/solid color snowball blocks.
I can almost imagine a 9-patch and snowball as a one-color quilt, especially with the variety of fabrics and prints in each color range. Maybe for another time?
That's it for my Rainbow Scrap Challenge (RSC) blocks for this week. Thanks so much to Angela for hosting!
--Nancy.
Showing posts with label scrap quilts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label scrap quilts. Show all posts
Saturday, May 24, 2025
Friday, February 21, 2025
Scrappy Stars is a Finished Top
Hooray for a finish! If you came here three days ago you saw these same blocks laid out as a quilt but they were not yet sewn together. Now they are. It measures 35" x 43½".
Choosing the fabric for the alternate blocks was a quick decision. Cutting and sewing those blocks went quickly, too--started and finished in three days. (Don't bother to enlarge the photo because it will not have the clarity you hope for.)
This may not be the scrappiest quilt with the most different fabrics or small pieces I've made, but it is the scrappiest quilt with the most different pieces in a single block. I counted 15 different fabrics in one block and others have more. Just to be clear, I made this quilt but I followed the lead of an antique quilt when I chose and placed fabrics. I participated in Repro QuiltLover Taryn's Scrappy StitchAlong a year or so ago. I raided my fabrics to find ones as close to the fabrics in her original antique quilt as I could. And boy, are these 6" blocks scrappy! If I had been the original creator of this quilt I think I might have placed triangles a little differently. So many of the stars seem out of balance.
These two are my favorite blocks. I think that's because of the clarity and simplicity. I'm thinking this quilt should be a donation quilt. Do you think any mom would want this for her baby?
I'd like to find someone who could layer and quilt it (by machine would be fine), then donate it. Any readers who would be interested? One of the reasons I'm not finishing it myself is that the fabric in the alternate squares is a little denser than regular cotton and makes hand quilting too hard for my hands. The other reason for finding someone to take it is that I already have too many quilts that need quilted, and I'm a slow hand quilter. So, if you might be interested please let me know in the comments.
I'm linking this post to Finished (or not!) Friday at Alycia Quilts. Thank you for hosting, Alycia.
And remember those photos I thought I lost last weekend? I found them, thanks to Katie. This photo doesn't show the detail of snow on branches but still, isn't it a beautiful winter wonderland? We are having frigid temperatures here in central Ohio, but spring will nudge out winter one of these days! Next week looks like it will be in the 40s and 50s. It will seem spring-like!
--Nancy.
This may not be the scrappiest quilt with the most different fabrics or small pieces I've made, but it is the scrappiest quilt with the most different pieces in a single block. I counted 15 different fabrics in one block and others have more. Just to be clear, I made this quilt but I followed the lead of an antique quilt when I chose and placed fabrics. I participated in Repro QuiltLover Taryn's Scrappy StitchAlong a year or so ago. I raided my fabrics to find ones as close to the fabrics in her original antique quilt as I could. And boy, are these 6" blocks scrappy! If I had been the original creator of this quilt I think I might have placed triangles a little differently. So many of the stars seem out of balance.
These two are my favorite blocks. I think that's because of the clarity and simplicity. I'm thinking this quilt should be a donation quilt. Do you think any mom would want this for her baby?
I'd like to find someone who could layer and quilt it (by machine would be fine), then donate it. Any readers who would be interested? One of the reasons I'm not finishing it myself is that the fabric in the alternate squares is a little denser than regular cotton and makes hand quilting too hard for my hands. The other reason for finding someone to take it is that I already have too many quilts that need quilted, and I'm a slow hand quilter. So, if you might be interested please let me know in the comments.
I'm linking this post to Finished (or not!) Friday at Alycia Quilts. Thank you for hosting, Alycia.
And remember those photos I thought I lost last weekend? I found them, thanks to Katie. This photo doesn't show the detail of snow on branches but still, isn't it a beautiful winter wonderland? We are having frigid temperatures here in central Ohio, but spring will nudge out winter one of these days! Next week looks like it will be in the 40s and 50s. It will seem spring-like!
--Nancy.
Saturday, March 18, 2023
Unifying a Scrap Quilt, Or at Least Making it Cohesive
My self-imposed challenge was--is--to use a group of black and grey plaid fabrics from shirts and a group of fabrics in the coral color-range to create a quilt. The point is to use up those plaids! I made a quilt using black plaids a year ago and learned that the plaids blend to grey when viewed from a distance. (Yes, this quilt is using more of the same plaids from that quilt!)
On the other hand, I learned from this quilt that while the black plaid fabrics may look grey, their value also varies depending on the proportion of black and light in the plaid. And also possibly depending on the direction of the plaid. Plaids are so variable!
Add to the above the variations in the eight or so coral fabrics I used--varying from prints that look light to solids and prints that are brights and darks--and I have a busy mess of blocks. But it's a scrap quilt, I tell myself....
Each block has 13 plaid and 12 coral squares. My decision to make the plaid dominant was based on the fact that I had more plaids than coral fabrics. I still have plaids left but not much coral fabric.
I am to the point of auditioning sashing. In my original post about these blocks you readers left some wonderful comments. Several of you suggested no sashing. In person, all the plaids jumble my eyes which makes me think they need some space between. So I'm choosing to use sashing. Several of you suggested that if I were going to use sashing that black might be too dark/stark. I had the same impression. I auditioned several grey shirt fabrics, none of which have enough fabric to make sashing for the whole quilt. The greys seem to disappear. After trying out several greys, I decided black might be the best option after all. (See photos below and at the beginning of this post.) I think the black or very dark grey sashing will give the quilt some unity, continuity, and structure and help it look cohesive.
The other thing about this quilt is that I'm trying to use up fabric, not buy more fabric, which means I'm hoping to use what I have, though I admit to stopping at the thrift store this afternoon....
This brings me to the next decision about this quilt, and that is whether to put coral squares at both ends of the black/dark grey sashing. I like that it will create a secondary pattern across the quilt--a 9-patch in the center of the black sashing.
At least that's what I think will happen. I've cut and laid out only a few strips of black sashing. I think the sashing will also give the eye a place to rest.
Another consideration is fabric for the squares at the ends of each black sashing piece. Coral, I think, and all the same fabric, if possible, for continuity's sake. The fabrics below are possibilities, shown with with pieces of the fabrics I used to make the blocks.
The fabric on the left has less than enough for the squares, but I think it looks best of the ones I have. The fabric on the right seems too dark, maybe a little too red/orange, and blends into the plaids. (See top photo, center square.) I'll cut black strips, then lay out the quilt and play a little.
It does occur to me that I could choose a completely different color range for the sashing strips and squares but I don't know what color that would be....
Do you have any insights to share about how to unify scrap quilts to make them look cohesive? Thank you if you do.
In the whole of human experience--even in the whole of my own personal experience of 70+ years--choosing fabrics and colors for a quilt is a tiny, brief fragment of life. Insignificant, really, and probably not worth all the time and thought I put into it. And yet, I'm continually striving for improvement--being better, doing better, making better--each next time an interaction or experience comes my way. That being said, I have to remind myself that each quilt I make does not have to be better than the last. And thank goodness for that! (But even so, I unconsciously set that as one of my goals when making a quilt.)
I thought this Cara Cara orange was so beautiful that I should share it. Citrus fruit isn't a favorite but I do love the smell and beauty of oranges. I'm linking this post to
> Oh Scrap! at Quilting is more fun than Housework
> Design Wall Monday at Small Quilts and Doll Quilts
Thanks for hosting, ladies.
I hope you are well and thanks for sharing comments!
--Nancy.
On the other hand, I learned from this quilt that while the black plaid fabrics may look grey, their value also varies depending on the proportion of black and light in the plaid. And also possibly depending on the direction of the plaid. Plaids are so variable!
Add to the above the variations in the eight or so coral fabrics I used--varying from prints that look light to solids and prints that are brights and darks--and I have a busy mess of blocks. But it's a scrap quilt, I tell myself....
Each block has 13 plaid and 12 coral squares. My decision to make the plaid dominant was based on the fact that I had more plaids than coral fabrics. I still have plaids left but not much coral fabric.
I am to the point of auditioning sashing. In my original post about these blocks you readers left some wonderful comments. Several of you suggested no sashing. In person, all the plaids jumble my eyes which makes me think they need some space between. So I'm choosing to use sashing. Several of you suggested that if I were going to use sashing that black might be too dark/stark. I had the same impression. I auditioned several grey shirt fabrics, none of which have enough fabric to make sashing for the whole quilt. The greys seem to disappear. After trying out several greys, I decided black might be the best option after all. (See photos below and at the beginning of this post.) I think the black or very dark grey sashing will give the quilt some unity, continuity, and structure and help it look cohesive.
The other thing about this quilt is that I'm trying to use up fabric, not buy more fabric, which means I'm hoping to use what I have, though I admit to stopping at the thrift store this afternoon....
This brings me to the next decision about this quilt, and that is whether to put coral squares at both ends of the black/dark grey sashing. I like that it will create a secondary pattern across the quilt--a 9-patch in the center of the black sashing.
At least that's what I think will happen. I've cut and laid out only a few strips of black sashing. I think the sashing will also give the eye a place to rest.
Another consideration is fabric for the squares at the ends of each black sashing piece. Coral, I think, and all the same fabric, if possible, for continuity's sake. The fabrics below are possibilities, shown with with pieces of the fabrics I used to make the blocks.
The fabric on the left has less than enough for the squares, but I think it looks best of the ones I have. The fabric on the right seems too dark, maybe a little too red/orange, and blends into the plaids. (See top photo, center square.) I'll cut black strips, then lay out the quilt and play a little.
It does occur to me that I could choose a completely different color range for the sashing strips and squares but I don't know what color that would be....
Do you have any insights to share about how to unify scrap quilts to make them look cohesive? Thank you if you do.
In the whole of human experience--even in the whole of my own personal experience of 70+ years--choosing fabrics and colors for a quilt is a tiny, brief fragment of life. Insignificant, really, and probably not worth all the time and thought I put into it. And yet, I'm continually striving for improvement--being better, doing better, making better--each next time an interaction or experience comes my way. That being said, I have to remind myself that each quilt I make does not have to be better than the last. And thank goodness for that! (But even so, I unconsciously set that as one of my goals when making a quilt.)
I thought this Cara Cara orange was so beautiful that I should share it. Citrus fruit isn't a favorite but I do love the smell and beauty of oranges. I'm linking this post to
> Oh Scrap! at Quilting is more fun than Housework
> Design Wall Monday at Small Quilts and Doll Quilts
Thanks for hosting, ladies.
I hope you are well and thanks for sharing comments!
--Nancy.
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