Thursday 3 November 2011

FREE MACHINE QUILTING MY WAY

On the PP Forum we are doing journal pages using different ideas that Katy and others come up with. For November it is Free Machine Quilting, as I tend to do a lot of that - hahaha - Katy asked if I and another lady on the forum would give some pointers to the newbies for doing this type of work. I put up three messages then said I would do some samples for them, so here they are for all to share.
Please remember this is how I do this type of quilting, other folk may do it different to me, but this is what works for me. You will have to find what works for you. Just practice. Anyway off we go....









NEXT.....




MOVING ON....





- AND WE ARE OFF ...







Hope that is all clear for you girls, get back to me if it isn't, I will sort it for you, I don't think I have missed anything out, I hope not anyway.

Tuesday 28 June 2011

MAGIC STARS

This is MY WAY for this pattern, I have been doing this pattern this way for many years now, I have never even read any of the books on this subject, of which I know there are many. I like to do it my own way. You of course can go and buy the books and make lots of various other designs this way. But just look at patterns that have a swirl in the centre, and there you go. Have fun.

Find pretty – or not! – Fabric with a fairly largish design on it that repeats at regular intervals, this is to save wastage. 
The repeats will match more efficiently if you use the lengthwise of the fabric. Width-ways you may have to jiggle it a bit to make it identical which will give you grief later at the cutting stage. I was told once by a fabric manufacturer that the repeat is always more accurate lengthwise, and this has proved right in lots of things I have used made and needed accurate matches. Any waste between the repeats can be used for other projects, or sashings or binding, there is always something to do with it. Hair for a doll even, why not!
OK fabric chosen washed and pressed? You know that makes sense. Let the fun begin.
I have cut myself a 9 ½” square to use for the Magic Star part of the square. You can choose yourself what size to use, it is very easy to draft.
I lay this square on the fabric in different areas and chose to go for the NOT so obvious, I have chosen to use slightly off skew, You will chose what you prefer of course. Just remember it will look nothing like the fabric when finished.
Using a fade away pen I drew round the square directly onto the right side of the fabric where I had chosen my square to be.
Now I have to tell you I cut the length of the fabric all the way down to the end so I only had that thinnish strip in front of me instead of the yardage...

I now need to cut out SEVEN more identical squares, I place the original square on top of the fabric strip and run round with the rotary cutter each time, you may be more comfortable using scissors.  CAN YOU SEE IT?
 HERE IT IS

Each set of EIGHT squares will give you EIGHT blocks. The cutting out part is the slow laborious boring part of this patchwork but the end results are truly justified by it. Wait and see.
Right, 8 identical squares now cut out, turn them over and take one at a time and press with hot iron, one on top of the other making sure you have the design the right way round, RIGHT SIDE FACING YOU
WRONG - one is up-side-down
 RIGHT - you just can't see the whole block in this picture!!!
 PRESS firmly to make them kind of 'bond' together...
Oooo now using a rotary cutter with a NEW blade in it – trust me – you need to cut all your squares. I am comfortable cutting through the eight layers, you can separate them if you wish into two sets of four, just make sure you have them the right way round when cutting….

Cut through the  Middle, Horizontally and Vertically then corner to corner.

This yields 8 sets of 8 triangles,

Pin each of these sets before you go any further.
Clear yourself a space and take one set of triangles open out and lay out as shown
 Pretty Huh?  BUT waitTurn the triangle the other way round, you will get a different design doing this,
You just then have to choose which way you wish one to choose, either way it doesn’t matter to the finished block. Do this to every set of eight as you make the blocks up, you are often surprised at the difference in the design you get. It only takes a minute to do. I laid mine on its background fabric and opted for this way round. The background fabric is actually lilac!!!!!
Now you have made your decision pin back together then get your background fabric and cut one 9 ½” square or whatever size it is you have opted to make. Cut as you did the patterned fabric right side facing you, this gives you enough for TWO blocks. The second shape you need is a rectangle [oblong] with a 45degree angle one end. See diagram below.
When you draft out your pattern you do not add seam allowances to anything, it fits as is. You must just remember to cut with the fabrics right side facing you at all times, if you cut on the fold you will get the reverse shape, which is no good for you in this case.
OK all set to assemble. After all the above it is now going to take you but a few minutes to put together one block. If only you could get some other Muppet to do the cutting out for you!!!! Hmm mm!!
Lay the whole block out right sides up to the side of your machine, or if doing it by hand, to the side of your hands – hahahaha
Look at the block carefully, you want to assemble in the best way, so take a pattern triangle and a plain triangle and join on short side, put back in its place when sewn, do the other three triangle + triangles, then do the other pieces, patterned triangle with the rectangle lopped off end piece, sew, place back, do other three. Are you with me still?
Just a word of caution, as you pick the pieces up to sew make sure you DO NOT turn them as the design will be wrong. Been there done that!!!
You should have four squares now, press the seams towards the background fabric, then join the top two squares then the bottom two squares, press the seams again, the long centre seam will ‘tell’ you how it wants to lay, let it go the way it wants, saves grief later.
Now last press on the front and Voila, one block done. How easy was that, but OH how effective!

As I said the cutting takes the time but I am sure you will agree it is worth it in the end.
ENJOY J
Do leave me a message if you found this helpful or even interesting, also if you are going to have a go I would love to see your pictures and maybe put them here if you will allow.

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Monday 14 March 2011

THE QUILTED ENVELOPE BAG

I used Sari silks for making these as I like the effect you get on the quilting. You can use cotton of course, or anything else, basically anything will do. Depends on the 'look' you want.
So here are the pieces, pinned to a piece of wadding and backing fabric which you wont see when the bag is finished so use something cheap and cheerful, some have muslin behind, some have nothing bar the wadding, yes you can quilt just like that...

I went a bit mad as you can see, but I use these as a way of testing my quilting patterns...
First you do some wavy lines, across and back in one continuous line, this is to give you some 'borders' for your quilting patterns...
Now you do your quilting, anything that takes your fancy, just fill each space you made with the previous step, try something you have never done before, it is fun, you may find something you really like and can practice here before you put it on your precious quilt...
This one has voile over the sari silk...
This is one I did with no backing fabric, this is the view of the wadding side for you...
Sorry, there are a few of these...
Another just showing the wadded side...
When you have filled the spaces, you place a piece of lining fabric over the right side, stitch almost all the way round, turn through, poke those corners out, then stitch as close to the edge as you can, using a matching or mono filament thread, seal the opening as you go, you end up with a flat piece of quilting...
Fold in half one way then the other and crease, bring one corner up place on creased line, bring another up, then join these two together, I hold them together and sew with a wide zigzag with mono filament thread, when you lay it flat again, the thread opens out for the edges to lay flat.. try it, it does work...
Then fold the other corner up, pinch it up together and stitch as before...
Ta da...
Here are the others I made with the samples up above...
I used different coloured threads in the different sections on this one, just for a change...
This one I used two different colours of sari silk, one half peach the other pale pink...
For some reason this is showing as blue, it is black, I didn't do much quilting, just double lines, then I sewed a red bead in the little squares those lines made, just for a change...
Yet more I made a while back...
Not sure which is my favourite, I need to make a Yellow one then I can decide. Which is your favourite?
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