Patchwork Seaming

I finished stitching all my patchwork strips together and thought of some times to share with you:

When stitching 1/4" seam allowances with a 1/4" foot such as Patchwork Foot #37 or Patchwork Foot with Guide #57, be sure to use the actual edge of the foot as your guide - if your fabric is peeking out from under the side, it's extending past the 1/4" guide. Instead of watching the side of the foot, watch the edge of the fabric as it goes under the toe; this is where you'll align the raw edges of your fabric pieces with the edge of the foot. Another helpful guide is the 1/4" mark on your stitch plate, just in front of the foot. By following both of these guides you'll ensure that your seams are exactly 1/4", and all of your subsequent joins should match properly.

I always buy two spools of thread, then wind one completely on bobbins. That way I know I'll have enough thread on bobbins to last until the needle thread runs out. This works for garment sewing and home dec as well as patchwork. For colors I use a lot (browns, grays, denim blues) I purchase full boxes of thread - I can usually get a bulk discount that way - and I always end up using it all. Last summer I purchased several boxes of brown thread for the My Label wardrobe I put together - 50 weight for my sewing machine, and 60 weight for my serger. I use three or four spools of 60 weight on my serger when sewing garments rather than using serger thread - it comes in lots of colors and is softer on the inside of garments.


Jo's Last Quilt

No, not the last quilt I'll ever make, but the last quilt I finished. I have at least four quilts-in-progress - all of them full- or queen-size - that need blocks joined and borders added before I can quilt them. Plus sets of blocks I've purchased at flea markets - I'm not the only one that doesn't get quilts finished!

Foundation piecing, based on a quilt in Valori Well's Stitch 'n Flip Quilts book. (I think the border is a Valori Wells batik from years ago, but I'm not sure.) I started it about 4 years ago in a class at my local quilt shop, made all the blocks, then finished a year or so later it at a weekend retreat with my quilt guild. What a great way to sew! 50 women, 50 tables, 50 machines, nearly two full days of sewing, no distractions, dozens of opinons...

I had fun playing with the free-motion quilting on this one. The BERNINA Stitch Regulator hadn't been introduced yet, so all of the quilting was done using Freehand Quilting Foot #29. I like the wide, clear sole of this foot for quilting - I can see where I'm going, and use the edges of the foot to judge how far I am from previous lines of stitching. I couldn't decide which threads to use, so I used them all - variegated threads from YLI, Superior Threads, Mettler, Sulky - all of the pink/orange/yellow and green spools in my stash. This kind of quilt is great for practicing free-motion techniques - since none of the blocks match, the quilting doesn't have to look the same either. No worries about staying inside the lines, having equally-sized loops, putting squiggles in the same places - just move the fabric and "draw" shapes.

I finished another quilt the same weekend - a group quilt made with seven children ages 7-13. It's one of my favorites, but I'll share it with you another time.


Jo's First Quilt - Scrap Four-Patch

My first quilt wasn't nearly as nice as Erika's, but it's been well-loved for over 25 years. I didn't have a clue what I was doing - the fabrics range from lightweight cotton bandanas to dense cotton/poly sheeting. It's folded like this so you can't see the parts where the thinner fabrics have worn completely away!

I love scrap quilts - each piece of fabric has its own story. Some of the squares in this quilt are from my mother's and grandmother's and aunts' fabric stashes, some from garments I'd sewn. The blue & black plaid in the corner is from a pair of shorts I made, the olive green from a top my mother wore in the '60s, the sheeting from my father's aunts...it's fun to sit down and go through them all one by one.

I stitched this together the summer before I started college. I'd been sewing my own clothes for years, but I didn't know much about how to put together a quilt. I had no idea how to apply the binding - it's still attached, so I guess it's doing its job, but I'm glad you can't see it up close! Binding a quilt isn't hard; you just need to know what to do. The Binding Basics Online Class at www.berninausa.com has instructions for several binding methods. My four-patch quilt uses - sort of - the single binding technique, using purchased binding. These days I cut my own bias strips and use the double binding method; I like to repeat fabrics from the blocks around the edges, and the two layers of fabric over the edge provide more protection than a single layer. (My quilts get used and loved and laundered a lot; if they were hanging on a wall a single fold binding would be fine.)  

There are so many tools now that make assembling a quilt easier - rotary cutters/mats/rulers, 1/4" presser feet (BERNINA Patchwork Foot #37 and Patchwork Foot with Guide #57), edgestitching feet (BERNINA Edgestitch Foot #10/10C), needle stop up/down features, adjustable needle position - so much easier than scissors, cardboard templates, and a single "all-purpose" foot!

I don't think I'd even heard of machine-quilting when I made this quilt, and I knew I didn't want to stitch it by hand, so I tied it with lengths of acrylic yarn (which has tangled and pilled over the years - I'd use embroidery floss or topstitching thread today). I come from a long line of hand-quilters, and I can hand-stitch when I have to, but I much prefer machine quilting. I've always liked to draw, and machine quilting is very much like drawing a line with a sewing machine needle instead of a pencil or pen. I can machine quilt just about as quickly as I can draw, so it doesn't take me long to complete a quilt once I get it set up. And it's soooo relaxing! Next week I'll show you some of my more recent pieces - which reflect some of the things I've learned through classes and books and looking at hundreds (maybe thousands?) of quilts.  


Make a Card Quilt for the Holidays

'Twas the weekend before Christmas, and all through the house...people were scrambling to get all their shopping and wrapping and decorating done! Here's an easy project for a last minute gift, decoration, or sewing craft to make with the kids. It's also a great way to use some of those seasonal prints in your stash! Don't limit yourself to a Christmas Card Quilt- other themes include birthday, graduation, new baby, Valentine's Day, vacation & travel (we'll call these last two Postcard & Ticket Stub Quilts). Thanks to Susan Beck & Nancy Bednar for this project! Happy Holidays!

A First Time for Everything!

I finally finished my first ever quilt!

Erika's first quilt!

I started with four embroidered squares that I had made while demonstrating the Happy machine at the Houston Quilt Festival. I added hand-dyed fabrics that I made, and came up with the design on the fly.

Erika's first quilt!

I used the Bernina Stitch Regulator to free motion quilt, and I was really getting the hang of it when I finished! I used the clear foot attachment for the BSR to guide my echo quilting. I also used the Walking Foot for the first time when I applied the binding, and I can't believe I have been sewing so long without it! Holy cow does it make sewing through several layers a breeze!

The embroidery designs are combinations of the Bernina Creative Genes collection and some other lacy designs. I'll post about how I made these kaleidescope designs in the Bernina Embroidery Software soon!