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Polly - Quilters' Playcation Adventure Sewalong 2022 in Prints

Polly

78” x 89”

Polly lived most of her life following the rules. Getting married when she was supposed to. Having kids when she was supposed to. Baking all the things, keeping a clean house, volunteering at church. Her life was as it should be. It was also painfully boring and Polly had no idea who SHE was in the midst of everyone else’s expectations. Finally, with the kids gone and her husband on the golf course Polly had a chance to explore herself. That meant figuring out what she actually liked in bed to what food she wanted to eat for herself. She took herself out almost daily and explored the world around her one little trip at a time. It’s not that she hated her life, but she didn’t know if she actually liked it. Little by little she explored, experimented, and learned to enjoy what she, herself, could give and get out of the world. She finally knew who she was, who she wants to be.

This quilt is a culmination of the Quilters’ Playcation Adventure Sewalong 2022. Each week for the year I shared how to make a unique improv quilt block. One version shared was a three colour solid and this version was love affair with prints. When I started the year and I stressed leaving open the finished block size so layout possibilities were endless. By the end of the year I knew this version would have blocks all the same size. After measuring my blocks I picked a 10.5” square as my default size and got down to the business of cleaning everything up. 52 blocks, however, does not make for even sides on a quilt, so I used scraps to make a handful more blocks to get to 56 blocks. This gave me a 7 x 8 block layout. Sashing in this collection of red-orange prints framed out each block. I’m not generally a sashing girl, but I think it absolutely works here!

She’s a big quilt so I knew that quilting her would not be easy. I had a friend baste her on the long-arm to save me some time. Turns out that this layout and the use of sashing actually simplified the quilting a lot. I used the curvy stitch that comes on the Bernini in the sashing. That was easy. Then I just quilted each block on its own. Free motion quilting is very manageable when you only work one block at a time. Each block got quilted uniquely. Sometimes it was an all over design, sometimes that outlined or directly highlighted the piecing. The decision was most dictated by my mood when I got to that block. I switched out threads between peach, pale grey, light blue, and an olive green. I filled a bobbin and when that or the spool ran out I switched to another colour. All the threads blended very well on the wide back Kaffe Fassett I used on the back.

The original plan was for a dark binding, with a bit of green piping. I did not have in my stash nor could I find anything in the store that was a good blue that worked for this. Grey washed things out too much. Also, I had deadlines for a local show. So I used more of one of the sashing prints and extended that orange line. The green did make an appearance in my stitching though. I chose to use a Perle thread (from Valdani) to stitch down the binding in a visible manner. I love this way of finishing a quilt. It’s fast and has a great effect.

Polly is ready to explore the world now.

View all the free tutorials here.

Check out the layout discussion for all the quilt blocks.

Sew along with the 2023 Quilters’ Playcation Adventure Sewalong.

Toque Block Swap

Improvisational sewn toque quilt blocks in a snowy spruce tree

Have you heard about the Toque Block Swap?

It’s a fun, playful swap that came out of the Quilters’ Playcation Adventure Sewalong. I made a toque block one week and by the end of our weekly live I had committed to organizing a swap!

Anyone can sign up. You can make 1 block or you can make 20, it’s up to you. Mail your blocks to me, I will swap your blocks for the same number made by other participants and send them back to you. The tutorial to make the block is here, but feel free to individualize things however you like.

Sign up now, deadline for mailing blocks is January 10, so I hopefully receive them all by January 20, 2023. (So you can get through the holiday season without any sewing stress from this, and maybe even relieve some stress by playing.) Then my plan is to get all swapped blocks mailed out by the end of the month.

Sign up here.

Happy Quilt Top

Pink and white Quilt Top blowing in the breeze

Not too long ago someone asked me how I design a quilt. Like, how do you go from idea to finished quilt? For all that I talk about play and experimentation, my answer was a bit of a cliche. The truth is, I rarely design a quilt. Instead, I try an idea out and see if it works, see if it grabs me. If I like it, then I make a bunch of things My great pleasure comes when I am trying to make all those things look good together. That is also the greatest challenge. When the last seam is stitched 90% of the time I could never have predicted (designed) the quilt I ended up with.

This particular quilt, for instance, actually started with a sample block for a virtual class. The pinks were piled up, rejects from my Perimenpause Chronicle Quilt. So when a request came from a student for a particular make I grabbed what was on the top of the table. The block worked, I set it aside. And honestly? I didn’t think about it again for months. The next time I pulled it out for a class it never got put away. Then, back in May it popped into my line of sight and I decided to make a second block. It was with the third block that I realized I’d gone from an experiment to a quilt top.

8 pink fabric blocks cut with an improv quarter circle

So I just made my way through the pile of hand dyed fabric. First I used all the pink pinks. That didn’t get me very far so I used the more purply ones too. I don’t really like to make small quilts and I was then out of enough of the pink and purple fabrics so I dyed some more. They ended up a lot lighter and I debated trying again but decided to just make it work.

Another thing I had to make work was the background fabrics. Somewhere along the way I grabbed a different white than the one I started with. Because I was mostly working in the evening, under artificial light, I didn’t notice immediately. I had a choice to make - redo the blocks with the different white or keep going. Because I am kind of lazy I kept going. But what I did was embrace the differences and made the remaining blocks a mix of both whites. That way your eye wasn’t going to be drawn straight to the outlier.

Pink and White Pinhweel Quilt Top on fence

The amount of pink fabric I had was going to make a 48” square quilt when all was said and done. Not too shabby, really. By this point though, this quilt - puttering on this quilt - was really helping my mental health so I decided I wasn’t ready to stop making. I spent a fair amount of time contemplating things on the design wall then decided on something akin to a border. In places the pink curves extend out beyond the centre square. Most of the outside is white, however. Rather than make it a solid white and have. bunch of weird piecing to accommodate those extra pink bits I made the border out of the same size 16 patch blocks as the centre. So really, the quilt top is basic patchwork of 576 4” squares.

We won’t talk about the backing debacle, but I am back on track to get this basted shortly. I plan on a mix of machine and hand quilting so I would like it ready for when the snow flies and we are indoors a bit more.

Fall Inspired

Quilt Top made from 100 blocks which are designed as a square in a square in a square, all in colours of blue, orange, coral, and yellow.

So technically, this is a fall inspired quilt. Well, it was when I started it last fall. The colours and energy reminded me of a oh so brief yet spectacular fall season here in Alberta: blue skies and all the colours of the changing Prairie. I’m not sure what motivated me to pull out the blocks, add some more, and finish the top this past week. It certainly wasn’t the snow covering the sprouting crocus and green grass growing. Or maybe that is precisely what did it?

Blue, orange, green, and coral quilt top laying across a log

The blocks began in my Improv Square in a Square Playdate hosted through Quilters’ Playcation. I was enamoured with the technique and the colours that I committed to a quilt top. Just five blocks put together in a free hour here and there. No pressure making, just the way I like it! Play for the sake of sewing. I think that is what I needed over the Easter/Passover long weekend - sewing for the sake of sewing. Then, when I counted the blocks, I realized that I was pretty close to finishing up the total needed. Some quiet evenings, a snow storm, and a sick kid home from school meant that I was not only able to finish the blocks, but get the quilt top pieced!

Close up of 6 Improv Square in a Square quilt blocks behind pressed with an iron

These blocks are all improvised. That means points are sometimes cut off and they don’t always match between blocks. On a moving, used quilt though that will never be noticed. This construction technique is so much more relaxed than a paper pieced or precision pieced version, at least for me.

This entire quilt top was also an excellent way to play with fabric and colour. I chose my colour story - blue, coral, orange, and yellow - and explored value, hue, and tint in each block. Some blocks have bold contrast, some are subtle. Some move from light to dark, some are less prescriptive. The constants were the construction method, overall size, and the transition from warm to cool with each square in a block. Then I made half the blocks starting with warm, half starting with cool. That meant for a great overall pattern when assembling the quilt.

Improv Square in a Square quilt top in a forest emerging from winter

The weather is doing it’s normal, indecisive thing these days. Not yet spring but not really winter. When my son - who helped me with the photos because he is out of school with a bad cold - lamented that now we would have to baste the quilt I told him not to worry because it is definitely not fall. This quilt, well, it makes me think of fall. Don’t worry, son, we’ll probably be basting it next September! Or the one after that.