Stash Buster Quilts. Lynne Edwards

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Название Stash Buster Quilts
Автор произведения Lynne Edwards
Жанр Сделай Сам
Серия
Издательство Сделай Сам
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781446351635



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more I worked on quilt designs with a view to using lots of fabrics in whatever amounts I happened to have, the more ideas seemed to appear. My students, too, were hungry for more and by the time Making Scrap Quilts to Use It Up had been published there were enough additional quilt designs already underway for this book. This time I have focused on techniques that are high on efficiency and time-saving features to move the design along. Not exactly ‘quilt in a day’ but certainly aiming at keeping the ideas bubbling and the quilt growing speedily so that the fabric stashes don't get too dusty.

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      I have to confess that after a long spell of controlled abstinence I have weakened several times in the past three months and bought new fabric, the designs and colours of which I couldn't resist. I've no plans to use them yet, but they are arranged artfully in a shallow basket in my workroom and I see them every day as I move about the room. All quilters will understand the pleasure that gives me. So, do not stop buying fabric – it is a part of the collecting process. Don't put your new acquisitions away or hide them from a disapproving family. You bought them to enjoy, so do just that, even if that means just stroking them occasionally. After a while, move them along and mix them with your established collections. Start cooking a new quilt project by auditioning new groupings of fabrics from your stash. A static collection grows stale: it needs to be constantly reassessed, used and replenished.

      In this latest book you will find 20 projects, both large and small, to use with all that fabric. Some of the quilts have been made by me, others by my students, and the range of fabrics varied to suit the taste of each maker. We all have a little less in our stashes now – but not for long, I'm sure. The important thing is that we have enjoyed ourselves. Reading through this introduction I see I have used the word ‘pleasure’ three times plus ‘enjoy’ and ‘delight’. Isn't that what we all feel about this craft and about all that lovely fabric waiting to be used?

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      Quilters can seldom resist a pile of different fabrics carefully chosen to look good together and tied with ribbon or string in a seductive parcel. We buy them, admire them, but find it hard to break up the pile as it is the relationship between one fabric and its neighbour that pleases us. Once a piece is removed, it never seems to have quite the same magic. Well, with layer-cake quilts you can build on this pleasure: several squares of fabric are layered and then cut into wedges, just like cutting the slices of a layer-cake.

      This Spinning Pinwheel block creates a good sense of movement in a quilt and allows for either subtle or dramatic colour combinations. The fanned shape of the block is perfect for assessing how a group of fabrics work together and is very satisfying visually The Subtle Spin quilt opposite is made from eight toning fabrics for the pinwheel blocks and two background fabrics used alternately in the blocks. The cutting for all the blocks is done at the same time. Each block looks different because the pieces are rearranged, although the step-by-step stages of construction are the same each time. The blocks are separated with sashing strips and a final 4in (10cm) border added. Sue Fitzgerald used the Spinning Pinwheel block to produce a lovely quilt in very different colours – see Blue-and-White Delight.

      Subtle Spin

       THE QUILT STORY

      Every year fabric designers bring out a new range of fabrics, often in a co-ordinating set of colours. I bought assorted half yards of a truly delectable collection designed by Robyn Pandolph, all soft greens and pinks. Two years later when I finally found a project to suit it there wasn't a piece to be found anywhere to supplement my inadequate stash. Trawling through quilt shops and students’ own fabrics, I finally acquired enough extra fabric to make the quilt. The moral of this story is: assume that when you buy from a new and probably temporary fabric range that you will finally want to use it in a decent-sized quilt. You need six yards in total for this quilt, not six half-yard pieces…

      Stash-BusterQults_c001_IL001Much time is saved on this quilt by eight layers of fabric being cut at the same time. The squares are then cut into wedges, each of which is used to make a block.

      Finished block size 10in × 10in (25.3cm × 25.3cm)

      Finished quilt size 55½in × 55½in (141cm × 141cm)

       FABRIC REQUIREMENTS

      • Pinwheel block fabrics: two squares each of eight fabrics, each cut 9in × 9in (22.8cm × 22.8cm).

      • Background fabrics: 30in (76.2cm) each of two different fabrics each 42in–44in (106.7cm–111.8cm) wide.

      • Sashing: 1yd (1m) of fabric plus 6in (15.2cm) of another fabric 42in–44in (106.7cm–111.8cm) wide for the contrast cornerstones.

      • Border: 30in (76.2cm) of fabric 42in–44in (106.7cm–111.8cm) wide.

      • Binding: 15in (38cm) of fabric 42in–44in (106.6cm–111.7cm) wide.

      • Wadding and backing fabric: at least 2in (5cm) larger than finished quilt size.

       “This quilt is a favourite of mine as I love the soft colours. I quilted it to death by hand over one summer – an excuse to sit in the sun and sew.”

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      This technique makes eight blocks from the initial eight squares of pinwheel fabrics, so start by cutting and making the first eight blocks, and then repeat the process to make the second set of eight blocks.

      CUTTING THE SQUARES

      1 From each of the chosen pinwheel fabrics cut two squares, each 9in × 9in (22.7cm × 22.7cm). Set one square of each fabric aside to be used later in the second set of blocks. Take one square of each fabric and arrange them in a sequence that pleases you. Remember that the last fabric will link up with the first fabric in this pinwheel design. Note the order of the fabrics on a piece of paper and number each one.

      Cutting through eight layers at once sounds great, but accuracy can suffer as the fabric shifts a little with each cut. Instead, make two piles each with just four layers of fabric and reassemble into one pile after cutting.

      2 Place the fabric squares numbered 1–4 on top of each other with 1 at the top and 4 at the bottom, all right side upwards. Line up the cut edges of the squares exactly. Use a rotary cutter and ruler to cut the squares diagonally from corner to corner (Fig 1). Repeat this from the other corner to corner diagonally (Fig 2).

       Fig 1

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       Fig 2

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      3 Without moving the layers of fabric, place the ruler horizontally across the centre of the fabric and the bottom edge of the fabric matching the 4½in marking on the ruler (Fig 3). Cut across the fabric squares.

       Fig 3

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      4 Lift the ruler without disturbing the piles of fabric and place it vertically down the centre of the fabric with the left-hand edge of fabric matching the 4½in marking on the ruler (Fig 4). Lefthanders should work from the right-hand side of the fabric. Cut through