Quilt Coats are quite the trend right now, even beyond the quilting world. I don't normally care about fashion trends, but I do like the idea of a quilted coat or jacket. Problem is, I have zero garment-making skills. I have tried and the results have not been good. I have wondered if I could go the sweatshirt-turned-into-a-quilted-jacket route, and have watched this tutorial with Edyta Sitar several times for the method. When I learned that one of the Island Batik challenges was the Lone Star, I thought a lot about making a quilted jacket using a sweatshirt for the challenge since a Lone Star would look fabulous on the back of a jacket. Ultimately, I decided it was too risky and moved on to design a Lone Star quilt.
But I couldn't get the idea of a Lone Star on the back of a jacket out of my head. Jordan Fabrics has a tutorial for a smaller Lone Star, and I thought if I made the strips narrower, the Lone Star might be small enough to fit on my back. So once I had chosen my fabrics for Crayola Explosion, I looked at the fabrics I hadn't used and tried to find a combination of 5 fabrics that I liked. I ended up repeating two fabrics. I decided to applique the star to the back of a denim jacket. My biggest problem was that I really didn't want raw edges. I bought some skinny pre-made bias binding and used that to encase the edges. That worked well.
My plan is to keep this jacket at work so I have something to throw on when I'm cold. With the variety of colors, I figure I can wear it with anything. The fabrics are Island Batik, of course, from the Chickadee collection, and I did use Aurifil thread and Schmetz needles. I've worn it at work a few times now and gotten many comments on it. I'm pretty happy with it, and I love that I can kind of hop on the Quilt Coat bandwagon without needing to make the garment!
If you like the Chickadee fabrics, I have a giveaway on this post until December 23rd to win a set of 2 1/2" strips from the collection--it's not a full jelly roll, just one each of 18 fabrics from the collection, but there are lots of bright colors.