Welcome to the final round of the Stay at Home Round Robin. This week we are in the hands of Gail, the mastermind behind this whole shebang. Gail chose pinwheels for her round. With my beachy, outdoorsy feel, the pinwheels seemed right at home! I love thinking about pinwheels blowing in the ocean breeze.
I used my Accuquilt to cut the pieces for my pinwheels. (Actually, I used the Accuquilt for every round!) I was in a pink mood, plus I thought they'd match the flamingos of my center. Here are all my rounds together.
I love it! I wanted a beach vacation, and while I didn't get one, I did get a very fun outdoor, warm, beachy feeling quilt top!
If you are sewing along, be sure to link up with Gail at Quilting Gail. After this week, you have a few weeks to finish your Stay at Home Round Robin before our final linky party opens on March 13th. Don't worry if you don't finish by then, just link up whatever you have! It's always fun to see all the different quilts that come out of the Stay at Home Round Robin. It's probably my favorite online event all year!
Don't forget to check out all of the hosts and see what they did with their Pinwheels!
Welcome back to the Stay at Home Robin! This week it is my turn to tell you and everyone else what to add to their quilts, and I picked Square-in-a-Square.
It's a fun unit, and there is a lot you can do with it. I started with a light yellow center and an aqua background for the outer squares. I did all of mine the same, because I knew was going to add something to each square -- I used my squares as a background for fun flowers!
I have a few different flower dies for my Accuquilt and I just cut out a bunch of different shapes and started putting flowers together. I had a lot of fun and really love the flowers together all in a row.
So here are all my rows/rounds together so far. Hard to believe, but we have just one round left in our quilt for this year!
Are you sewing along? Link up and show us your Square in a Square blocks, or whatever round you are up to now. Remember that there are prizes this year! You get an entry for every week you link up.
Welcome back to the Stay at Home Round Robin! This week it is up to Anja at Anja Quilts to tell us what to add, and she picked Flying Geese.
I went pretty simple with my flying geese. I used a variety of brightly colored Island Batik scraps for my geese and I made them in pairs, then lined them up radiating from the center. These were cut with my Accuquilt, which is my preferred method of making flying geese because the dog ears are already cut off.
I've finally started sewing my rows together, using Island Batik's solid cobalt as my sashing. I'm really enjoying seeing this come together!
If you are sewing along, be sure to link up with Anja. And check out all the Stay at Home Round Robin hosts to see what they did with flying geese.
It's time for another round in the Stay at Home Round Robin! This time, it is Chris's week to pick, and she chose hourglass blocks. If you are sewing along, be sure to link up with her at Chrisknitssews. Hour glass blocks are essentially quarter square triangles with the opposites sites the same, creating the look of an hourglass. I used a trick I used once before to turn my hourglass blocks into butterflies.
These blocks are 4" finished; I used my accuquilt quarter square triangle die. I also cut the butterfly bodies with my accuquilt. Because I had to cut the blocks in even numbers, I ended up with an extra butterfly. I added antenna to the spare to see how it looks. Husband thinks the butterfly looks better and more recognizable with the antenna; I am still undecided and so have not added anything to my row yet, but I still might. What do you think: antenna or no antenna?
I forgot to get a shot of the rows I've completed so far while it was still light out, so you are stuck with this indoor shot. I have a brand new design wall that Husband & I built together as my birthday present. It's in the hallway, because that was the only place we could put it, and I can see it from the couch. The rows are not yet sewn together because I haven't decided on an order yet; I'll probably wait until I've finished all my rows to finalize the order. I keep moving them around to see what I like.
Be sure to visit all the hosts to see all the hourglass blocks. And here's the full Stay at Home Round Robin schedule if you are
sewing along:
Welcome to the first day of the All Puffed Up blog hop! Island Batik sent each of their ambassadors one of the brand new collections hitting stores now and tasked us each with making a puff quilt. I was lucky enough to be sent Bits and Pieces, a lovely and bright collection designed by Kathy Engle for Sherry Shish of Powered by Quilting. I just love the colors in Bits & Pieces!
If you are looking for the next round in my Stay at Home Round Robin, it will be posted tomorrow, February 7th.
The products featured in this post were given to me by Island Batik, Schmetz, and Aurifil.
I documented my three test attempts here. In the end, I liked the this youtube tutorial best, and I did it as directed. I particularly like two things about this method. First, that you complete your top before stuffing, rather than stuffing individual squares and then piecing those together. And two, her directions make it clear how to keep the already-stuffed puffs not in throat of your machine, so it's easier to complete.
sewing in the pleats
This was a really fun little quilt. Once I determined my fabric layout and made sure I had all 20 fabrics from Bits & Pieces included, I whipped up the quilt top fairly quickly. I did all my piecing with a Schmetz microtex needle and Aurifil thread 5004, Grey Smoke. This quilt requires quite a bit of stitching that is visible in the finished quilt and the Grey Smoke was perfect for not calling too much attention to itself. It's also sewed together like a pillow case and flipped right-side out, eliminating the need for binding.
With pleats all sewn in, before stuffing
And after stuffing
This finished at 36" by 44", but while that sounds small, it feels much more substantial than that, likely due to all the stuffing. My son and I sit on the couch together and listen to Harry Potter audio books each night before bed and this has been the perfect size to cover both our legs while snuggling. (We're currently on The Order of the Phoenix, for those who may be wondering.) He frequently comments on how big it is, and it's certainly very warm. He has claimed it, as I knew he would. Those puffs are irresistible! He moves it around the house with him, and loves it while watching TV.
What's a blog hop without a giveaway? I'm offering up what's left of 4 of the fabrics from Bits & Pieces. There are at least 12" of each remaining, so that's a third of a yard each! To enter, leave me a comment during the month of February. Any comment will do, but if you need a prompt, tell me if you've ever made a puff quilt, or if you are tempted to. I'll pick a random number as the winner on March 1st. And be sure to check the Island Batik blog each Friday during the hop for a chance to win more beautiful Island Batik fabric--they set up a new giveaway each week! Many of the other Ambassadors will also have their own giveaways on their post days, so be sure to visit everyone!
Island Batik's first blog hop of the year starts on Monday. Each ambassador was sent one of the newest Island Batik collections and tasked with making a puff quilt. Also called biscuit quilts, a puff quilt is what it sounds like--a quilt stuffed with fiber fill to make little puffs.
My assigned collection is Bits & Pieces, a signature collection for Sherry Shish of Powered by Quilting, designed by Island Batik's head designer Kathy Engle. Bits & Pieces has such beautiful bright colors! It's a really fun collection. And I'm on the first day of the hop! Come back on Monday to see my puff quilt made with the bright fabrics. (Full hop schedule below)
I had never made a puff quilt before, so I had to look up how to do it. There are a lot of tutorials out there and a lot of different methods. I am usually far too impatient to do a test block, but this time it felt important to test out the technique. I ended up doing THREE small tests! I used Island Batik scraps and stash builder strips (5" x WOF), so I can show you my samples now. See how much Buttercup the cat loves them all?
First, there was a recent blog post by Laura at Slice of Pi Quilts about doing a puff quilt on her longarm. I don't have a longarm but I thought I could try it on my domestic machine. Well,
I liked the technique, but because I was doing it on a standard machine instead of a
long arm, I had to turn the quilt a lot and there was no way to
eliminate having the already stuffed puffs
in the small throat of my machine. I managed to finish my 5 x 5
sample, but the last two rows were tricky and I wouldn't want to do it
with anything bigger. She bound hers like a standard quilt and I had every intention of doing that to mine as well, but before I could, my son claimed this sample for the cat and put it on her cat tree. I figured that Buttercup probably doesn't care about raw edges and left it unbound.
Since I knew that technique wouldn't work for me, I moved on to one of the youtube tutorials I watched, that like Laura's method, uses a completed quilt top. I went back and
watched it again, and then made 2 simultaneous test. One exactly as
done in her tutorial, and another without the tucks. I figured if I
liked the look of my first test and there were no tucks, I'd see if they
were really necessary. Here is the test without tucks:
And here is the one with tucks, exactly as in the tutorial. I do like the look of the test with the tucks a little better. Not a whole lot better, but better. One of these also went to the cat, and the third is now a stuffed animal quilt.
So now that you've seen my test samples, come back on February 6th to see my finished puff quilt made with the Bits and Pieces collection! And be sure to follow along all month for all the puffy goodness of the All Puffed Up blog hop! Here is the complete schedule: