Having been given a jelly roll and a quilting book for Christmas 2010, there is no excuse not to get on with quiltmaking.

Here's what happened next...



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Monday 28 March 2011

Er ... no, THIS is the Final Layout!

So I fibbed - looking at the previous post this morning, it struck me that laid out as it was, I would have each big block as a 'X' made of my four mini blocks, & not a square.

Hardly a big deal in the scheme of things, but by moving a single column of blocks from one end of the quilt to the other - hey presto!

I've taken your comments on board about keeping my layout fixed whilst I sew the blocks together along with those of big sister Helen. She emailed me & said 'How about laying out an old sheet on the floor ... and pinning them down ... then roll or fold up the sheet, & unroll next time you have a sewing session. Unpin a couple of blocks at a time & sew together, then pin back in position.'

But even better than rolling & unrolling the sheet, I found an old curtain rail, & a couple of hooks (I'm sure that you're all ahead of me here!) - so I now have the blocks pinned to a sheet hanging on the wall, along with a print out of the above pic, & now I'm all ready to put the blocks together...

6 comments:

  1. Sounds like you have your own home-style design wall. I like that idea and may use it in the future. Thanks, Hazel and your sister:) I also like the layout. I think this will be a beautiful quilt.

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  2. Joanna - I came to say just the same thing!

    Last week I was teasing Hazel about needing a design wall, looks like she has found one.

    Hazel, here's another tip: I have a few ordinary sized safety pins with a length (only 6" or so) of BRIGHT red wool knotted through the hole at the end. You can't miss them, whatever they are pinned to. When sewing blocks into rows, I always mark the left-hand edge of a row with a "red flag" - otherwise it is far too easy to turn a row upside down and have the left-hand blocks on the right-hand side of the quilt ....

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  3. I agree with Bilbo, it's too easy to turn a row upside down between picking it up and putting it back - if you do that in the middle of putting a top together, well, the air can turn blue. Hmm, wonder how I know that?

    What a great idea for a design wall too. One day I'd love one of those rather than a floor.

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  4. QuiltSue: thinking of a design wall for you . . .

    on the wall above the sofa in your "sewing studio", could you have two hooks and when you want a design wall, hang a rod between them with a bit of cotton batting threaded onto it (make a casing in the batting to slide through the rod, and just fold it up in your Magic Cupboard {grin} when you are not using it?)

    That's what I've done above the radiator in my sewing room and whilst it's not huge it is better than nothing.

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  5. If I was going to make a refinement to my 'design wall', I would run a second curtain pole or weights along the bottom, just to keep the sheet straight - it flaps about a bit at the mo.

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  6. Spare bamboo cane from the garden works well!

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