Last night's events with Patternista caused my brain to swirl just like the colors on the fabrics. You see, I watched the tutorial that Jenny did on how to make the stars from a jelly roll strip, and I thought it a bit odd that she showed how to make 3/4 of a star, and left the rest up to our imagination.
She showed the pattern that she was making the quilt from, and I looked it up on the website. It is very cool, and is shown several ways to make the quilt, some were made with the duller, lower contrast colors, and one made with black background and bright batiks.
I thought I could figure out how to make the quilt by just making stars and somehow connecting them together. But in looking carefully at the pattern, it seems that some of the corner squares are shared with several adjoining stars. Whoa, that caused my brain to spin as fast as the spirograph patterns in the fabric! How on earth did they do that? I couldn't turn off the brain cells trying to figure that one out, but finally got to sleep about 1 a.m.
When I have a sewing issue to resolve, I usiually do my best thinking while in bed trying to get to sleep. It makes for a rather restless night when I can't figure out a solution. I know I thought out many of the costume challenges I've had in the past during some late night toss-and-turn sessions. This one was stirring my brain like those dilemmas did in past years and with past projects.
I still haven't quite figured it out, guess I'll have to spring for buying the pattern and getting directions, or I can just connect the blocks in my own way. Until then, I'll have to settle for letting the brain cells swirl on, and hopefully they won't interfere with my afternoon nap, which I desperately need, since I had to get up at 6 for my early morning class. Can't function on 5 hours of broken sleep anymore. Bye! It's naptime for this old gal!
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Monday, February 27, 2012
What's not to love?
Jelly Roll stars made from Patternista by Paula Nadelstern for Benartex Fabrics
9 of the fabrics from the collection
Yesterday and Friday, this pattern of fabric, called Patternista, was part of the daily deal on Missouri Star Quilt Company's website. They posted the Daily Deal on Facebook with the disclaimer that some of the people who worked at the shop loved the fabric, and some hated it.
Comments from FB users ranged from "loved it", "beautiful", "have to have it so I ordered it", to "ugly", "doesn't appeal to me", "makes me nauseous to look at it". I guess you couldn't ask for a more diverse set of opinions about a line of fabrics than this one engendered!
This is the one a customer claimed would make her nauseous if she worked on it! It also is the one I bought 2 yards of fabric of to make a border for my own quilt! I love it!
Well, I for one absolutely loved it the minute I saw it. I had some jelly rolls ordered before 6 a.m. on Friday. Then one of my local quilt shops sent an email advertising several new fabric lines, and Patternista was one of them. Since I like to add borders to my quilts, I was determined to get some yardage from this store. Then, on Sunday, the layer cake of Patternista was the Daily Deal.
I managed to sneak in a trip to the LQS to pick up some yardage of several of the prints, and saw the whole line in glorious color. It is so rich, so colorful and with such symmetry and design, I wish I could have hogged it all and taken home all the bolts.
Today, I was lucky, my first order of jelly rolls of Patternista was in my mailbox, and so tonight, I got started making jelly roll stars, trimmed with black, which was my vision for how this fabric would best be displyed. I don't think the pictures do justice to the richness of color in this line. I didn't think the web pictures were that great, but when I saw it in person, I was totally smitten!
You can judge for yourself if you like this type of wild fabric or not. I'm not the kind of person who goes for civil war, shabby chic, or muted colors in quilt fabrics. I'll never make a quilt in shades of beige, cream and taupe, unless there is a shot of red or yellow somewhere in it. I like vibrant, alive and high contrast colors. You can tell from the quilts I have made so far that this is my preference. So I put on my old Pink Floyd records, my bell-bottom hip huggers and tie dyed shirt, and started sewing away, and finished 9 jelly roll stars tonight using my beautiful Patternista.
You can decide for yourself--but I say, what's not to love about this fabric line?
Yesterday and Friday, this pattern of fabric, called Patternista, was part of the daily deal on Missouri Star Quilt Company's website. They posted the Daily Deal on Facebook with the disclaimer that some of the people who worked at the shop loved the fabric, and some hated it.
Comments from FB users ranged from "loved it", "beautiful", "have to have it so I ordered it", to "ugly", "doesn't appeal to me", "makes me nauseous to look at it". I guess you couldn't ask for a more diverse set of opinions about a line of fabrics than this one engendered!
Well, I for one absolutely loved it the minute I saw it. I had some jelly rolls ordered before 6 a.m. on Friday. Then one of my local quilt shops sent an email advertising several new fabric lines, and Patternista was one of them. Since I like to add borders to my quilts, I was determined to get some yardage from this store. Then, on Sunday, the layer cake of Patternista was the Daily Deal.
I managed to sneak in a trip to the LQS to pick up some yardage of several of the prints, and saw the whole line in glorious color. It is so rich, so colorful and with such symmetry and design, I wish I could have hogged it all and taken home all the bolts.
Today, I was lucky, my first order of jelly rolls of Patternista was in my mailbox, and so tonight, I got started making jelly roll stars, trimmed with black, which was my vision for how this fabric would best be displyed. I don't think the pictures do justice to the richness of color in this line. I didn't think the web pictures were that great, but when I saw it in person, I was totally smitten!
You can judge for yourself if you like this type of wild fabric or not. I'm not the kind of person who goes for civil war, shabby chic, or muted colors in quilt fabrics. I'll never make a quilt in shades of beige, cream and taupe, unless there is a shot of red or yellow somewhere in it. I like vibrant, alive and high contrast colors. You can tell from the quilts I have made so far that this is my preference. So I put on my old Pink Floyd records, my bell-bottom hip huggers and tie dyed shirt, and started sewing away, and finished 9 jelly roll stars tonight using my beautiful Patternista.
You can decide for yourself--but I say, what's not to love about this fabric line?
Saturday, February 25, 2012
Sure and Begorra, St. Patty's Day is near!
I'm on a roll with making a quilt per month for my bed. It gives me such joy to slip into a snuggly bed each night wrapped up in a warm and colorful quilt! The concept I had for this quilt came to me months ago, and I've been collecting rainbow colored fabrics since then.
One of my favorite quilt stores had packs of fat quarters on sale, 12 for $8 last fall. This was as cheap as I've ever seen them. Granted, the fabrics weren't the quality of the $11 a yard fabrics they carry in their regular stock, so this may end up being the worse for wear in the washing machine, but I'll be careful and hope I can use it for a long time. They had all the rainbow colors that I wanted, so I bought 6 packs for this quilt. I should say, at least 6 packs, maybe more, do I have to tell that? Oh, OK, now you know! I bought more than 6 packs--just for my stash, right?
The method for making the quilt is the same as the one I've used for October through February. I've used some sort of half-square triangle pattern, starting out with an 8-1/2" square. For the last two quilts I've done, I used 10 squares across and 10 down, giving me a finished length of top of 78" and I added a 5" border. My October through January quilts were 8 squares across by 9 squares down, requiring a much deeper border, using multiple fabrrics. For this one, I ended up with a quilt that was 87" square (somehow, can't figure out exactly how that happened!)
I saw a posting on the net this week that called quilts with high contrast fabrics a "value" quilt. I love that name, because my quilts have been value quilts. The interplay of light and dark fascinates me, and this one was no exception. But,this one was especially challenging because instead of randomly putting the light and dark fabrics together,I had to connect specific colors together in a random pattern to make the rainbow pattern possible. It ended up with the pairings of Yellow/Orange, Orange/Pink, Pink/purple, purple/blue, blue/green and green/yellow. I needeed anywhere from 16-18 squares of each combination for the quilt. It all depends on which color combination you start with, because you need more for the rows that end up in the middle of the quilt, since the rows are longer.
You all saw my last post where I was toying with the concept of the pot at the end of the rainbow. Yes, it might have been a cool idea, but I couldn't make it work. I asked for opinions, and it was 2 zillion to 1 for no pot. Unfortunately, after I got the one opinion to "go for it", I sewed it on, double stitched it, with regular and applique stitching. Now that was NOT EASY to rip off! It took me over an hour to rip it, being ever so careful to cut only thread and not fabric! My old eyes aren't made to work on black fabrics anymore, need many more lights than in the past!
I made the backing of rainbow striped fabric. There was barely enough in the store to make this backing, and my quilt needed 1" more in width than two pieces of backing sewed together. So, I added a gusset in the middle to give me more width. When I laid it out, it ended up being close in length, but I had plenty of width.
I stitched in the ditch across all seams with multicolored thread. Not my favorite look, but it's OK. Some day I'll learn to stipple! Bound it and the quilt was finished last night, late into the night. This morning I got up early and did my pillow cases, and so now, I'm ready for March 1 to roll around. For those of you who saw my previous post and commented on the pillowcases, I loved that fabric by itself, but it was too dull next to the bright colors. I had this rainbow fabric from way back when, and found a use for it for the pillowcases. I think I'm happier with this choice than the duller fabric.
It is bright and cheery, and I am 1/2 pure Irish, so St. Patty's Day is meaningful to me. I do love these bright colors, and will enjoy my month of sleeping with shamrocks cradling my head, and the rainbow keeping me warm and cozy!
Next month, Dogwood Trail, in memory of my dear late husband, who loved dogwood trees, planted and nurtured three of the neighborhood's most beautiful dogwood trees (one still living and giving pleasure after 46 years!) I resisted twice at the fabric store from purchasing the necessary materials to make a quilt using this pattern, but someone on the forum said, "do it in memory of him!" So I did purchase the fabrics yesterday, and am itching to get going on it. I'm going to use D9P pattern for that one.
Friday, February 24, 2012
Pot or Not?
My concept for my March quilt is getting closer to being a finished product. I had the idea to make this "value" quilt from half-square triangles in rainbow stripes. It was a bit tricky to lay out, when I had it laying on my two cutting tables, I locked the door to the room so zooming grandkids wouldn't disturb it and make the squares fly off until I sewed it together.
Now my question is to add the pot or not to add it. It will be a pain to do, and the coins will definitely be delicate and hard to attach. I may rethink the pot at the end of the rainbow for the sake of a more long lasting quilt.
What do you think?

With the Pot
The pot and its coins
No Pot
Now my question is to add the pot or not to add it. It will be a pain to do, and the coins will definitely be delicate and hard to attach. I may rethink the pot at the end of the rainbow for the sake of a more long lasting quilt.
What do you think?
With the Pot
Tuesday, February 21, 2012
More Information about extra wide Jelly Roll Quilts
There has been a lot of chatter on the Missouri Star Quilt Company Community Forum about Jelly Roll quilts. If you use one jelly roll (with 40 pieces of fabric in it), your quilt comes out to be about 55" wide by about 64" long. Since the Jelly Roll quilts are so easy to make and turn out so pretty, a lot of people have beeen wanting to make one that would fit a regular size bed. I know I did, so I figured out how to enlarge the concept to fit a twin, queen or any width bed.
First of all, you need to know how wide you want your quilt top to be. To get it to be wider than about 55", you are going to have to add jelly roll strips to your original long strip that you start with. You can add length later, but not width.
So here's how I did it:
Measure how wide you want it to end up. I made my top from the jelly rolls end up to be 72". This made the jelly roll portion cover my queen bed, and fall over the side of the mattress a couple of inches. I added an 8" border all around to make it completely cover the mattress.
So: take that number of the width of the jelly roll portion of the top and multiply by 32. You use the number 32, because that is how many rows the jelly roll quilt will have when you are finished sewing it. I got a number that was big, I think mine was around 2350". Then I measured how long each of my jelly roll strips would end up being after I sewed them with a bias seam, mine were 44" and I took off about 3" in seaming to give me approximately 41" long for each strip. Then I divided that number into the big number to get the number of strips I needed to put into my first long strip. So the math was 72 x 32 = 2350 divided by 41 = 56. I used 56 jelly rolls in my first long strip and it did indeed come out to about 72" wide.
Then I sewed some more jelly roll strips together and added them one at a time to the length of the finished jelly roll top to make it longer. I added 8 rows. I kind of overdid it on that, because by adding the border, it is longer than I normally want my quilts to be, but I guess too long is better than too short.
This one is still in the flimsy stage, I need some time to sandwich, quilt and bind. My primo Janome Horizon was in for a good cleaning this weekend, so I wanted to wait til it was back before tackling a big quilt. I plan to stitch in the ditch between the rows. Got the machine back today, will quilt on Friday.
I am excited about making more of these quilts. They are fun and fast and colorful and unpredictable as to how they will turn out. But they can be made various sizes, just be doing a little math. And when you purchase jelly rolls, you might want to get two matching ones, if you intend to make a larger top than lap size. I know they are expensive, but if you are going to make something pretty and colorful for you or a friend, just bite the bullet and go for it. Or you can use yardage and cut your own strips. I did that to add to this jelly roll, and I did it completely for my boys' alien quilt (See "A Busy Weekend" blog entry for a picture of that one.)
To use yardage: figure 1/2 yard will make 7 2-1/2" jelly roll strips, so you will need 3 yards for a regular jelly roll quilt, or more if you want to make it larger. I think you could easily use leftovers for these, they don't even have to be full strips, but then your width of the quilt might be harder to predict unless you measured your long strip as you sewed it. I don't think I would want to do that!
Good luck on your next jelly roll quilt--I have jelly rolls lined up waiting for a chance to be made into pretty colorful quilts, can't wait to do my next one!
First of all, you need to know how wide you want your quilt top to be. To get it to be wider than about 55", you are going to have to add jelly roll strips to your original long strip that you start with. You can add length later, but not width.
So here's how I did it:
Measure how wide you want it to end up. I made my top from the jelly rolls end up to be 72". This made the jelly roll portion cover my queen bed, and fall over the side of the mattress a couple of inches. I added an 8" border all around to make it completely cover the mattress.
So: take that number of the width of the jelly roll portion of the top and multiply by 32. You use the number 32, because that is how many rows the jelly roll quilt will have when you are finished sewing it. I got a number that was big, I think mine was around 2350". Then I measured how long each of my jelly roll strips would end up being after I sewed them with a bias seam, mine were 44" and I took off about 3" in seaming to give me approximately 41" long for each strip. Then I divided that number into the big number to get the number of strips I needed to put into my first long strip. So the math was 72 x 32 = 2350 divided by 41 = 56. I used 56 jelly rolls in my first long strip and it did indeed come out to about 72" wide.
Then I sewed some more jelly roll strips together and added them one at a time to the length of the finished jelly roll top to make it longer. I added 8 rows. I kind of overdid it on that, because by adding the border, it is longer than I normally want my quilts to be, but I guess too long is better than too short.
This one is still in the flimsy stage, I need some time to sandwich, quilt and bind. My primo Janome Horizon was in for a good cleaning this weekend, so I wanted to wait til it was back before tackling a big quilt. I plan to stitch in the ditch between the rows. Got the machine back today, will quilt on Friday.
I am excited about making more of these quilts. They are fun and fast and colorful and unpredictable as to how they will turn out. But they can be made various sizes, just be doing a little math. And when you purchase jelly rolls, you might want to get two matching ones, if you intend to make a larger top than lap size. I know they are expensive, but if you are going to make something pretty and colorful for you or a friend, just bite the bullet and go for it. Or you can use yardage and cut your own strips. I did that to add to this jelly roll, and I did it completely for my boys' alien quilt (See "A Busy Weekend" blog entry for a picture of that one.)
To use yardage: figure 1/2 yard will make 7 2-1/2" jelly roll strips, so you will need 3 yards for a regular jelly roll quilt, or more if you want to make it larger. I think you could easily use leftovers for these, they don't even have to be full strips, but then your width of the quilt might be harder to predict unless you measured your long strip as you sewed it. I don't think I would want to do that!
Good luck on your next jelly roll quilt--I have jelly rolls lined up waiting for a chance to be made into pretty colorful quilts, can't wait to do my next one!
Saturday, February 18, 2012
And I thought I was a genius!
I woke up this morning with shamrocks on my brain. I had created a whole Valentine themed bed set using a simple heart block I learned from a tutorial on Missouri Star Quilt Co's wonderful website. (See Tutorial"Quilting Valentine Hearts Using Charm Pack's" posted Jan. 19, 2012 , also look at their Feb. 13 blog entry, my quilt set is shown there!)
So I had a flash of inspiration this morning, I could improvise from that idea to made a shamrock out of 4 squares of green fabric. Instead of sleeping in, I just went downstairs, dug through my stash for green fabrics, and started playing around. In about 30 minutes, I had a block that looked like a shamrock! Spurred on to further my collection of shamrocks, I kept making them! Now I have 4 made! They are really cute.


Assessing my own genius for inventing things, I got to thinking how absolutely simple this really was. Someone for sure had thought of it before I had. Sure enough, a Google search came up with this much fancier version of my creation.
http://www.quiltingworks.com/howto/shamrock-block.htm
My block came out to be the same size as the one on this website, 12-1/2" unfinished, which will be a 12" block when sewed into a quilt or wall hanging. I intend to use my shamrocks for pillows, as I did for the Valentine's Day Heart block. I'm sure you could make table runners, lap quilts, entire quilts out of shamrocks, pair them up with some jelly roll strips or disappearing 9 patch blocks or something. I already have my March quilt top sewn together, hope to get it ready for quilting today, wish me luck! Ha, Ha, Luck of the Irish!
Here's how I did it. Took 4 5" green charm squares ( I actually cut mine out of fat quarters), 3 strips of the same green cut 2" wide, and 4 white charm squares. Cut the 3 white squares into 2-1/2" squares, you need 9 (you'll have 3 leftover for the next shamrock!) Iron the 2-1/2" squares in half diagonally, and sew three of them on the corners of the green charm square. Trim away the excess fabric and iron the white back. Do this three times. For the stem, I made it 1" wide. I cut my 4th white charm square in half diagonaly, and ironed a diagonal crease in the green charm square. Then I marked a line 1/2" from the crease for the seamline for sewing the white triangle to the green square. Fold the white back and trim off the green. Do it on both sides of the crease. This makes the stem square. Then lay them out to form the shamrock shape, and sew together like a 4 patch. I used a log cabin technique to sew on my borders, sewed the 2" strip to one side, trimmed and squared, then sewed to the second side, then continued on till all sides were bordered. Soooooooo Simple!
They are all cute, go simple or fancy, but get in the mood for March, because that is when all of us, whether or not we have one drop of Irish blood in us, will be claiming our Irish roots, and be "wearin' the green!"
Happy St. Patty's Day a month early! Start your shamrock quilt today!
So I had a flash of inspiration this morning, I could improvise from that idea to made a shamrock out of 4 squares of green fabric. Instead of sleeping in, I just went downstairs, dug through my stash for green fabrics, and started playing around. In about 30 minutes, I had a block that looked like a shamrock! Spurred on to further my collection of shamrocks, I kept making them! Now I have 4 made! They are really cute.
Assessing my own genius for inventing things, I got to thinking how absolutely simple this really was. Someone for sure had thought of it before I had. Sure enough, a Google search came up with this much fancier version of my creation.
http://www.quiltingworks.com/howto/shamrock-block.htm
My block came out to be the same size as the one on this website, 12-1/2" unfinished, which will be a 12" block when sewed into a quilt or wall hanging. I intend to use my shamrocks for pillows, as I did for the Valentine's Day Heart block. I'm sure you could make table runners, lap quilts, entire quilts out of shamrocks, pair them up with some jelly roll strips or disappearing 9 patch blocks or something. I already have my March quilt top sewn together, hope to get it ready for quilting today, wish me luck! Ha, Ha, Luck of the Irish!
Here's how I did it. Took 4 5" green charm squares ( I actually cut mine out of fat quarters), 3 strips of the same green cut 2" wide, and 4 white charm squares. Cut the 3 white squares into 2-1/2" squares, you need 9 (you'll have 3 leftover for the next shamrock!) Iron the 2-1/2" squares in half diagonally, and sew three of them on the corners of the green charm square. Trim away the excess fabric and iron the white back. Do this three times. For the stem, I made it 1" wide. I cut my 4th white charm square in half diagonaly, and ironed a diagonal crease in the green charm square. Then I marked a line 1/2" from the crease for the seamline for sewing the white triangle to the green square. Fold the white back and trim off the green. Do it on both sides of the crease. This makes the stem square. Then lay them out to form the shamrock shape, and sew together like a 4 patch. I used a log cabin technique to sew on my borders, sewed the 2" strip to one side, trimmed and squared, then sewed to the second side, then continued on till all sides were bordered. Soooooooo Simple!
They are all cute, go simple or fancy, but get in the mood for March, because that is when all of us, whether or not we have one drop of Irish blood in us, will be claiming our Irish roots, and be "wearin' the green!"
Happy St. Patty's Day a month early! Start your shamrock quilt today!
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
A special Valentine gift
My oldest daughter is a crafter, but her specialty is paper crafting. She has all the fun tools to make awesome scrapbook pages, decorations, invitations and cards. She found this idea on a craft site, and decided to make one for me for Valentine's Day.

This is extra special, not only because she made it for me, but that she used my mother's wooden spools that I still had in my thread collection for the materials for the heart. She left Mom's threads on the spools for extra color, and cut new tops for the spools using her awesome Cricut machine! She even "fussy cut" some of the labels to include flowers and other motifs. She left one very special spool bare, because it has the name of the company actually branded into the wood--I'm sure others have these "Belding Corticelli" thread spools in their collection.
She used quilt pattern fabric for mine, She made another one for her sister, using balking motif paper, a talent her sister excells in.
So sweet, I wasn't expecting this, so it made my Valentine's Day extra special, plus we three girls had a nice visit tonight, so that was great also.
This is extra special, not only because she made it for me, but that she used my mother's wooden spools that I still had in my thread collection for the materials for the heart. She left Mom's threads on the spools for extra color, and cut new tops for the spools using her awesome Cricut machine! She even "fussy cut" some of the labels to include flowers and other motifs. She left one very special spool bare, because it has the name of the company actually branded into the wood--I'm sure others have these "Belding Corticelli" thread spools in their collection.
She used quilt pattern fabric for mine, She made another one for her sister, using balking motif paper, a talent her sister excells in.
So sweet, I wasn't expecting this, so it made my Valentine's Day extra special, plus we three girls had a nice visit tonight, so that was great also.
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