The perfect cabin quilt!
It stood to reason that I should bring along my almost finished scrap vomit quilt - which, by the way, I will now refer to as the Scrapalicious quilt. This quilt has been over a year and a half in the making (actually I've pieced two of these tops and have enough squares cut to make a few more!).
- Katy's fab tutorial for the quilt is here
- See my Anti-Voodoo piecing tutorial for making sure your squares make it from the design wall to the machine in the right order using a method I learned years ago from a favourite quilting teacher. This works for efficiently piecing blocks into a quilt top as well.
- A post including a pic of the second top I've pieced with different coloured "B" blocks is here
And then I came home and washed the quilt. When I pulled it from the washer and saw batting and frayed thread, I had a momentary coronary event thinking that something had ripped the quilt, until my brain registered that, in fact, I had missed sewing down about 20" of binding!!! So, yeah, I missed a spot. Oops.
Scrapalicious: the Full Frontal
So, although you've seen several iterations of this quilt from blocks, to top, to quilted top, now it is finally complete, washed and folded on the back of our family room couch for everyone to enjoy. Even this little gnomey.
I free-motion quilted it in an all-over interlocking flower pattern that I learned last year in a FMQ class with local teacher Lynne Fanthorpe. I had so much difficulty with the Sulky 40wt thread I was using - it was breaking constantly and driving me mental with stopping/starting and burying threads. I finally had to abandon it from frustration but when I resumed quilting at Mayne my friends helped me discover that the variegated spool I was using was simply 'bad thread'. It broke with a gentle tug! I had pulled my hair out and came very close to tears thinking that my machine, the tension, the batting, the many needles I tried, or my skills were to blame. I've never experienced bad thread before. Luckily, I had a second spool of the exact same brand and colour variegation that I purchased on the same day as the offensive spool. The second one worked PERFECTLY FINE. Bizarre.
Next time I'm sticking with Aurifil thread and less involved quilting. I'll also do a more careful check of the binding before my quilt gets its first wash!
11 comments:
I have always wanted to do a scrapalicious quilt (I'll leave the other name alone as it conjures up things I don't want to think about...). Your quilt is fabulous!!
It looks great, but I can imagine that feeling of panic thinking that the washing machine had eaten your quilt!
Super scrapalicious - well done on finally finishing! I love, love, love that flower FMQ design...one of the nicest floral ones I've seen.
I've had a bad quilting experience with a thread different to what I usually use, I wonder if it was just a bad batch? It was a silk finish thread and it gave me all sorts of tension problems. Hmm, maybe I'll try it again one day.
love this quilt, and the new name is so much more appropriate! I really must get you to show me the quilting design - it is fabulous!
I too love the quilted flowers. The quilt is lovely too. Sewing a quilt binding in a bikini is an interesting image, however, but still, it sounds like a lovely retreat.
I. Love. This. Top of my to do list again after seeing yours ; )
Yay for a finish! And I love that quilt - I've got my own on my bed right now, but I want to make another one.
Love this quilt ~ so colorful and looks so cozy. I got a bad spool of Aurfil once ~ I was wondering all the same things as you till I realized it wasn't any good..
You looked fab stitching your binding down in that bikini and I have a photo to prove it! :0)
Congratulations on the finish - that one must feel good! It's a great quilt!
That's a funny story about the binding. I often winder when I'll do that since I glue basted my binding before sewing it down. Lovely finished quilt
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