Hi there and welcome to all my fellow blog hoppers and followers :-) Thank you so much to Beth at Plum and June
for organising this fantastic hop and for the opportunity to connect with so
many talented people!
Please do take a look around my page, I hope you find something that you
like. I originally set up my blog at the
beginning of 2011 to record my progress as I work towards a City and Guilds
Level 3 Certificate in Patchwork and Quilting.
I was new to blogging and so it was all a bit of a learning curve, and I
didn’t have any idea that such a wonderful, inspirational, friendly quilting
community even existed! It’s only been
in the last few months that I have really started connecting with people and
‘putting myself out there’ as it were, and I have learnt so much and *met* so
many fabulous, like-minded people. Now I
really don’t know where I’d be without my quilt/blogging friends.
Anyhow, I shall attempt to answer some of the questions that Beth posed,
before moving swiftly on to a little tutorial that I have put together. But first a little mosaic of some of my
2012 finishes.
|
Clockwise - 1. Walk in the Woods Quilt 2. Easter Bunny Bags, 3. Kukla Dolls Quilt, 4. Siblings Together Cards x100 5. Ed Emberley Happy Drawing Quilt, 6. Rocking Horse Cross Stitch, 7. Quilt for Baby William 8. Chocolate Stash Bag |
How long have you been
quilting?
I have sewing for most of my life, but it’s only in the last 18 months
that I have really focused on patchwork and quilting. I spent many years doing cross stitch but I
always wanted to make quilts, and that’s why I started the City and Guilds
Level 3 Certificate in Patchwork and Quilting.
It’s via distance learning with the School of Stitched Textiles and it’s going to take several years to
complete it, but I love it, and I also try to find time to work on my own
projects as well. Somehow!
Favourite quilting tip(s)
This
would have to be to keep scraps. I made
a gorgeous mini quilt for my son’s teddy bear using left over pieces from the
quilt I made for him. It was completely
unplanned but the idea just came to me when I saw those teeny tiny bits of
fabric!
Favorite blogging tip(s)
Use
lots of photos to break up the text.
Busy blog readers won’t necessarily have time to read large blocks of
text, it’s much easier and more enjoyable to read a post that is full of
pictures, even if it’s just pictures of lots of lovely fabrics.
Favorite
fabric (or wish list fabric):
Oh so many! I have just bought the Trade Winds collection
by Lily Ashbury, and also French General. I love anything with a vintage feel. Conversely, I also love Mona Luna’s Taali
collection, which is also waiting in my stash to be made into something
beautiful.
Favorite craft book:
Anything by Sarah Fielke. Her books and quilts are amazing and I am
completely inspired by her. Most of her
quilts are lovingly hand quilted, and so I have been largely doing the same,
using perle cotton threads to quilt with, I just love the finish and the
heirloom quality it creates. I can’t
wait to get my hands on Hexa Go-Go, as EPP is my latest sewing craze, (and yes it features in my tutorial!) and
anything by Kaffe Fassett.
Favorite book (or book you are currently
reading)
I am currently reading The Hand that
First Held Mine by Maggie O’Farrell – it’s great but my progress is very slow
because I spend almost all of my spare time quilting! As for my favourite book, how long have you
got. The 44 Scotland Street Series by
Alexander McCall Smith, The Book Thief by Marcus Zusak, The Little Stranger by
Sarah Waters, Small Island by Andrea Levy, The Curious Incident of a Dog in the
Night Time by Mark Haddon, Sacred Hearts by Sarah Dunant…I could go on…
Favourite children's book:
Again a tricky one. For my 3 year old daughter I love reading
Room on the Broom, or anything by Julia Donaldson in fact. When I was a child I was completely obsessed
with anything by Enid Blyton, but in particular the Far Away Tree series and
when I was a bit older Malory Towers.
And of course anything by Roald Dahl.
But I think I love Matilda most of all.
I love that she reads so much and can outsmart her crazy parents and
headteacher.
Favourite
quilting tool:
I would not be able to survive without
my air erasable pen. I do not know how
people get by without one, particularly for hand quilting. I just draw my lines, sew along them and
within an hour the line is gone. It’s
amazing.
Favourite
music to listen to while quilting:
It has to be Adele’s album 21. I listen to her album over and over again,
particularly in the evenings.
Favourite TV show while hand stitching:
I don’t watch a lot of tv but I do have
one guilty pleasure – Neighbours! We no longer have sky plus, and I can’t watch it during the day because I have
2 small children (trust me it would be no fun, and I like to watch it in peace)
so I watch it on the laptop on demand. I am often hand sewing and gripped by the
latest Neighbours plot lines. My idea of
a perfect evening!
Binding - by hand or by machine?
Both. I
machine the front and then hand stitch the back. Best of both worlds.
If I'd only known - what you wish you
knew about blogging before you started your blog:
I wish I had known that there was a wonderful
blogging community out there! I never
expected blogging to be this much fun, and to meet so many like minded
people. It’s just been great. And I have learnt SO much.
*****
Right, so on to the tutorial! (Which I will also put on a separate ‘tutorials’
page at a later date, so that it can be found more easily.)
Please join me to make a…
You Will Need:
Mug, Spoon, Card, Paper, Glue, Quilting Ruler, Hexagon template, Scrap fabrics with motifs, Air Erasable Pen, Top Fabrics, Backing fabric, Binding fabric, Perle cotton thread
1) So
first of all you will need some fabulous fabrics to work with. I used scraps from my Walk In the Woods
bundle, hence the name of my mug rug ;-)
2) Next you need a template. I just looked one up on the internet, printed
it off and cut it out and stuck it onto card to make it robust. Draw round 7 different fabrics and cut
out. Remember that you need to allow for
the ¼ inch seam when choosing your hexagon size. I also ‘fussy cut’ the little girl, ensuring
that she was in the centre of the hexagon as I wanted her to be in the middle
hexagon and the main feature.
3) Next
you need 7 paper hexagons. I just
trimmed ¼ inch from my original template all the way round and then drew around
it on paper 7 times.
4)
Now to the paper piecing. First pin your fabric wrong side facing, to
the paper.
5)
Next, fold the fabric over the top of the
hexagon, tie a knot in the thread and secure at the top of the hexagon like so.
6) Then
make a small stitch, folding each edge as you go round.
7) When
completed, it should look like this:
8)
Do this for all the hexagons.
9) Now
to sew all those little hexies together using a whip stitch or ladder
stich. Start with the centre hexagon and
sew each outer one to it. NB. In this
picture, the outer hexagons are not sewn
to each other. That’s the next bit!
10) So
now, yes you guessed it, use a whip or ladder stitch to sew all the outer
hexagons together and remove the basting and paper. Iron for a lovely flat finish, completing the
EPP part of the project. Yay!
11) So
to the next stage, the background. Take
a plain piece of fabric, measuring 8” x 8 ½” and a patterned piece of fabric
measuring 3” x 8, ” and machine stitch together, using a ¼ inch seam with the
patterned piece being on the left.
12) Next, appliqué the hexagons onto the backing
fabric.
13) And
so to quilting! First you need a backing
fabric, larger than the top.
Say 12” x
10”.
14)
Create your quilt sandwich and baste by hand, in
preparation for hand quilting. Don’t
panic, there’s not too much hand quilting involved, and it looks so pretty, it's well worth the extra effort!
15) Use
a hoop to stabilise the fabric. I used
my cross stitch hoop, it did the job perfectly for this little project.
16)
Using no. 8 perle cotton thread, quilt around
the outside of the middle hexagon and then around the outside of the outer
hexagons.
17)
Add additional details, for example quilt along
each side of the join in the fabrics and why not add some little shapes. I attempted some cute little mushrooms!
18)
And finally to the binding. Cut 4 strips and machine sew on the front and
hand stitch to the back. Well that’s how
I like to do it, but I think everyone has their own way ;-)
And eventually your Tea in the
Woods Mug Rug should look like this:
Now all you need is a mug and spoon, oh and some tea, and
it’s project complete :-)
Well done if you have managed to read this far, I think it's my longest post ever!
Don't forget to check out January
from Sew Sew Go today too.
Thank you so much for stopping by. I hope that you are all enjoying the hop as much as I am.
Sarah x