When I was a teenager I made a hexagon quilt with the English Paper piecing method. Family and friends gave me their scraps of fabric and I spent hours putting them together to make a bed sized quilt. I don't remember why I started it or where I got the idea from but I thoroughly enjoyed making it and when I finished I gave it to my sister as a birthday or a Christmas present. She still has it somewhere, and it has been repaired at least once. It's probably quite tatty by now.
I've been wanting to make another for a while, especially since seeing Louise working on hers. Recently I had a clean out of my sewing bits and pieces and came across a large box of dressmaking material remnants. Bits I couldn't bare to throw out because they might be useful one day but were taking up a lot of valuable space. Some were really pretty or had sentimental value because they were from clothes I made for my daughters when they were little. So I hatched the idea to make them into a quilt - and an old fashioned English paper pieced quilt would be just the thing. What better way to hang on to the little pieces of fabric that I love or that hold good memories? Traditionally leftover and scrap fabrics were used to make quilts but today when you can buy everything you need the practice isn't so popular anymore. I think it would be fun to make a quilt out of fabric I already have and to keep adding to it as I make more clothes.
I bought a small packet of plastic templates to play around with (available from
Punch with Judy) and spent an evening cutting out pieces of paper in different shapes and sizes.
I looked online for ideas for different combinations of shapes. I found out that you can download and print shapes that you then just have to cut out. You can also buy pre-cut shapes in all sizes too. But I enjoyed tracing and cutting them out myself while I was watching TV. Therapeutic work for my busy brain.
I've started preparing some fabric by tracing around my plastic template and then cutting out with scissors. I've also tried out several different methods of basting the fabric around the paper. You can glue, or you can use needle and thread. I settled for
this method of basting - one where you stitch through the fabric only, then when you come to take the paper out it just slips out, no need to unpick or remove the basting thread.
I think I've decided to make a simple hexagon quilt, cutting 6 hexagons from each piece of fabric to make a flower with a white fabric piece for the centre. That way I can make this quilt over many years, adding to it whenever I have leftover fabric. Hopefully the white centre will tie all the different fabrics together to make a quilt that is both 'scrappy' but has some consistency throughout it.
This purple fabric is from a summer top I made a couple of years ago and still wear. It may have a little bit of polyester in it and that's okay. I will not be sticking to only cotton fabric for this quilt but will experiment with different weights and blends. The lighter weight fabric I will back with interfacing first. The only fabric I won't use will be the heavier denims and cotton drills and the slippery 100% polyesters as these would cause too many headaches.
This morning I went fabric shopping and bought some pretty floral cotton lawn to make a dress and a summer top for myself. The scraps will be perfect additions to my quilt. Two projects for the price of one?
Lovely idea and the first one looks great. I remember the fabric and blouse too.
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