As you know I am actually rather enamored of the idea of the Quilts of Valor Foundation. This is partially because I have been feeling the need to do more "good works" and quilting is a way to do that and still be doing what I want! (Perfection is still a long way off, I know...) I also feel more of a connection to the soldiers in question and have thought a great deal about the healing that all of the deployed soldiers need, not just the physically wounded ones. N. has many patients who need all the support they can get as they struggle to put their lives back together.
So this is my first design and it is almost ready for presentation!
The design is a Split Log Cabin, that is, a Long Cabin Block that is cut in half and joined to a different block. In order to do this and have them be square the center is actually a rectangle....the square plus seam allowances through the center. I saw a quilt done like this online and really liked the look of it.....especially since I had a jelly roll to do it with.
The quilt is actually a bit more than one jelly roll in size....the lighter colors come from a different roll. It was so easy to put the blocks together with the pre-cut strips.
The hardest part to put together was the border on the side of course, but I really wanted to give it a sense of being a work table....and that the process of rebuilding is ongoing. It has all sorts of crazy bias and making things look "random" is actually very tricky.
N. recommended alternating the direction of the blocks, and I really like the way that turned out. I even tried to set each split square with one going each way. Of course, many of the squares aren't actually split....they were made as a half as I got down to smaller and smaller pieces that would go together. The outer row is actually just slightly longer than the 42 inch strip on a full split block. If you look close, some of them have slightly different colors on the outside of one corner. Others have matching centers but not matching outsides. It all worked out though.
The back is also black and has little stars on it.
After a day of trying to figure out why the picture of the quilting (by the lovely Debbie Younkin of Fort Collins near mom's house) I have given up. Some day I may have the presence of mind to figure out why everything else works but that pic won't.....sigh! You are just going to have to trust me that it looks GREAT! It is a whirlpool style all-over design and it works really well.
And so we don't get too bogged down in things I OUGHT to be doing, here is the last pic of the "Presentation Case" which is simply a coordinating Pillowcase.
All in all, this has been a great experience that I plan to continue.
Now I need to go bind "Not a Wallflower" and if I am really ambitious I will post pics of the pillowcases I made for the 1,000,000 Pillowcase challenge (and you can find info about that HERE!)
In the meantime, make something that makes you smile even if it is a mess (or some order, if that is more your style.....mine is mess in case you were wondering. heh) k.
Thursday, August 26, 2010
Building With What We Have
Labels:
charitable giving,
machine quilting,
piecing,
pillowcases,
QOV,
quilt design
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
1 comment:
I don't know if your mom has finished and sent this one off or not, but I hope that you mentioned in an accompanying letter or something, the idea behind the side border (a work table....and the process of rebuilding). I think that is significant, because the soldier who receives this quilt may also be working to rebuild his life.
Post a Comment