(fyi -- this post is really picture heavy)
Last week I finished the triangle quilt for the church silent auction. I cranked this baby out in 2 weeks!Here's the finished quilt. It's about 51" x 60", perfect for napping under. :)
Now, a crash course in how I made this quilt:
First, I had to cut out all my triangles. I did this during one of Calvin's gymnastics practices (3 hours of mostly uninterrupted time).
Since I wanted the various FQ (fat quarter) triangles to be randomly placed, I laid the whole thing out. I did this at a different gymnastics practice, since there is a nice big floor to work on. By laying it out, I was able to make sure the various colors were nicely scattered.
Once I liked the layout, I then layered each row from left to right (meaning, I took the left-most triangle and put it on top of the next one, then those two on top of the next one, etc., etc.). I labeled each row.
Sixteen rows ready for pieceing! Connor counted them to make sure I had them all. :)
Time to put the rows together! I put a FQ triangle with a background triangle, in pairs. I chain piece, then at the ironing board I clip them apart, keeping them in order. Then I put pairs together to make bigger pairs, repeat until....
.... I have one long strip. I like to work a quilt from the bottom up, so this is row 16.
Once I finish a row, I add it to the rest of the rows. Here are rows 14-16.
The quilt top is pieced and borders are on. Ready for quilting!
To layer the quilt, I put my backing together (it has one seam), then taped it to the floor (at yet another practice -- love that big floor at the gym), stretching it quite taut. Then the batting (Warm and White) was laid down and smoothed out. Lastly, the quilt top was put on, and the whole thing was safety pinned together.
I quilted a squiggly line down the diagonal sides of the triangles, making a diamond pattern. I stitched in the ditch around the border seam.
The borders got quilted with a meandering stitch.
After the quilting is all done, it's time for the binding. I wanted a 1/2" binding, so I cut my bias strips 3.25" wide (6 x the finished binding width + 1/4"), folded in half, and stitched at a scant 1/2".
Then wrap the binding around to the back and slip stitch into place (handwork that was mostly done at another practice. I get a lot done sitting at the gym).
After a trip through the washer and dryer, the quilt is finished!
(that's my peach tree in the background -- doesn't it look great? There will be a post about it coming soon)
beautiful, beautiful, beautiful!!!!!
ReplyDeleteWow, all those little triangles! It is beautiful, Linda!
ReplyDeleteWow, I am absolutely in awe... you're so talented! (not that I didn't know this already). It looks fantastic.
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness! That is AMAZING! And in 2 weeks! Thanks for the picture tutorial - I've never made a quilt before and it was very interesting to see the steps... :)
ReplyDeleteBeautiful quilt and it's amazing how quickly you put it together!
ReplyDeleteIt's beautiful Linda! How much white did the quilt take?
ReplyDeleteHoly cow, that's a lot of work, and it's a beautiful quilt! I would never get all the seamlines straight like you did.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't be able to do that in a year! What a ton of work for a silent auction. I've no doubt it brought in a lot of money, it had to. But you brought back memories of when my kids were little and I used their play time as sew time. Like in the spring when I sat huddled in blankets at softball games while my frozen fingers sewed tons of beads to the skirts of dance recital costumes!
ReplyDeleteGreat job! Your points are so even.. nice!
ReplyDeleteI just saw this beautiful quilt on Pinterest and had to click over and see more - just gorgeous! I was wondering if you could let me know how you cut your FQ triangles?
ReplyDeleteBeautiful! I love the quilt and all the colors!! What size are your triangles? Do you know how much the quilt got at auction?! I hope a bunch!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing this wonderful idea!!! It has inspired me to start cutting some of my stash of scraps into triangles for a scrappy looking quilt!!!
ReplyDeleteWhat were the size of your triangles?
ReplyDeletewow, more comments almost 3 years later! the pattern for the quilt is from the book Fat Quarter Quilts. it's the triangle confetti quilt. i want to say the triangles are 4 or 4.5". to cut the triangles, you cut your strips. then you use the 60* line on the ruler and make an angled cut. then using that new cut, cut parallelograms the same width of the strips (so if your strips were 4.5, cut the parallelograms 4.5). then cut those in half to make equilateral triangles.
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