Friday, February 9, 2007

Paper Piecing


The second Friday of the month is when I go to my local quilt shop http://www.phatquartersquilting.com/ to pick up the next three stars in the series of Carol Doak's 50 Fabulous States Stars, all 12-inch, paper-pieced, and complete with excellent instructions. We began a year ago, and have about four more months to go to complete the stars representing the 50 states.

Cutting the fabric to fit is one of the things that make paper piecing so frustrating for beginners like myself, but my quilt shop, has it pre-cut using the charts in Carol's book, and the pieces allow you plenty of "fudge" room. When doing paper piecing you have to "think right" and "sew left-side". Stashbusters newsletter suggested the paper piecing tutorial on Judy Neimeyer's homepagepage http://www.quiltworx.com/ .It is excellent and shows you step-by-step what to do.

Carol Doak also makes a translucent paper you can feed through your printer and its non-woven construction allows you to tear it away easier than most papers. My favorite paper is Fun-dation from HTCW inc. It's like Carol Doak's paper, but they even suggest you leave it in to stabilize your project. Because it's translucent, you can easily see where it is that you are positioning your fabric on the "RIGHT side", so when you turn it to the wrong ("LEFT") side to sew, it's almost fool proof. If you want to tear it out, it comes out quite easily. Many old quilts, like Grandmother's Flower Garden left the paper in for added warmth.

The great thing about this Block-of-the-Month project is that I just had to purchase the book at Phat Quarters and they supply me with the pre-cut fabric each month, that will result in four different quilts in four different color-ways.If I can't make it into the store that month, I can go later and pay $3 for the three stars, which is still a great bargain.

A friend and I are swapping one of the colorways, so that she and I will end up with 24 blocks in one of the color-ways and 0 in the other. We each gave up a colorway that we weren't thrilled about, and now will have enough blocks to make one of the quilts larger.

Another benefit of this 16-month process has been having time to think about how I want to "set" each of the three quilts. I've been collecting pictures from different quilt magazines. One of the quilts I want to set on point and intersperse with plain blocks so that I can showcase some quilting. Another I hope to do a center applique set on point, with the 12 blocks around it, and the third is still in the dreaming phase.

2 comments:

Debra Dixon said...

I like the idea of leaving the "paper" inside. I'll have to check out that product. Thanks for the tip. any pics of your blocks?

Suzanne Earley said...

My mom and I participated in a block swap using these blocks several years ago. I made 50 of the Iowa blocks, she made 50 of the South Carolina blocks. We got so tired of them. But, we did end up with 1 of each block. My quilt stop is almost put together, her is still in pieces. I think they need to simmer a few more years before we are ready to finish them. They are gorgeous blocks....