Showing posts with label Dwellings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dwellings. Show all posts

Thursday, May 8, 2014

All Squared Up

We all love quilt projects where the fabric does the heavy lifting. With the right prints providing maximum impact, even the simplest block design can really shine! 

Wendy Sheppard proves that in her All Squared Up quilt, featured in the April/May issue of The Quilter magazine, which showcases the big and bold prints from Contempo's Dwellings collection. 


Just how did this quilt come to be? Keep reading--Wendy lets us in on her process.


What attracted you to Dwellings and the colorway you picked?
Since I am more traditional in my quilting style, I might not have been "attracted" to Dwellings at first.  I am more appealed by the idea of challenging myself to work outside of my comfort zone, and coming up with a pleasing quilt design.  However, the more I looked at the fabrics, the more I liked the informal feel of the print designs.  I picked a mix of green, salmon and brown because I thought the green and brown provide a nice contemporary contrast to the salmon.

Was it challenging to work with so many large prints? How did you overcome that?

Yes, it is always challenging to work with large prints because oftentimes large patches are needed to show the prints, and there are only that many "square/rectangular" blocks one can use!  For All Squared Up, I went ahead and still used large square blocks, except I used thin black framing interior border to break up the one-fabric-blocks.




Tell us about the block design.
The block is essentially a one fabric square block, except I used thin black framing interior border to break up the one-fabric-block.  The black draws the eye to zero in on the individual blocks, and thus draw the viewer to spend a bit of time looking at the fabrics.

Can you talk about your border decisions (love that stripe, sandwiched in white!)? 

That stripe print is probably my favorite swatch from the entire collection.  I feel like the quilt center looks a little busy with all the different fabrics used in the blocks. So the stripe print would probably be drowned if placed right next to the quilt center. So one way to highlight that stripe was for me to sandwiched it in white.



How did you machine quilt it?
I quilted my allover Jester's Hat motif to kind of break up the "square-ness" of the quilt.  I have discussed my Jester's Hat motif here, here, and here.

What do you like best about this quilt?
I like that it is very usable, and will instantaneous visual effect when used as a home decor item.  Drape it on a solid color couch, and you will see what I mean.


See the entire Dwellings collection here.
See more of Wendy's work, including her post about the All Squared Up quilt, here.
Find the kit for this quilt here.
Find The Quilter magazine here.


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Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Mi Casa y Su Casa: Technique Tuesday with Debby Kratovil


My House and Your House!

Dwellings Collection - medium sized flowers (Baby Bloom)
What can we do with this collection of 29 different Dwellings prints from Contempo? It's almost too much, like eating the entire Thanksgiving dinner with all the dessert - by yourself! Let's see what Debby Kratovil of Debby Kratovil Quilts narrowed it down to in this week's Technique Tuesday. We sent her half-yard cuts of every single piece . . . the rest was up to her.

What did you do first when you got such a large package?
After I groaned due to visual overload <smile>, I separated the fabrics into matching prints, fanning them out to show the various color families. Wow - wanna see what I found?
Don't you love these colored brush strokes in 11 different flavors? Print is called "Confetti"
Absolutely LOVE these "log cabin" geometrics - Baby Box Trot
Two types of stripes. Can you believe stripes with those ovals - Beaded Stripe?
Very large scale rendition of Baby Bloom - Bloom!
And I saved the best for last:
5 different "log cabin" prints about 8-1/2" for each motif - Box Trot
You obviously had to start cutting somewhere. What ideas were spinning inside your head?
I fell back on one of my "go to" patterns that would combine a geometric (ie, stripe) with a floral and use a 90 degree ruler to cut wedges. I call this "Yikes! Those Stripes!"
Two 3-1/2" strips with good contrast
Method:
1. Cut two 3-1/2" x wof strips of two fabrics (a stripe and a floral). Note that I offset them in order to save fabric. I used an Omnigrid 98L ruler (generally used to cut side setting triangles for setting blocks on point). I ignored the numbers; just used it to cut my stripset, which measures 6-1/2" high as shown.
Flip-flop the ruler to cut as shown
2. Continue cutting as shown in the picture above.
Place the units, cut from the SAME strip set
3. When these pieced triangles are cut, the straight of grain runs along the long edge. This means that your block will have NO BIAS EDGES as in other techniques. Your block will finish to a square without wobbles!
Yikes! Block sewn and pressed
4. I cut pieced triangles from various pairings and got the following quilt center. This is what I would call a "low contrast" quilt - hard to see where one color/fabric begins and the others end.
Remember those large log cabin prints? I used them for a vertical center
5. I made 6 of my Yikes! blocks. As I was using only 1/2 yard cuts of fabric, I had to get creative with finishing the quilt. I used a strip of the large log cabin print as a vertical center. I put in some vertical sashing to separate them. Two different prints for the borders - because that's all I had, that's why!

Debby, did you make anything else?
Well, of course! There was a lot of fabric that I hadn't even played with yet. I thought of some quick and simple hot pads, letting the fabric do all the work.
Single piece fabric hot pads
I like your binding - again a stripe. And your quilting is simple and clean. Can we see the back?
Here you go:
Here is that fantastic smaller log cabin print for the backs
So, you're really done now, right?
Not so fast. I still had things running around in my head. I thought "log cabin" and that goes with Dwellings. How about a log cabin dwelling? I'll show you my steps, but it really isn't a pattern because each of those Box Trot panels isn't the same size:
The large Box Trot panel prints - cut out various units

Cut a 4-1/2" strip, recut into triangles for the roof

Added sky next to the roof and then trimmed. Yes, I lopped off the points!

A completed block that didn't have the points lopped off!
I only was able to make 5 blocks with matching roofs. How can I make this a balanced center?
Added green Confetti fabric to either side of the center house block
I was able to finish this quickly with machine quilting with a walking foot. I absolutely love this little quilt and it is already hanging in my kitchen. It makes me smile every time I see it.

Thanks Debby, for providing so much creative inspiration using the Dwellings collection! 
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Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Contempo Blog Hop Winners


Thanks so much to everyone who followed and commented during our Contempo Studio Blog Hop last week. We hope you enjoyed all the tutorials!

If you missed the tutorials, click on the links below. We guarantee you'll want to make all four!
Day 1: Quarter Log Cabin Pillow Covers by Clover & Violet
Day 2: Ruffle Trim Bib from see kate sew
Day 3: Reversible Placemats by the Benartex Blog Team
Day 4: Strip-pieced Wrist Strap and Lanyard Set by Ebony Love 


Now, on to the winners:

Day 1, receiving a FQ bundle of Dwellings:




Congratulations, Barbara Corbitt!


Day 2, receiving a FQ bundle of Cachet:





Congratulations, Katy!


Day 3, receiving a FQ bundle of Cosmopolitan:


Congratulations, Emily C!


Day 4, receiving a FQ bundle of Dwellings:


Congratulations, Debbie!


If you see your name above, you'll be receiving an email from us to get your mailing address. If you don't receive an email, it means we couldn't find your email address associated with your comment. Please email us at sewinlovewithfabric (at) gmail.com and give us your address. 

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Thursday, August 29, 2013

Contempo Blog Hop Day 4: Strip-Pieced Wrist Strap and Lanyard Set by Ebony Love


Welcome to the final day of the Contempo Studio Blog Hop! Today, the talented Ebony Love of LoveBug Studios is sharing a quick and easy tutorial--colorful wrist straps and lanyards, strip pieced from the Dwellings Beach House colorway. Check out Ebony's tutorial and then find out how you can enter to win a bundle of this gorgeous fabric!


Here's Ebony!
It’s really simple to make a wrist strap or lanyard from just a few strips of fabric, and end up with dozens of nice stitchy gifts for your favorite quilting friends at holiday time.



I truly have a love affair with fabrics, and Benartex fabrics are among my favorites. However, I don’t always have the time to incorporate my favorites into a quilt, nor do I have the wall or bed space to display as many as I like.  Besides, I like being able to have the fabrics I love with me at all times, but I can’t sit in my studio all day buried under my bolts!  That’s what makes a project like this so appealing – I get nearly instant gratification because it stitches up so quickly, and I can take my favorite fabrics with me wherever I go.

Let’s get started!

Materials:
6 fat quarters (pick your favorites from the Contempo fat quarter pack!)
3 – 10 1” swivel hooks (these are usually in the notions or purse supplies section of your local craft store)
2- 15-1/2” x 21” pieces of lightweight fusible interfacing (Pellon #911F is awesome for this!)



From each fat quarter, cut:
2- 3” x 21” strips



You’ll be making two strip sets, so arrange the strips the way you like them and stitch them together in rows.  Press your seams open so your strip set lays nice and flat. Repeat for the other strip set.

Once your strip set is assembled, with wrong sides together, layer with the fusible interfacing and fuse.  This will stabilize your strips and add a bit of body to the finished piece. Repeat for the other strip set.



Now, cut 4” strips along the width of each strip set. You should be able to get five pieced strips from each strip set.



If you want to make a lanyard, piece three of the 4” strips together into one long strip, and press those seams open. If you’re making a wrist strap, you only need one strip.

Fold your strip in half lengthwise with the right side out and press along the fold.  Starch works great here – you want a really crisp fold.




Next, fold the raw edges to the center, and press those folds as well.  Your strip is now about 1” wide.



Thread your folded strip into the swivel hook until the hook is about at the center of the fabric. 



Here’s where it gets a little tricky, but once you do this you’ll see why and start using this technique for straps from now on!

With the swivel hook at the center, unfold the raw ends of the strap and pin them right sides together. 




Stitch this with a 1/4” seam, and press the seam open.  Now you can refold the strap and you have a continuous loop for your swivel hook.



At your sewing machine, use a zipper foot (or your 1/4" piecing foot) to topstitch the strap through all layers, about 1/4" from the edge. Repeat on the opposite side.


The last step is a little bit different for the wrist strap and lanyard. For the wrist strap, fold the strap in half around the swivel hook so that you don’t have a bulky seam near the hook.  Topstitch close to the swivel hook through all layers, reinforcing your stitches by stitching several times over your stitching line.



For the lanyard strap, when you fold the strap in half around the hook, you want to angle the strap slightly so that your lanyard forms a “v” near the hook. This will allow the lanyard to lay flat against your chest. Topstitch the strap as you did for the wrist strap.



Now, you get to decide how many wrist straps and lanyards you will make from your two strip sets.  You can either make 10 wrist straps; 1 lanyard and 7 wrist straps; 2 lanyards and 3 wrist straps; or 3 lanyards and 1 wrist strap. The possibilities are endless and awesome indeed!



Do you want to win a Dwellings fat quarter set of your own? Just sign up to follow the Benartex blog using either Bloglovin’ or the email feature (both in the right sidebar). Then leave a comment below this post telling us that you are a follower and letting us know who you would make lanyards or wrist straps for. This giveaway will be open through Monday, September 2 at 11:59 pm EST.

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Monday, August 26, 2013

Contempo Blog Hop Day 1: Quarter Log Cabin Pillow Covers by Clover & Violet


We're kicking off the launch of Contempo Studio with a blog hop featuring tutorials made using Contempo fabrics. Today, Jennie from Clover & Violet is sharing a quilted pillow in two sizes made using Dwellings in the Guesthouse colorway. Gorgeous! After you read Jennie's tutorial, head over to her blog to see the wide range of fantastic patterns they offer and find out how to win some Dwellings fabric for yourself!

Hi! I'm Jennie and I work with my mom over at Clover & Violet where we design PDF patterns for patchwork handbags as well as offer tutorials and ideas for patchwork projects of all types. I chose the Dwellings fabrics in the Beach House colorway because I could vision them in my living room. I love adding a little bit of quilting to every area of my home.  The scale, colors, and beautiful finish on the fabric was perfect for some large-scale quilt blocks that will really show off the prints.

The tutorial I'm going to share is for a Quarter Log Cabin Pillow Cover, which will include an invisible zipper for easy washing, and can be made in two sizes {or easily adjusted to any size you'd like}.

To make two covers, one 20" square and one 18" square, you will need {if only making one, you will need 6 fat quarters):
  • 1 fat quarter each:
    • Baby Bloom Khaki
    • Confetti Aqua
    • Beaded Stripe Aqua
    • Baby Box Trot Ivory/Aqua
  • 1/2 yard each:
    • Bloom Aqua
    • Wavy Pencil Stripe Green
  • 1/3 yard prewashed cotton flannel {like you'd use for pajamas}
  • 20″ or longer invisible zipper
Optional:
  • Invisible zipper foot
  • serger
Note: Patchwork seam allowances are 1/4" and pillow seam allowances are 1/2". Measurements for 20" pillow are in parenthesis. From fat quarters cut:
  • Baby Bloom Khaki - 8" (10") square
  • Confetti Aqua - 4 1/2" x 8" (4 1/2" x 10") rectangle
  • Beaded Stripe Aqua - 4 1/2" x 12" (4 1/2" x 14) rectangle
  • Baby Box Trot Ivory/Aqua - 7" x 12" (7" x 14") rectangle
From half yards cut:
  • Bloom Aqua - Two 12" x 18" (12" x 20")
  • Wavy Pencil Stripe Green - Two 7" x 18" (7" x 20") rectangles

Beginning with the center square, sew the rectangles around two sides of the square as shown. Place pieced square on top of a square of flannel slightly larger than the square. Pin and quilt in place. Set aside. Now we’re going to make the back. First, serge one 18" (20") edge of each of the back pieces.

Note: If you don't have a serger, a zig zag stitch works just fine.



Next, take your invisible zipper and press the zipper open. This will make it much easier to sew right next to the teeth, even if you’re using an invisible zipper foot. It was very difficult to get a picture of what this should look like, but if you examine the zipper you’ll see what I mean.

Note: I intentionally left my backing fabrics a little larger than the front of the pillow so I wouldn't have to line up seams!



Then, sew your zipper to the right side of one of your backing fabrics. Zip the backing together and place it right sides together with the front of the pillow.



Leave a small portion of the zipper open and pin the ends next to each other. Stitch around the pillow with a 1/2" seam allowance, back stitching twice at the zipper ends.



Serge the edge {or zig zag and trim}.



Carefully open the zipper from the wrong side and turn the pillow right side out.



And there you have some fun pillow covers that are just as pretty from the back (shown above) as the front.

Thanks, Jennie!

Head over to Jennie's blog to see how you can enter to win a fat quarter bundle of the Dwellings collection.

Find the remaining Contempo blog hop tutorials here:

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