I took this quilt up to my sewing friend’s place yesterday and she assisted me in getting a couple more photos.
Blue Christmas indoors
This is the “straightest” photo I’ve been able to get — I’m holding it up at the corners. It’s yellowish because it was inside.
Blue Christmas outdoors
This is the most colour-accurate shot but it was extremely windy and there was no way it would hang straight at all. As you can see, I have added two five-pointed stars in the top corners of the main panel and I’ll add others over the next couple of months — I still have twelve weeks until Christmas, after all.
Size: 137 x 170 cm (54″ x 67″)
Design: Robert Kaufman panels in my own arrangement
Fabric: 100% cotton
Batting: Matilda’s Own 100% cotton
Machine: Janome Horizon MemoryCraft 9400 QCP
Pieced: September 2019
Quilted: 2019 and 2022
Bound: September 2022
This began life as a Finish-A-Long project back in June 2019. After finishing En Bourgogne I wanted a smallish project and decided on a Christmas Tree wall quilt. I didn’t really care for most of the tree panels I saw — too garish or too cutesy or too plain — but then I saw a couple of blue and silver tree panels and I realised that blue is a much better colour for Australia, being cooler and lighter. I also found two sets of small panels and some coordinating silver and grey fabrics.
It took me six weeks to get a layout finalised. My initial plan was to use all 16 small panels around the tree, in pairs to cut down on the number of seams. That plan was soon discarded because the spacing between the panels was 3/4″ between horizontal pairs and and 2″ between vertical pairs and it would have looked bizarre.
The second plan was to use the small panels with sashing between them. The small panels are 9.75″ and the tree panel was 23″ across (22.5″ finished) so I needed 3″ vertical sashing to make the measurements fit. With four panels across the top and six down the sides, 3″ sashing made the whole quilt 54 x 79″ — the width was acceptable but the length was too long, and it would require an extra few inches be added to the panel. Reducing the horizontal sashing to 2.5″ and then 2″ didn’t help much and made the quilt look unbalanced.
In the end I decided to discard two of the small panels down the sides and use 3″ sashing both vertically and horizontally. This brought the measurements to 54″ x 67″ — a little bigger than I wanted at the start, but manageable.
When I finally got around to cutting out the panels and the sashing strips I was disappointed to find that not a single one of the panels was actually square — if you look closely at the finished quilt you can see some slivers of blue and silver panel sashing visible around the edges.
Once I actually started sewing, the top was put together in a single day and then I procrastinated again while trying to find a fabric to use as a backing. Because this was destined to be a wall hanging the backing fabric had to be on the warp grain, which meant I needed at least 142″ (3.6 metres) of fabric. I didn’t have enough for two complete lengths in any blue or grey print fabrics so I ended up using a 2.5 metre length of a navy print and piecing the extension — not ideal, but it was better than going out to buy more fabric just for a backing.
Quilting started out well. I completed the walking foot lines along the sashes and the silver-on-white panels and started free-motion quilting on the main panel but then for some reason it stalled — it’s so long ago I can’t remember why. The quilt was set aside for three years until I picked it up again last week. My FMQ skills had deteriorated in the interval but I was in a “get it finished any way you can” mood so I completed the quilting around the ornaments and did pseudo-pebbles in the blue panels.
For the sleeve I used an offcut from the backing and for the binding I used a medium grey Kona solid which went better with the quilt than any of my blues.
All in all I’m fairly happy with how it turned out — the ornaments on the tree look amazingly three-dimensional (they’re not, really) and it will look great on the wall in December. I wasn’t going to add quilting in the background because it’s not a bed quilt and won’t be handled much, but having seen the wrinkles in the centre panel I think I’ll add a few five-pointed stars to hold the layers in place.
Lessons Learned:
1. Panels are weird sizes and never, ever square.
2. No matter how much fabric you have, you never have exactly what you need.
3. I need to do more FMQ practice.
September already! The days are getting lighter and warmer, and I’m hoping to enjoy at least four weeks of nice weather before it gets too hot and I start complaining about the heat. My poor friend in Queensland is already suffering 36°C — way too hot for this time of year.
August goals:
1. AHQ: 4 generic laundry bags. I got three done instead of four — they all had the same accent fabric so it was very easy to do them together. I’ll have to cut some more kits soon so that I can make up two or three in a day if I need them quickly. JM has put out a call for bags to go to Butterworth so I’ll send these off once I’ve done a few more.
Three generic laundry bags
2. Personal: I didn’t set one this month.
3. FAL: Complete the Blue Christmas top and start on the quilting. Well … I finalised the design and cut the fabric but I haven’t actually set a stitch in it yet. I still have five weeks or so until the finish is due so I need to make this a priority for September.
Blue Christmas all cut out
Other work:
I’ve resumed regular progress on my second Penrose quilt. My wrists are coping with two units per night so I’ll try keep it at that and not push it. I should finish this section by the end of the month, and then I have rosettes to do.
September Goals:
AHQ: Three more generic bags for RAAF Butterworth.
Personal: I really would like to get those last two Hawaiian blocks done. I keep looking at the two pieces of stiffened fabric that are ready for the design and telling myself that I could get them done in only one or two days, just as soon as I’ve traced the design.
FAL: No time to dilly dally on this one. Get the top done, quilt it and bind it before 10 September October.
Here is my nomination for Q3 of the 2019 Finish-A-Long. As usual I’m linking through Sew of Course in Ireland.
Blue and silver Christmas fabrics
After the effort it took to get En Bourgogne quilted I really need a smaller project for this quarter, but all my unquilted tops are full size. I remembered a Christmas Tree panel I’ve had for several years and decided that now would be the time to quilt it. But … I can’t find it. I know I haven’t thrown it away (I never throw anything away) but it’s not in the shelf with the other panels, it’s not with the multi-coloured fabrics, it’s not in a project box and I simply can’t find it anywhere. Having set my mind on a panel for this quarter’s project, however, a panel I must have, so I took a quick trip up to Hobbysew.
To be honest, I didn’t really care for most of the tree panels I saw — too garish or too cutesy or too plain … just not what I wanted. Then I saw a couple of blue and silver tree panels and I realised that blue is a much better colour for Australia, being cooler and lighter. I also found two sets of small panels and some coordinating silver and grey fabrics, so there will be a blue and silver wall hanging done in time for Christmas this year. (Finding somewhere to hang it will be another matter — all my walls are covered in bookcases.)
I don’t know what the dimensions will be yet — I’m aiming for 50″ x 60″ or smaller, but we’ll see. As for the quilting, I’m going to do outline stitching of the main tree, and FMQ for the rest, with sparkly machine tacks here and there.