Two for one:
Grandmother’s Dream and Boston Commons
Fabrics: Any number of fabrics will work, odd or even
number. If using 3” strips, 15 fabrics
will make a 50” wide quilt, 20 fabrics will make a 68” wide quilt, 23 fabrics
will make a 78” wide quilt. Each square
is about 3.4” on the diagonal so you can do an approximate estimate for any
number of fabrics.
Two
color families work well in this set of quilts.
Then you can easily figure out which quilt the created quarters go to.
Choose
your fabrics in a run from light to dark.
The light of the 2 colors of fabric will meet at the center of the
strata. For example, dark green to light
green meeting light blue and proceeding to dark blue.
Pressing:
every strata must be pressed identically. Seams will be pressed one up, one
down throughout the strata. This means
if you press the seam toward fabric 1 on the first strata it must be pressed the
same on every strata. This eliminates the confusion in
directions that call for half of the stratas pressed up and half of the stratas
pressed down and continually deciding which pile of slices to choose from.
Sewing: Straight seams are SO important. Sew at the speed that produces straight
seams, no faster. Use a 2.0 seam length
because the strata will be cut through many times. This will prevent stitches popping out at the
ends.
Stratas
will be left flat, NOT JOINED INTO A TUBE like some other trip around the world
techniques.
If
you want to make a small sample I would suggest two 2” strips of 9 fabrics to
make one of each of the styles of quilts. These will be doll quilt size or
table topper size.
For
larger quilts I would suggest 3” strips.
For
quilts approximately 50” wide (15 fabrics) I sewed 5 stratas of 3” strips. For a quilt approximately 68” (20 fabrics)
wide you will need at least 6 stratas, 7 if you want to elongate it
further. For a quilt approximately 78”
wide (23 fabrics) you will need at least 7 stratas, possibly 8 depending on the
length you need. If you are making both
quilts rectangular (Boston Commons) you will need to add at least another half
or whole strata for the elongating rows.
Decide
what size you are making, choose fabric and cut strips. You may want to make a color card with the
fabrics numbered for reference as you are sewing.
Sew
the required number of stratas for the size you are making. Press the seams one up, one down, the same
way in every strata.
Cut
the stratas into strips (slices). For
small stratas place the first strata down along a line on your mat, place the
second strata on top, moving it down one line, add a third strata, again moving
it down one line. Trim the left edge so
it is straight along a line on the mat and then cut slices (the same width as
your original strips to make the strata).
You should be able to get 14 three inch slices out of batiks, maybe only
12-13 out of regular quilting cottons that have been prewashed. Here is a photo of staggering the stratas
from another quilt I was making.
I
have left the right edge peeled back so you can see the layers. In this case I was cutting segments for 4
patches but the technique is the same no matter how many strips are in the
strata. Larger stratas may need to be
folded in half to be shorter than your ruler and then cut 1-2 stratas at a
time.
Unpicking
comes next. The first strip is left full
length, the rest of the strips have a part picked off which then becomes part
of a quarter for the other quilt. You
will need a large table for this.
Choose
the color to be the center of the left hand section and the first strip will be
a whole strip. The second strip will
have the first center color picked off and placed to the right for another
quarter. The third strip will have a
section of 2 center colors picked off and placed to the right in the other
quarter. The fourth strip will have a
section of 3 center colors picked off and placed to the right in the other
quarter. You will continue like this
until you have just one piece in the left quarter and the rest of the strip in
the right quarter. The left quarter is
for one quilt the right quarter for the other quilt. Below are photos of pieces for all 4 quarters
of both quilts. Notice 2 quarters are
one strip shorter than the other 2 quarters.
Photos below.
Next
you will sew the quarters. If you are
making the Grandmother’s Dream (square quilt) one quarter will be smaller than
the other 3. Notice the top quarter is
the largest with the center square in it.
The 2 side quarters are identical and the bottom quarter is 2 strips
smaller than the top quarter (you will not sew the 2 longest strips into that
bottom quarter).
(Yes
I know that a square is missing off the bottom corner. I will fix that.)
Below
are 2 others so you can see how other colors look in these quilts.
If you want the easy to print PDF version go to this post.
12 comments:
Thanks! I know how hard it is to write directions. I'll try out the doll version first.
Looks like you got through the process of posting this. Great instructions. Chris
Wonderful details on this. Thank you so much for sharing. I know how much work it is to put one of these together. I really look forward to putting this tutorial to use instead of doing another bargello! You are a fabulous angel.
Very clever way of making either block. Thanks for writing this out so clearly. Have a great weekend!!
Thank you for doing all this work! I've been looking forward to this tutorial. :-)
Yaay.. I am so glad you got it written up and posted. It looks good to me.
Thank you!!!!! Very clear and easy to understand, saving this tute to my favorites :-) :-) Amie
Thanks so much for the wonderful tutorial.
I will have to read this again when I am not so tired!
Nan
Thanks so much for persevering through the task of writing and loading these directions for us all. I for one really appreciate it and look forward to making my very own Boston Commons quilt.
Marie
OK, my fingers are crossed!
And Vicki's fabrics are luscious! I need to drool over there some more!
It makes sense reading it and it looks really pretty. I can see where accuracy in seam allowances is crucial.
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