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clsurz 03-11-2012 07:41 AM

Interlocking Puzzle Quilt
 
Has anyone ever designed one and made it?

Dina 03-11-2012 08:06 AM

I have seen a few quilts that I would call Interlocking Puzzle Quilt, so there must be a pattern out there somewhere. Might be worth googling.

QuiltnNan 03-11-2012 08:09 AM

1 Attachment(s)
I have not made mine, but this is my design
[ATTACH=CONFIG]318925[/ATTACH]

clsurz 03-11-2012 08:10 AM

Well actually I'm thinking of designing one myself and have been for quite some time. I love to make puzzles and the harder the better such as doing a two sided puzzle......been there done that before and those are not even interlocking with both sides pieces looking alot alike but not.

I'm also thinking more along the lines of a scenic background of sorts.

clsurz 03-11-2012 08:13 AM


Originally Posted by QuiltnNan (Post 5050109)
I have not made mine, but this is my design
[ATTACH=CONFIG]318925[/ATTACH]

Have you considered getting fabric that has some sort of picture, graphics, photo, scenic and cutting it to your design here?

QuiltnNan 03-11-2012 08:39 AM


Originally Posted by clsurz (Post 5050125)
Have you considered getting fabric that has some sort of picture, graphics, photo, scenic and cutting it to your design here?

no, haven't considered that. but it would be difficult to line up as the interlocking part is pieced.

clsurz 03-11-2012 08:51 AM


Originally Posted by QuiltnNan (Post 5050233)
no, haven't considered that. but it would be difficult to line up as the interlocking part is pieced.

Never done paper/foundation piecing but perhaps it could be done using that method! Or how about perhaps doing it as an applique quilt using water soluble and invisible thread? Perhaps it would give it the real look of an interlockig puzzle.

jlm5419 03-11-2012 09:23 AM

1 Attachment(s)
This may not be exactly what you are looking for, but it is simple to do.[ATTACH=CONFIG]318966[/ATTACH]

clsurz 03-11-2012 10:53 AM

I was just looking at the alphabet in CAPS to see which letters can be used to create puzzle quilts and have a never ending supply of new puzzle quilts to make by rotating or inverting it them.

I decided to look at the Latin alphabet to see which letters vaguel resemble letters that can be rotated or mirrored to create many puzzle quilts with never ending possibilities.

I found that these letters L, N, I, P, F, Y, T, U, V, W, and Z can be mirrored or rotated to create an endless supply of squares and rectangles to create puzzles.

Now I am going to have fun. I bought myself a 3 ring binder yesterday with a grid tablet and lined tablet to experiment with so I hope to have fun this month with it and see what I can come up with.

As I was sitting here thinking on this I remembered that last fall I had purchased from AccuCut to use in my Accuquilt Studio some math sets to do just that, create puzzles. I went about trying to find it and took a while because they were not moved into my cutting room like I had asked my son to do the other month. I have sitting here four different Pentominoes Sets to play with. I simply forgot I had them until now. For those of you who may wonder what a Pentominoes is, a pentomino is a polyomino composed of five congruent squares connected along their edges.

I think what I will do is use these Pentominoes dies to cut various colors in cardstock first to create templates and start manipulating it onto my grid paper to see what type blocks I can create with it. Since I have a wide format printer up to 13 x 19 I'll have enough wiggle room to create at least 12 by 18 inch blocks or smaller. My using colored paper will save m from using so much ink and process it all using black ink. If I'm not mistaken somewhere in this house I still have even patterned paper I use to use when I did papercrafting so might as well use that up and create templates to design and create a multitude of puzzle quilts.

ghostrider 03-11-2012 11:02 AM

Any and all tessellations are 'interlocking' by definition. They can be as complex or as simple as you want to make them. One example of an interactive design site is this one.
http://gwydir.demon.co.uk/jo/tess/tess.htm


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