Hello all
I am a newbie here, My name is Kathy and I would like to know as far as pre-cut 4" inch fabric squares to make a quilt just sew on machine w/1/4" inch seam? also how many will I need? I know these are dummie questions but I am a NEW sewer too |
Hello and welcome from Ontario.
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No question is a dumb question. So first off, welcome to the board. Yes, 1/4 inch seam is standard in quilting unless a pattern states otherwise. As far as size, it depends on how big you want your quilt to be, each 4" sq will become 3 1/2 after sewn because of the seam allowance. Have fun quilting!
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Hello from Idaho!
Yes, sew a 1/4" seam. How many will definitely depend on how big you want to make it... |
Hi from Ohio! No dumb question here! Just the ones that are not asked.
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Hi and welcome.
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Hello and welcome from California!
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Hello and welcome from Tennessee
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Hi and welcome from Southern California!
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Welcome to the board!!
A cut 4 inch square will finish to be a 3.5 inch square when you sew your 1/4 inch seams on all 4 sides. The number of squares needed will depend on how large you want your finished piece to be. 10 squares by 10 squares quilt (100 squares total) would make a 35" by 35" quilt. |
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Originally Posted by STRANGARITCH
Hello all
I am a newbie here, My name is Kathy and I would like to know as far as pre-cut 4" inch fabric squares to make a quilt just sew on machine w/1/4" inch seam? also how many will I need? I know these are dummie questions but I am a NEW sewer too I encourage you to buy a pad of 4-squares-to-the-inch graph paper (often called "quad-rule), a small box of colored pencils, a regular pencil with good eraser, and a 6" ruler. 1. Draw out the squares to the actual size.....you will use 16x16 little sqs. per 4" block. 2. Then add ONE little square on all sides to represent your seam allowance, shown in lighter gray. 3. Now measure the square you've drawn with the seam allowance added. It will measure 4.5" and this is the size you will cut each of your blocks (as you mentioned in your post.) Doing this gives you a better visual of the cut size, the finished size, and how/where you need to add seam allowances. 1. Now, use one or two little squares on your graph paper to represent the 4" finished block (instead of 4). Just for sake of argument, make your paper quilt be 8 blocks across and 10 blocks down. 2. Color in the blocks as you would like the quilt to be. 3. Count how many blocks ACROSS you have drawn; then multiply that by how many blocks DOWN. This will tell you how many blocks you will need to cut to make your quilt. 4. If you will multiply the number of blocks across by the size of your finished block, you will know how wide your quilt will be. And do the same for the length. If you get familiar with drawing your patterns out on graph paper, you will find that you can make almost any quilt you see that uses squares, rectangles, and half-square triangles, without having to buy a pattern. And you can learn to adjust it to any size you want to make your quilt. Using graph paper also allows you to decide how you want to color your quilt - what fabrics you want to use. And it's a great way to design borders and sashings. Yes, there are expensive quilt designing programs out there, but as a beginner you would be well served to learn to draw your own on paper first. I am SO grateful I learned to quilt this way nearly 30 years ago; I never buy a pattern -- which frees up more funds for fabrics! Jan in VA block drawn with seam allowance shown in lighter gray outside the first block. [ATTACH=CONFIG]131336[/ATTACH] |
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