The jelly roll quilt I made from my scraps
#1
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: MS
Posts: 3,434
When I see pictures of the quilts posted on the Quiltingboard I so often wish I could see the photos of the quilt as it is being created. That is how I am going to post this and I hope you won't mind lots of photos.
The jelly roll quilt I made from my scraps
I started cutting my squares May 10, 2010 and finished the scrappy jelly roll quilt today. It was a hobby, not a job so I didn't do a 40 hour work week. I did spend a phenomenal amount of time reading, learning, researching, practicing and reading again. One of the best tools I had was this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wprg5vzkuGw which came from one of the Quiltingboard posts from 2009. http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-17400-1.htm.
I enjoyed remembering whose stash the fabric came from, when I got it and what they may have been using it for.
I enjoyed remembering and applying the knowledge, tips and tricks I have learned on the Quiltingboard. Some of you will remember telling me some of these things in some of our posts.
Some of the good sewing habits I used: ( An asterisk * denotes the ones I learned on the Quiltingboard)
*Started a Quilting Diary, journaled each time I worked on the quilt and documented my work with digital photos
*used my walking foot
*used a Schmetz 75/11 quilting needle
*used the June Taylor Shape cut
*used a sharp rotary blade
*made good use of my folding tables and ironing 'wood board'
*used my design wall
*starched and pressed each seam, rolling them into a jelly roll.
*seamed strips from the jelly roll into a quilt top
*starched and pressed each strip seam
*added a 3 1/2" sashing strip around all 4 sides
double stitched around all 4 sides and then trimmed the raw edges.
*cut a 31/2" binding strip, pressed it in half with right sides together, *attached it to the backside of the quilt, *mitered the corners, and *stitched in the ditch from the top side to the bottom side.
*mitered each end of my binding strips together when I finished off the binding.
*was patient with the machine, sewing on slow+ speed letting the walking foot have time to function properly.
*was careful when moving the quilt with the walking foot raised so I didn't break the little plastic grabber thingy.
*did not put straight pins in my mouth.
Some of the not so good sewing habits I used:
used a 1/2" seam rather than the standard 1/4".
I had to sew over 5 spots on the binding where my I 'slid off' my stitch in the ditch. (An inch or so only per spot and I was proud of that!)
I broke one needle sewing over a straight pin.
I used the rotary blade on about 1 yard of the binding strip knowing it needed to be sharpened yet I waited to sharpen it.
I did not use leaders and enders.
The jelly roll quilt I made from my scraps
I started cutting my squares May 10, 2010 and finished the scrappy jelly roll quilt today. It was a hobby, not a job so I didn't do a 40 hour work week. I did spend a phenomenal amount of time reading, learning, researching, practicing and reading again. One of the best tools I had was this video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wprg5vzkuGw which came from one of the Quiltingboard posts from 2009. http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-17400-1.htm.
I enjoyed remembering whose stash the fabric came from, when I got it and what they may have been using it for.
I enjoyed remembering and applying the knowledge, tips and tricks I have learned on the Quiltingboard. Some of you will remember telling me some of these things in some of our posts.
Some of the good sewing habits I used: ( An asterisk * denotes the ones I learned on the Quiltingboard)
*Started a Quilting Diary, journaled each time I worked on the quilt and documented my work with digital photos
*used my walking foot
*used a Schmetz 75/11 quilting needle
*used the June Taylor Shape cut
*used a sharp rotary blade
*made good use of my folding tables and ironing 'wood board'
*used my design wall
*starched and pressed each seam, rolling them into a jelly roll.
*seamed strips from the jelly roll into a quilt top
*starched and pressed each strip seam
*added a 3 1/2" sashing strip around all 4 sides
double stitched around all 4 sides and then trimmed the raw edges.
*cut a 31/2" binding strip, pressed it in half with right sides together, *attached it to the backside of the quilt, *mitered the corners, and *stitched in the ditch from the top side to the bottom side.
*mitered each end of my binding strips together when I finished off the binding.
*was patient with the machine, sewing on slow+ speed letting the walking foot have time to function properly.
*was careful when moving the quilt with the walking foot raised so I didn't break the little plastic grabber thingy.
*did not put straight pins in my mouth.
Some of the not so good sewing habits I used:
used a 1/2" seam rather than the standard 1/4".
I had to sew over 5 spots on the binding where my I 'slid off' my stitch in the ditch. (An inch or so only per spot and I was proud of that!)
I broke one needle sewing over a straight pin.
I used the rotary blade on about 1 yard of the binding strip knowing it needed to be sharpened yet I waited to sharpen it.
I did not use leaders and enders.
The back side
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84645[/ATTACH]
One of the mitered corners
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84708[/ATTACH]
Scrappy Jelly Roll Quilt from my scraps
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84713[/ATTACH]
Top half of the Quilt
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84714[/ATTACH]
Pressing the strip for the jelly roll
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84715[/ATTACH]
The Jelly Roll
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84719[/ATTACH]
Stripped seams ready to be pressed
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84720[/ATTACH]
Sandwich pinned for stitching
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84721[/ATTACH]
Rolled to go under the throat
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84722[/ATTACH]
I had help
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84727[/ATTACH]
His name is Oreo
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84729[/ATTACH]
mitering the binding strip ends_1
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84744[/ATTACH]
Mitering the binding strip ends_2
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84749[/ATTACH]
Mitering the binding strip ends_3
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84752[/ATTACH]
Mitering the binding strip end _4
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84753[/ATTACH]
Mitered binding strip end ready to attach
[ATTACH=CONFIG]84755[/ATTACH]
#4
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Upstate New York
Posts: 2,004
Very nice! I love all the colors.
What size did you make the squares. I just started quilting, but it would be nice to cut my leftover pieces into blocks to use later. If you said above, I'm sorry I overlooked it. I don't know what the standard size of blocks in a jelly row is as I have never bought one!
Thanks for sharing!
What size did you make the squares. I just started quilting, but it would be nice to cut my leftover pieces into blocks to use later. If you said above, I'm sorry I overlooked it. I don't know what the standard size of blocks in a jelly row is as I have never bought one!
Thanks for sharing!
#7
Wonderful quilt. I like that you had all the reminders of what we should do in your thread. I will print it out and post it in my sewing room. Your reminders of what not to do are helpful, too.
Is Oreo litter box trained? He sure is a cute guy.
Is Oreo litter box trained? He sure is a cute guy.
#8
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: MS
Posts: 3,434
Originally Posted by no1jan
Very nice! I love all the colors.
What size did you make the squares. I just started quilting, but it would be nice to cut my leftover pieces into blocks to use later. If you said above, I'm sorry I overlooked it. I don't know what the standard size of blocks in a jelly row is as I have never bought one!
Thanks for sharing!
What size did you make the squares. I just started quilting, but it would be nice to cut my leftover pieces into blocks to use later. If you said above, I'm sorry I overlooked it. I don't know what the standard size of blocks in a jelly row is as I have never bought one!
Thanks for sharing!
#9
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: MS
Posts: 3,434
Originally Posted by Marjpf
Wonderful quilt. I like that you had all the reminders of what we should do in your thread. I will print it out and post it in my sewing room. Your reminders of what not to do are helpful, too.
Is Oreo litter box trained? He sure is a cute guy.
Is Oreo litter box trained? He sure is a cute guy.
Yes, Oreo is house broken. He has his own little potty and his own little pooper in his own little cage. We let him play in the sunroom for awhile when we are out there. He is so sweet and he is really spoiled. He was our granddaughters 9th birthday present. Yep, he lives at Camp Grandma&Grandpa.
#10
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: MS
Posts: 3,434
Originally Posted by luv-e
Boy, you did a REALLY nice tut on this. I felt like I was right there. Hope you do more. I really enjoyed this.
Thank You Sooo Much :thumbup: :thumbup:
Thank You Sooo Much :thumbup: :thumbup:
I also wish more members would include the 'building the quilt' photos in addition to the photo of the quilt. There are so many of us out here learning from them. Oh,,, on that video I saw her backstitch with her walking foot!!!!!! Yep, she did it more than once... I thought it would break a needle or something but she did it so I did it a time or two (holding my breathe!) and it worked just fine on my machine to..
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
leatheflea
Pictures
8
08-25-2011 06:36 PM
craftybear
Main
3
07-12-2010 03:03 PM