9-patch frustration
#21
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: New York City/Manhattan
Posts: 1,316
If it is the same block repeatedly, you could strip piece and that would eliminate some of the pain. For example, if the top row is A-B-A, and the finished block is 9", you would cut a 3-1/2",WOF strip of fabric for each piece. Then sew the three strips together in order. Press carefully then cut into 3-1/2" crosswise pieces. The top row is then done. Follow suit for the next two rows of the block. In my opinion, this is quicker and thus eliminates a lot of the tedium.
Good luck,
Laurie
Good luck,
Laurie
#26
The 9-patches are only 3 color, green, tan, cream. But that is where the problem is...I think....LOL. the cream and the tan are pretty close in shades when not under the light and I am guessing the that I just mix them up. I have 6 to fix this morning to finish up what I need for the blocks (18 blocks-4 per block), the remainder are for the setting triangles and those are gonna wait till I need them!
#28
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Montana
Posts: 414
I too have to put a pin on the side to be sewn!I have made too many pinwheel blocks going the wrong way-ends up a 4 patch instead-so I had to do something to show the right way.(still made a few 4 patches that weren't found in time lol) I do the strip piecing way when doing 9 patches much easier and faster. And like everyone else I give it a rest until brain works again.
#29
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 6,430
If not every patch is different, use strips to make them. You will need 2 sets: one set of strips using 2 colors: A,B, A;
a second set should use the same colors but in different sequence B, A, B. Sew them, press them, and then slice across each strip to make the size squares you need. Sew them together then, using ABA, BAB, ABA. The next block should be BAB, ABA, BAB. Hope this makes sense.
a second set should use the same colors but in different sequence B, A, B. Sew them, press them, and then slice across each strip to make the size squares you need. Sew them together then, using ABA, BAB, ABA. The next block should be BAB, ABA, BAB. Hope this makes sense.
#30
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 15,639
If you do a repeat of the same colors/fabrics, you could lay them all out in piles. Then take 2 piles and sew those two fabrics together, always putting the same one on the top. Then add the third fabric to the same side of that pile. Repeat for row 2 and row 3. There is more than one way to skin a cat (or sew a 9-patch). lol
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