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that quilt is for the future!!!!
many more ahead of that one :D :D :D :D |
The technique is really easy. I hope you have as much fun making this quilt as I had designing the pattern. Have fun using it on other projects. A friend used the technique to make purses. Enjoy and thanks for the blog, they are fun to read. If you have any questions - [email protected]. Thanks again, Carol Nartowicz
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Originally Posted by CarolJNar
The technique is really easy. I hope you have as much fun making this quilt as I had designing the pattern. Have fun using it on other projects. A friend used the technique to make purses. Enjoy and thanks for the blog, they are fun to read. If you have any questions - [email protected]. Thanks again, Carol Nartowicz
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I have come close a few times to getting that book and chickened out. I don't care for raw edge anything and it looked like there would be a ton of raw edges.. granted.. I didn't look through the book long at Hobby Lobby but I tell you what - I keep picking it up and putting it down.
I'd love to see one that someone has made from it! |
I really like that the author responded to this post. Most would not. That is enough for me to buy the book and see what it is all about.
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Let me break it down for you. Fuse together 2 pieces of fabric, wrong sides together. Draw the pattern on freezer paper and iron it to the fabric. Cut out the pattern with a craft knife. Bend back the cutouts and press open.Lay a third piece of fabric underneath. Straight stitch ( or in one case, zig zag stitch) down around the cutouts. It's all flat stitching. You get different patterns depending on which fabric you put on top. Hope this helps.
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Thanks, Carol, for the explanation. I'll have to look for your book.
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