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I bought a great book a few years ago - The Big Book of Scrap Quilts. It has the "potato chip" block quilt (by another name) and many other nice quilts, some easy, some harder.
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Quilted Twins has a lot of free quilt patterns and I just finished one called Trail Mix though I don't think that pattern is still on their website. Then there is always Bonnie Hunter's site as she's all about scraps and how to deal with them.
I also have a top called Rick Rack but don't know where I found that pattern but used a bunch of my scraps for that one also. Good luck on using your scraps. |
I have these scrappy quilt patterns on my to-do list:
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Originally Posted by Julienm1
(Post 8698594)
Love the scrap gallery...TSM!!!
I'm sorry, but while I've made a lot of scrappy quilts I don't have any patterns. Mine are mostly made from pics. |
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I just finished this St Louis 16 patch found on My Last Homely House YouTube channel. It was fun, fast and made completely from scrap 2 1/2” strips. I need to make a lot more to whittle down that scrap pile though.
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Hey scrap quilting folks, remember the thread Grammy Dwynne (I think that was her name) started? I think it was called Scrappy Quilt Show Right Here Right Now or something like that? I got piles of ideas off of that thread.
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Before I get all about zen and the art of quilting -- I want to take a moment to appreciate our fellow quilters. I get so much energy and ideas from you all that I don't even buy any magazines for the most part. A very talented group of people, and I enjoy seeing the current projects and trends from your pictures and work!
TL;DR -- For my projects or others, we can help you with the names/patterns or construction techniques once you pick something you like and want to do. Sometimes (depending on the scraps) it can be easy to follow a pattern. Other times, not so much. Or, if you want, you can take pictures of what you have and see if that tickles a "what would I do with that" response. It can be a hard/big step for modern quilters to break away from following a pattern or design or class, much less making significant changes to the fabric selections -- just changing from says 30s prints to batiks can really change something. From going from the model of "I need 3 yards of this and half a yard of that" to "this is what I have" and "this is what I want to achieve". And then when you add in the amount of Chaos scraps can bring in -- it can be really hard to let yourself go and just put stuff together. Or to not do that and carefully control your results. Do you have a guild or a couple of either local or postal friends where you can do a block exchange of some sort? That can be a good way to work into scrappy projects. Some of my projects can be harder to appreciate than others -- but that's ok, I'm enjoying myself and sometimes I'm teaching myself things, or I'm using unwanted things to make something wanted. I feel art should be able to stand alone, but some things need back story -- and a lot of my quilts have story. That's all part of quilting for me. |
What she said! LOL
I have found that I love scrappy quilt making! It takes the guilt out of purchasing pretty fabric that has no current use planned! I am a "controlled" scrappy quilter, but I am getting better!! I Love Lena's quilt! |
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