What to pick for the first project?
#11
Oh i agree with the warm wishes quilt, i've never done one, but there's one in the photo section right now, that looks so gorgeous, but so easy, here is a link to it:
http://www.quiltingboard.com/posts/list/19177.page
http://www.quiltingboard.com/posts/list/19177.page
#12
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I always think rail fence is a great first quilt. For a second quilt, I would recommend log cabin. These quilts don't require matching seams, which is the most difficult skill to acquire IMO, but let you practice all of the other skills -- accurate cutting and sewing, making a sandwich, basting, quilting, binding. For a third quilt I would recommend a largish 9-patch, which requires matching seams. Fourth quilt would be Warm Wishes, which requires cutting up a 9-patch and matching even more seams. After that, anything goes!
#14
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Location: Western Wisconsin
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Originally Posted by Barb M
oh prism, warm wishes is rail fence blocks, alternated with a plain block, unless theres another warm wishes i dont know about
Also, rail fence and log cabin *do* require matching seams when you sew the blocks together! It's just that you don't have to match seams within the blocks, which means there is much less matching of seams required.
These senior moments are the pits!
#16
prism,
do you have a link for the double 9-patches so I get an idea?
Not sure what you mean by matching seams b/c it looks to me that you have to match those square perfectly or else when you do the outside... so I guess I am missing something.
Thanks :)
--
Thank you all for the wonderful suggestions. Taking notes.
do you have a link for the double 9-patches so I get an idea?
Not sure what you mean by matching seams b/c it looks to me that you have to match those square perfectly or else when you do the outside... so I guess I am missing something.
Thanks :)
--
Thank you all for the wonderful suggestions. Taking notes.
#17
Moose here is the addy for the one I was suggesting:
http://www.quiltingboard.com/posts/list/19126.page
http://www.quiltingboard.com/posts/list/19126.page
#18
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
Originally Posted by Moose
do you have a link for the double 9-patches so I get an idea?
Do you have a beginning quilting book? I really think it is a good idea to have one on hand to help you with techniques, especially if you want to learn strip-piecing (what most of us use to speed up the process of making blocks).
Here is a link to a picture tutorial on how to make a double 9-patch by means of strip piecing. A 9-patch quilt is composed of just 9-patch blocks; a double 9-patch alternates 9-patch blocks with plain squares.
http://tinyurl.com/cd7w9k
Here is a link to a picture tutorial on how to make a disappearing 9-patch. For this one, you make a large 9-patch block and then cut the block and rearrange the pieces.
http://tinyurl.com/ccn6hn
The fewer seams in a block that need to be matched, the easier the blocks are to put together. With a rail fence pattern, the first time you need to match seams is when you sew one row of blocks to the next row; you just need to match the block seams. When you make a 9-patch block, you already have to match seams inside the block when you attach row 2 to row 1, row 3 to row 2, and then you still have all the block seams to match when you sew row 2 of the quilt to row 1 of the quilt.
What I was trying to say, in my senior moment way, was that the easiest quilt will have a block pattern that does not require matching seams within the block. Rail fence is like that.
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