Finished! "Broken English"
#71
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Knot Merrill, Southern Indiana
Posts: 5,781
Thanks everyone for your kind remarks.
For those with this quilt on your bucket list ... go for it! It's a very easy quilt to construct. There is only 1 block and you make as many of them as you need to, then just flip them in the direction you want. You can choose many different pattern settings that are typical with dark/light blocks (similar to Log Cabin). The one above (and Bonnies) are finished in Barn Raising setting, but the pattern looks equally well in Furrowed Rows and Set Blocks. I strongly suggest laying out your blocks into your setting in quadrants - take a photo and make sure you don't have a block flipped the wrong way. Yeah ... ask me how I know
The block itself is simple. 2 four patches and 2 HST's. Just make sure that within the block you have good contrast between the lights and darks. There are some places where I used a specific fabric as a light in one block, and a dark in another. Value is always subject to it's surroundings! So don't be afraid of using some fabrics that fall into a "medium" category. I did keep three piles of fabrics ... dark, light, medium ... and selected my mediums as either light or dark in accordance with the adjacent fabric.
For those of you who indicated you can never work with squares that small. You can make this pattern in any size you want!! I cut 2" squares for my four patch blocks and matched to 3.5" HST units. To me ... these were LARGE squares. I like to work with small pieces
It's a great "leaders and enders" quilt, and a great quilt to make a little, store while working on something else, then pick it up again at any time.
Again I want to thank the fellow QB'ers who I swapped and traded with. I never ... EVER ... buy "novelty" fabrics. Every single novelty fabric you see in this quilt came from someone else. I have to admit that it was great fun to use them, although I doubt if I would ever use them in anything other than a scrappy quilt like this. My 20 year old step-son was staying with us while I was laying all the blocks out for this quilt, and he was amazed that you could make a pretty quilt that had; cows, hearts, guitars and light houses in the same block!!
Thanks again everyone.
For those with this quilt on your bucket list ... go for it! It's a very easy quilt to construct. There is only 1 block and you make as many of them as you need to, then just flip them in the direction you want. You can choose many different pattern settings that are typical with dark/light blocks (similar to Log Cabin). The one above (and Bonnies) are finished in Barn Raising setting, but the pattern looks equally well in Furrowed Rows and Set Blocks. I strongly suggest laying out your blocks into your setting in quadrants - take a photo and make sure you don't have a block flipped the wrong way. Yeah ... ask me how I know
The block itself is simple. 2 four patches and 2 HST's. Just make sure that within the block you have good contrast between the lights and darks. There are some places where I used a specific fabric as a light in one block, and a dark in another. Value is always subject to it's surroundings! So don't be afraid of using some fabrics that fall into a "medium" category. I did keep three piles of fabrics ... dark, light, medium ... and selected my mediums as either light or dark in accordance with the adjacent fabric.
For those of you who indicated you can never work with squares that small. You can make this pattern in any size you want!! I cut 2" squares for my four patch blocks and matched to 3.5" HST units. To me ... these were LARGE squares. I like to work with small pieces
It's a great "leaders and enders" quilt, and a great quilt to make a little, store while working on something else, then pick it up again at any time.
Again I want to thank the fellow QB'ers who I swapped and traded with. I never ... EVER ... buy "novelty" fabrics. Every single novelty fabric you see in this quilt came from someone else. I have to admit that it was great fun to use them, although I doubt if I would ever use them in anything other than a scrappy quilt like this. My 20 year old step-son was staying with us while I was laying all the blocks out for this quilt, and he was amazed that you could make a pretty quilt that had; cows, hearts, guitars and light houses in the same block!!
Thanks again everyone.
#77
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: S C michigan
Posts: 2,118
i've seen this quilt before, and thought it would be super hard. looking at yours, i see that it is really a '2 block' quilt. never caught that before. i've made the blocks for one of her quilts, but never sat them together. oh i should after seeing yours. it is a beauty.
I see this is just a 4 patch, and a half sq triangle. oh how easy . what size sq's are they. i guess it doesn't really matter. any size would work......
sorry, looking up a couple posts, i see you explained it sooo easily. TY
I see this is just a 4 patch, and a half sq triangle. oh how easy . what size sq's are they. i guess it doesn't really matter. any size would work......
sorry, looking up a couple posts, i see you explained it sooo easily. TY
Last edited by sewNso; 02-09-2015 at 04:11 PM.
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