Optimism BOM quilt finished
#1
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Join Date: Dec 2024
Posts: 116
This is Aby Dolinger's Optimism 2025 BOM quilt. I very much enjoyed my first BOM. It uses mostly fabric scraps. I love the big patches and bright colors, perfect for Spring, Easter, Summer and really all-year-round. I'm keeping this one!



What fun learning how to make pentagons, chevrons, hourglass units, pieced 9-squares and cat's cradles.
I did this quilt as a QAYG. I originally wanted the flower print fabric as the outer border but the busy pattern conflicted with the main quilt body, so I ended up using it as an outer border on the backside.
Quilting each block separately was great fun, and I joined them together with sashing. I quilted the outer border with a zig-zag pattern, because the geometric pattern echoed the quilted blocks.
Shout out to Monica Poole for her super-helpful QAYG videos, I used her "with sashing" instructions as well as her border instructions. It turns out adding a border after stitching together all the quilted squares is a bit of a challenge!
I struggle with quilting larger quilts, it requires so much upper body strength to hold and move a heavy quilt sandwich, even on my Janome HD9 (my dream machine! <3).
Finished dimensions were 58" x 78", just shy of twin-sized.
I learned a bit about the psychology of BOM quilts. I started the project restricting myself to six selected scrap fabrics in blues, yellows and white, but began running out of some fabrics as I snipped off bits for other projects throughout the year, ha.
Also I grew weary of the same old fabrics as time went on, and began adding in new colors (pink centers, green). So I'm not sure I'm the ideal BOM target audience.
The other big achievement - this was my last UFO. I have a clean slate for the rest of the year!



What fun learning how to make pentagons, chevrons, hourglass units, pieced 9-squares and cat's cradles.
I did this quilt as a QAYG. I originally wanted the flower print fabric as the outer border but the busy pattern conflicted with the main quilt body, so I ended up using it as an outer border on the backside.
Quilting each block separately was great fun, and I joined them together with sashing. I quilted the outer border with a zig-zag pattern, because the geometric pattern echoed the quilted blocks.
Shout out to Monica Poole for her super-helpful QAYG videos, I used her "with sashing" instructions as well as her border instructions. It turns out adding a border after stitching together all the quilted squares is a bit of a challenge!
I struggle with quilting larger quilts, it requires so much upper body strength to hold and move a heavy quilt sandwich, even on my Janome HD9 (my dream machine! <3).
Finished dimensions were 58" x 78", just shy of twin-sized.
I learned a bit about the psychology of BOM quilts. I started the project restricting myself to six selected scrap fabrics in blues, yellows and white, but began running out of some fabrics as I snipped off bits for other projects throughout the year, ha.
Also I grew weary of the same old fabrics as time went on, and began adding in new colors (pink centers, green). So I'm not sure I'm the ideal BOM target audience.
The other big achievement - this was my last UFO. I have a clean slate for the rest of the year!
Last edited by dpendleton; 03-16-2026 at 05:26 AM.
#5
This quilt makes me smile. Since I made a granddaughter’s quilt with yellow back, I realize I like yellow. It makes me happy if that makes any sense. You have made a happy quilt !
Thanks for the info you provided. I went to both and may have to consider a quilt as you go since my shoulders/arms aren’t what they used to be. I like how the back sashing is the same as the backing, too.
Thanks for the info you provided. I went to both and may have to consider a quilt as you go since my shoulders/arms aren’t what they used to be. I like how the back sashing is the same as the backing, too.

