Need your input
#41
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,018
[QUOTE=Daffy Daphne;6023092]
Good point about that outer edge "scant" 1/4" seam allowance......hope it is not like periwinkle. I have not made HST the way Jennie does, don't like fussing w/bias if I don't have to....but we each find our own path....
Yes, she does make it look easy and I thought it was. I will starch twice once on back then front, sew. Here is a picture of the sample then a picture of the material I am using I will not be using any of the sample pattern ( it was just a practice piece) Thank you all I am just so happy to be able to get such great knowledge and willingness to help.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]409755[/ATTACH]
I too love the fabrics you've chosen, and your practice block looks great (especially the 8 points coming together in the center!), except I don't see enough seam allowance at all the outer edges to keep the star points from being cut off when you combine the blocks. I would want to find a solution for that before proceeding.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]409755[/ATTACH]
I too love the fabrics you've chosen, and your practice block looks great (especially the 8 points coming together in the center!), except I don't see enough seam allowance at all the outer edges to keep the star points from being cut off when you combine the blocks. I would want to find a solution for that before proceeding.
#42
If bias is a problem and it usually will be on a few no matter how much you starch, just cut strips of lightweight fusible interfacing and fuse an X through the block where you will be cutting. Cut as usual and no stretching at all. I buy the this and use it all the time for bias edges. Not one worry about stretching. [ATTACH=CONFIG]409946[/ATTACH]
#44
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Corpus Christi, Tx.
Posts: 16,105
I found out everyone does it their way. Whichever is best for you is the way to go. I met 3 ladies from the same guild and asked them all different ways to cut a same block. They all said the way they did it was best. One paper pieces everything and gets her best look. So I would say whatever method works for you. BTW love your material color choice.
#46
Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Bunker Hill, IL
Posts: 101
I used this method for making hst's - http://www.quiltingboard.com/tutoria...s-t141047.html
I wasn't making this particular quilt, but still an hst.
I wasn't making this particular quilt, but still an hst.
#47
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Heart of Colorado's majestic mountains!
Posts: 6,026
BDawn, I just had to smile at the background for showing your fabric. My mother made so many pineapple doilies in years long past. I still have many of them stored in a cedar chest. As for your HST, choose your method and handle carefully. I am always amazed at the comments about starching because it is so easy to distort the fabric with starch because you iron the fabric rather than press it. A bias seam is more stable if it is made a little large and then square it up. If you try to force it into position you lose and it wins.
#48
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 11,276
If you cut a square, then sew on each side of a drawn diagonal line, it stablizes the bias before you cut, the resultant HST has straight grain on all 4 sides.
#49
Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Southern Illinois (also HI, OR, WA, TX, CA, MO, etc.)
Posts: 25
I love your fabric selections!
Yes, she does make it look easy and I thought it was. I will starch twice once on back then front, sew. Here is a picture of the sample then a picture of the material I am using I will not be using any of the sample pattern ( it was just a practice piece) Thank you all I am just so happy to be able to get such great knowledge and willingness to help.
[ATTACH=CONFIG]409755[/ATTACH]
Fabric I am using
[ATTACH=CONFIG]409756[/ATTACH]
[ATTACH=CONFIG]409755[/ATTACH]
Fabric I am using
[ATTACH=CONFIG]409756[/ATTACH]
#50
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Corpus Christi, Texas (that's me!)
Posts: 3,771
I tried the MQcompany method and it worked for me. I've made 6 blocks so far but my squares/fabric were cut at 9.5 inches instead of the layer cake method she suggests. Then I trimmed the finished HSTs to 6 inches even because that's how I wanted the size to be.
I'm not sure why your local quilt shop would side track you, instead of encourage your decision.
I'm not sure why your local quilt shop would side track you, instead of encourage your decision.
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01-14-2012 08:15 AM