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A Beginner's Quilt

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We're back from a week-long trip to Slovenia (with stops in Italy and Austria). BFF is sleeping the drive off; the last 150km was driven in the heaviest rain. You know, when your windshield wipers going at full speed with no intervals, you still can't see shit, and the only way to drive is by following the red brake lights of the car in front of you? I wimped out just past Munich. But the trip! It was amazing, I can't wait to tell you about it. I'm trying to organize the photos and my notes scrawled on the backs of receipts into a coherent narrative, so in the meantime here are my final notes on Bella.

Bella Quilt { + }

Pattern: Four-patch and sashing
Fabrics: Belle by Amy Butler, patterns in all 3 colorways; a graphic tone-on-tone print by P & B Textiles; Cotton Supreme Solids in Light Blue by RJR Fabrics
Batting: Hobbs Heirloom Premium 80/20 Cotton Batting
Quilting: Hand-tied with DMC Pearl Cotton, size 5, in Cream
Finished size: 80" x 80" square

You'll note that the size is fairly large for a beginner's quilt. I'd read that it's a better learning experience for the beginner to start off on a small size, a baby or lap quilt. Whatever, I thought, why would I want to break up my magnificent eBay purchase into three smaller quilts? Isn't it sometimes more fun to go by the seat of one's pants? Besides, when have I ever paid attention to rules?

Bella Quilt { + }

The front and back can be enlarged; just click on the image or the little plus. My sister-in-law thinks this quilt is very "beachy", very SoCal, and I tend to agree with her. The achingly-bright colors remind me of swimsuits, volleyball shorts, beach balls, umbrellas, and kids' toys. The pale sashing with its grainy tone-on-tone print of course reminds me of sand. The blue backing is very much the summer sky.

The design for this quilt took a few weeks (it was my first, after all) working with all the squares in Photoshop. I had the squares on point, then in rows, then as bricks. I couldn't really decide. Add to that the fact that I was going at this completely blind: a few quilt blogs served as my only inspiration and direction. It's difficult to combine three colorways of a pattern line especially when the colors clash. The squares, without the sashing, were a big jumble of color that BF (remember, this was made before we were married) said made him dizzy. Then one day my sister-in-law out of the blue gave me some quilt books her co-worker gave her. She'd told the co-worker what I was attempting to do, and the woman gave me a stack of instruction and pattern books that were extremely helpful. So, sashing. It breaks up the color riot quite nicely, don't you think?

Bella Quilt

Here's a closeup of a square, and my criss-crossed tie. How convenient that the cross in the middle hides misaligned corners! It was fortuitous, as I had quite a few of those. Chalk it up to beginner's luck!

One last note: I haven't recalibrated my laptop monitor in a few months, so I'm not sure the colors are the most accurate. But I hope you get the picture. It's a very summery quilt: think gorgeous bright colors.

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Four-square with sashing

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Bella

Oh, Bella. Bellissima Bella. "Four-square with sashing" is such a practical name, you deserve something indicative of the surprisingly harmonious blend of colors and patterns of your 196 squares. You pretty, pretty imperfect-but-oh-so-cool-that-I-did-it-all-myself quilt!

Belle

Bella was an exercise in so many things: navigating through the quilting section on eBay, navigating through the fabrics at Joann and The Cotton Shop, deciding what fabrics I liked (the ubiquitous Amy Butler, now I know why crafters love her work), calculating how much fabric for the sashing, binding, and backing that I needed, calculating how much batting I needed, and figuring out the best way to quilt, or tie, this. It was great fun.

Now, if I can only remember the details...

Video Link: From Elise.com, a video of women's faces in 500 years of Western art.

Details

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'Tis done. With many thanks to my sister-in-law, who graciously lent me her sewing machine, a gift from my big brother, that she'd used only once.

MJ's Amy Butler Belle Quilt

Okay, so it's not a quilt. It's a tied comforter.

MJ's Amy Butler Belle Quilt

Oh so many ties. I spent a week on these: perle cotton, #11 needle, and the most pin pricks I've ever had. How many ties? Only 637.

MJ's Amy Butler Belle Quilt

I even got straight corners. Har har!

MJ's Amy Butler Belle Quilt

Until I get the hero shot, you'll have to make do with a selection of four-patches. Can you find the one I mended? It seems I came too close to the edge, but what the hey, instant character.

Bronchitis. Bed. Squares.

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Thank you for your well wishes out there! It was good reading your comments but. I'm still sick. Yeppo, bronchitis. I caved and started taking more antibiotics.

It occurred to me, while in bed, that I should upgrade my cms. I'm still at 2.661 and Movable Type is now at 3.32.

It occurred to me, while in bed, that I should update my blog design. I was never fully satisfied with it in the first place (you got your graphic designer talking here), and an upgrade and update double-header would be something I can do while propped up on pillows.

It also occurred to me, while in bed, that sewing a four-patch of squares would take less than a minute with a sewing machine.

Belle quilt

This took me half an hour by hand. By fricking hand. Fifteen minutes to join two sets of two squares, another fifteen minutes to join the two sets, shriek obscenities at the crooked lines (quarter-inch seam my ass), mismatching intersection (somehow, the idea of pinning never crept into my mind), ripping, resewing, and pressing the thing flat. Now I have to sew it to the sashing (pretty cream fabric on the left), but I'm sooo tried right now! When I cough I feel like my lungs are being ripped apart. Uuuuuhhhhhhhh!

To think I have 48 more squares left.

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