Quiltville
Custom Quilting
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Old Tobacco
Road!
~A Quiltville
Mystery Quilt!!~
Part 2
© Bonnie K Hunter.
Bustin' of the
Bonus Triangles!
Got a
box of THESE that you've saved from double-sewing units like THIS?
When working with 2.5" cut
squares or larger, I 'double sew' these 3/8" of an inch away from the
diagonal seam across the corner square, and when I trim between them, I
get OODLES of bonus half square triangles! Because I sew 3/8" away
instead of a full 1/2" away....these bonus 1/2 square triangles can be
squared up to 2" unfinished! PERFECT! They will play nicely with
all my 2" squares and strips in making blocks! The icky part is
pressing and squaring them. I tend to put that off. What you see
in the bin above is what HAS been pressed and trimmed. It's a good TV
project.
This lovely baggied-up mess
is all the ones from projects
that have NOT been trimmed up yet, though some have been pressed open
at least ;c| Some of them have light backgrounds, and I use those
the most. Some of them have black backgrounds, or yellow backgrounds
from various projects, and I haven't gotten around to trimming them
yet. But OH the possibilities! Sometimes a pattern crosses
my mind and I just have to dig in and sew, as with Charlotte's Baskets!
I simply had to lay out the half square triangle units with some other
pieces and I was ready to sew! Isn't it great?
So, for those of you WITH bonus triangles, see if you have some that
are light on one half, and dark on the other! Use them in this project.
For this step you will need 388 (YES! That is THREE HUNDRED AND EIGHTY
EIGHT!) half square triangle units that measure 2" unfinished. They
will finish at 1.5".
Now before you
hyper-ventilate, remember what you said about Carolina Crossroads, our
first mystery. And what you then said about Orange Crush, our second.
You said that if you had known what was entailed before hand that you
wouldn't have taken on the project. And then you said that you
are SO GLAD YOU DID because they turned out to be your favorite quilts
ever, and stretched you in ways that you didn't think possible.
This is another one of those quilts, and I won't let you down!
If you don't have bonus
triangles to use up, this is where you cut some! Layer a light 2"
strip and a dark 2" strip with right sides together. Trim one end off
even, and then use the Easy Angle Ruler and the 2" markings to cut
matched triangle pairs. I like to cut through 4 to 6 layers at a time.
Anything more than that, and things can start to shift. You will be
amazed how fast you can stack up some pre-matched pairs just ready to
chain feed through your machine. My bonus triangle units are ALL
DIFFERENT lights and darks as you will see further down the page, but
you can also do them color controlled. If you chose one color family
for the 4 patches in step one, you can choose another color family here
and do them that way. Press the seams towards the darker fabric,
and take the time to trim off all those dog-ears while you are at
it. What I really love about the Easy Angle is the little nubbed
tip on the triangle pairs. It makes it so easy to feed them through the
machine one after the other, and only leaves you with ONE dog ear to
trim after pressing. Hey, I'm easily made happy by little things! :cD
This is where the fun begins! From your 388 half
square triangles, make 96 pinwheels!
I matched them up so there
were 4 of each color per pinwheel,but all my pinwheels are
different. I have red, blue, green, black, brown, pink,
purple, and gold pinwheels in my quilt! I wanted the pinwheels to
be recognizable AS pinwheels, so that is why I matched colors, even
though
each blade is a different fabric. Note: Be sure ALL the
pinwheels spin in the same direction!!
You are also going to need 4
half-pinwheels. Study these closely. Be sure the bottom half
square triangle is pointing to the right. Cut 4 light 2" wing triangles
and 4 dark 2" wing triangles (Each dark wing triangle matches the color
of the half square triangle it is paired with.) with the easy angle
ruler.
And just so I am covering all the bases: Are you
using
regular
rotary cutting measurements because you don't have an easy angle yet?
You can cut the triangles from 2 2 3/8"
squares, and cut them once
from corner to
corner to get the triangles you need.
And for those of you afraid to put the bias edge on the long
side of
the triangle...cut squares 3 1/4". Cut them on the diagonal twice
with an X. This will put the straight grain on the long outside edge of
the triangle. It's up to you. I don't tend to keep 3 3/4" squares
on hand, so it would either mean cutting from new yardage, or trimming
down pre-cut 3 1/2" squares that I *DO* keep on hand.
While you are sewing all these pinwheels, think of the words to
"Windmills of Your Mind" Made popular by Dusty Springfield in 1968. I
like this version better than the Sting remake :c)
Questions
or Comments? I would love to hear from you!!
© Bonnie K Hunter &
Quiltville.com 1997-2011
All Rights Reserved.
No part may be used, copied, sold, distributed or otherwise
altered
without
express written permission from the author/webmaster.
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