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Lazy Gal Quilting

Spell It Out!
Lessons in letters!
Page 1
Intro To Letters
H, I, T
Page 2
L, U, C, O, P, R
Page 3
J, E, F, B
Page 4
S, G, V, Y
Page 5
A, N, Z, M, W
Page 6
D, K, X , Q
Page 7
Putting It All
Together!
Strip Widths!
Taking The
Leap!
X's & O's Challenge quilt!
Lower Case Letters!
Page 1
i,j,h,y,b,d,p & q!
Page
2
t,f,a,e,g,r,n,m & w!
Gallery!
More Lettered Quilts!

Free-Piecing
Fun!
Basics!
Asterisks!
Free Form Fireworks
or Snowflakes!
Housing Projects!
Funky Freehand Houses!
Priority Hope!
Alzheimers
Piority Quilt Auction
Wonky Hearts!
Lopsided and Loveable!
Tonya's
Tea Party!
Tea Cups!
Drawing Teapots!
Sewing Teapots!

Quilting
Tonya Style!
Completely Hoopless!
Quilting Out Of The Frame!
Fantabulous Fans!
Freehand Fandango!
Threads!
Dare To Stitch Boldly!

Tonya's
Pages
©2006-2007
Tonya B Ricucci
All Rights Reserved
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This is "Bricks," named for
the shape of the blocks. (I'm not really
into naming my quilts - whatever is easiest to remember is usually what
sticks, tho sometimes the names change every few years as I forget what
I used to call them.)
This is the quilt that my Tonya bruise
block fell out of. My name was supposed to be the last brick in the
wall, but it just didn't work. Too purple to go there. Plus I would
have had to drop out an adjective, and I kinda liked all those.
I
didn't put punctuation in the quilt, but I think of it as "Be yourself,
be dazzling, be joyful..." but it could also be read "Be yourself:
dazzling, joyful..."
These are all words I'd
use to describe
myself, at least the me I'd like to be. Sure, there are lots of other
adjectives that I could have in there, but that was what I needed to
hear back then. And I wanted fun, exciting words. Be honest, be
sincere, be kind, be good-hearted: all excellent choices, but not what
I had in mind for this quilt.
I'd challenged myself to use every
letter of the alphabet in this quilt. Then I experimented with making
some letters tall and narrow (imaginative) and others wide (bold).
I used the black with speckly grey bits and all the rest are
commercially available hand-dyes.
So
if you've made a bunch of free-pieced letters and don't know what to do
with them, here's a project for you. What shall you be?
Capital J
Capital J is
another letter that I could have made easier, but didn't. Easy is
boring and ya'll don't want me to get bored do you? Things get ugly
when I get bored... I wander off and never finish the alphabet, ba ha
ha.
If you want to do this one the easy way, start out with a
square from a medium-sized strip of background fabric and sew it to a
strip of letter fabric
and trim. If you want the extra flourish, then create something that
looks like this:
And no matter which way you've started, add this section
to an letter strip, as follows, and trim.
Some
background fabric is added next to that and the whole thing capped off
with a
strip of letter fabric, although actually you could leave that
off. When I look
at the picture above, it does look like a J to me.
Capitals
E and F
For my F,
I used a medium-sized chunk of letter fabric, sewn to a skinny
background fabric,
sewn to a skinny letter fabric, sewn to a wide background. I did make a
couple of slices along the left side and the top to get more of an
angle on this one. For the E, I started in the middle, cuz I
like having that middle section be shorter than the other two legs,
then added from there.
And here they are are finished. The F has more of a straight
bottom than you can tell from this photo, though the right side does
angle.
Capital B
This is the way I make a B
(I'm sure there are others). I start out with two separate bits of
background, one a square and one a rectangle. Square gets attached to a
skinny letter strip and evened up. This then gets added to a letter
fabric so
that it looks like the section on top. (similar to a 1/2 log cabin) The
rectangle gets added
longways to a wider l-fabric: I want this bottom section to be
longer/wider than the top section. I then add a skinny strip as
pictured.
Next
step is to add a wider bit of background fabric to the upper section.
Add what
will be the lower part of the letter to the bottom section.
These two sections are
then joined and added to the widest strip of letter fabric.
Sometimes
I'm not sure if I'm explaining all of this well enough. I learn and
figure things out from looking at pictures, so I have a tendency to
think that everyone learns the same way.
© Tonya B Ricucci 2006-2008 All
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