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Tonya:
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Tonya's Blog:
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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Wonky Hearts!
~All You Need Is Love~
(click here
for printer-friendly version)

Free style primitive hearts
are fun to make and make a great addition to your quilts!
"All
You Need is Love" is one of my older quilts. Well, older
improvisationally lettered quilts. I pieced it in January 2001.
This
is a quilt that ended up looking nothing like I originally planned. I
was going to have houses in here and free-pieced tulips and stars. But
as I started making the wonky hearts, I loved how they were looking and
all the other blocks I pieced went into the orphan bin. I just
experimented with the different ways I could think of piecing the
hearts, some of them more successful than others. I learned that hearts
are not a good block to just slice some off if the blocks are too wide
- I look at those hearts in particular and go eeeuw.
I had
thought to quilt words into the different hearts just like on the candy
hearts. "be mine" etc, but the hearts are just too small to make it
worthwhile - the words wouldn't be legible. Instead I freehanded wavy
lines, which turned out to be harder than I expected. My lines kept
getting flatter and straighter so I'd have to get chalk back out and
draw wavy lines. I like the look of it, but freehand fans are
definitely more fun.
This
is the basic way that I make wonky hearts. There are many other methods
to make hearts, but I've found this to be the easiest way to get a bit
of a rounded shape. Have to admit to being out of practice with the
hearts - don't think I've made any in four years.
First off, I
start with a square or rectangle and cut through the middle of it. I
like my hearts to lean so I cut at an angle. This particular square was
3 1/2".
Next I lay one of my heart
pieces on top of a background
piece so that I can slice through the fabrics at the same time. Just
have to make sure that there is at least a quarter inch or more of the
background sticking out. This is just a bitty triangle. Repeat for the
other side as well.
This
is what the background triangles look like before they get sewn
on. As usual with triangles, at least a quarter inch has to be
offset.
This
is what it looked like when I sewed both those triangles on. I
obviously cut the one on the left a bit too skimpy.
Not
to worry, I just made my cut a bit deeper when I straightened up
the sides. Now when I say straighten - I mean a straight edge following
the heart fabric. The sides will still taper and angle.
New
triangles are made for the upper outer corners, in the same manner as
the earlier triangles.
<> 
<>After
those are attached, you'll straighten the edges just like we did
before, following the edge of the heart fabric.
Bigger
triangles are cut for the bottom outer corners. For this step, make
sure to at least hit the inner corner with your cut. If you make too
shallow of a triangle, you'll have a flat-bottomed heart (which isn't
necessarily wrong).

Attach
the bottom triangles. Straighten the edges down the center
and join together.
To
finish off the heart block, attach fabric to the sides, and top or
bottom if needed. When I made "All You Need is Love" I only added the
side fabric as I joined the units together (ie one strip of fabric in
between heart units, not two).

Here are
some other hearts I've made
recently. I'm not liking those pointy bits I'm getting on top of the
hearts! I'm going to have to do a better job of not overlapping
those
top triangles. I also like it better when the bottom bits of the heart
come right together - I like them more offset. I'll loosen up as I keep
playing.
Reach
for the Stars
Reach
for the Stars is another quilt with the wonky hearts. This is another
of my post-9/11 "gonna get happy and positive" quilts. Lots of pink and
purple made just for me.
The words read as follows:
- Reach for the stars
- Believe the Impossible
- Be true to yourself
- Follow your dreams
- Listen to your heart
I
pieced the quilt top in 14 days. Before I started, I planned to have
these words as well as stars, hearts and
asterisks (my name for the
little * blocks that look like fireworks, snow, or stars depending on
the context). I sewed the words, the hearts and the asterisks, but used
sections of star fabric instead of piecing those. I really like how
using big sections of fabric works in this quilt.
I sewed
little rectangles onto strips, cut even, over and over again to get the
border. So it wasn't strip pieced and I didn't use a foundation. I
ended up with different widths of border and that's okay (although the
pic
doesn't do the border justice at all. Sorry about that - this is one of
my quilts that's in storage right now). I quilted free-hand fans in
black perle cotton.
Little
Pink Houses
"Little
Pink Houses" was made directly after "Reach for the Stars" using
leftover asterisks, a heart, and the piano key border as well as some
new blocks.
© Tonya B Ricucci 2006-2008 All
Rights
Reserved.
No part may be used, copied or otherwise
altered without express written permission from the webmaster.
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