"Webbing The
Top!"
or
How To Chain Stitch Blocks Into That Top!
(With Sashings, or Without!)
These instructions were originally part of the Pineapple Blossom
pattern page, but requests have come in to put them on a page of their
own! So for you who asked for it, here it is!
Do
you have trouble keeping things straight when you
assemble blocks and sashings together? Do you sometimes get blocks
turning the wrong way, and get rows mixed up and out of order? This is
how I like to chain stitch the blocks and sashings into rows, and then
sew the rows together into the top.....continuously!
First, lay out the blocks,
corner stones, and sashings just how you
want them on the floor as in the pic above. We are going to
start chain assembling from the far left side, and work our way across
to the right. All the across rows will be sewn together, and the rows
will be held to each other by the chaining threads between the rows. I
call this "Webbing The Top!" As you look at things laid out, I want you
to start from the far left, working from top to bottom.....and call the
row with sashings and corner stones along the left edge row 1. The next
row is sashings and blocks. it is row 2. Row 3 is made from
cornerstones and sashings again.....There are 9 rows in this quilt even
if your eyes see it as only 4 rows with sashings in between.
This
looks like a row is missing...but really what I did was take the
second row down, and flip it over right sides together against the left
side sashings and cornerstones. (Meaning row 2 is right sides together
on top of row 1.) The top left block you see is really already placed
right sides together with the sashing that will be sewn to the left of
it. The sashing below it, is right sides together with the cornerstone
it will be sewn to. Go down the row and flip those blocks and sashings
over on top of the sashings and cornerstones at the left edge of the
quilt. Starting at the top, and keeping them in order from top to
bottom, stack the sashing with the cornerstone, the block with the
sashing underneath it, then the sashing with the cornerstone, etc, so
you have a pile all in order as in the second pic above.
Take
the stack to your sewing machine. It
might seem weird to sew a long piece with a short cornerstone under it,
but this is the way it goes to start with. Pick up the top sashing and
the cornerstone from the top of your pile. They are already right sides
together, right? Stitch them with a 1/4" seam. Now...do NOT break the
thread! Now you are going to pick up the next pair in your
pile....which happens to be a block on top of a sashing (also right
sides together, right?)as shown in the second pic above. Feed
these
next through the sewing machine with 1/4" seam. When you get to the end
of the block and sashing, you will have another cornerstone and
sashing....continue this process of sewing the second row to the first
row all the way down.
Now,
go back to the quilt on the floor and starting at the top and
keeping things in order (I do them all right sides up) pick up the 3rd
row from the top to the bottom in order. Cornerstone, sashing strip,
Cornerstone, sashing strip, etc...
Look at the pic above. You are going
to flip out the second row from
the first row, and then stitch the third row in place all the way down.
You can see that the corner stone at the top of row three is sewn on
already, and the sashing strip that goes against the block is next.
Next will be another cornertone, etc....just keep sewing continuously
all the way down the row! Do the entire top this way and you will have
this!
Here
you see all the sashing rows sewn to cornerstones, all the block
rows have sashings sewn to the blocks! Everything is "webbed" together!
(You
can even see my last leaders/enders in
the top right corner!)
Nothing is out of order, nothing got turned around or backwards! You
can carry this from room to room at this point and it isn't going to
get out of place!
I
use this method a lot when sewing anything that has
straight rows. Blocks
without sashings works the
same way.
Now you have some decisions to make.
Is it too unweildy for you to want
to just leave it stitched like this and sew the rows together? You can
cut the rows apart now if you want. This is a good time to do that if
you want to press the seams towards or away from the sashings.
This is where you decide what works for you depending on your
pressing preferences.
Do I cut the rows apart? Nope! I
leave them as is, and just fold one
row over the other so the right sides are together and I just work with
the whole thing as one unit. On
this
quilt I finger-pressed my seams so that they would butt up together at
the cornerstones, and then I pressed with the iron after each row
was
added.
I've done this on king sized quilts and it
works fine for me to have the rows webbed together. The choice is up to
you. At least if you stitch the top to the point where the ROWS are
rows..there will be less chance of anything getting backwards, upside
down, out of order or just plain wrong! :c)
I
hope this helps you come up with an assembly method that works for you!