60-Degree Triangle Table Runner #1

It all began with a quilter’s garage sale this past summer. I found a table runner kit for $3. I could see a cheerful red geranium border print folded into a plastic zipper bag along with batting and backing. The title on it said “60 Degrees of Separation.” It looked like a fun project, so I bought it.

When I got home, I discovered that the directions were missing. No wonder the kit was so cheap! I did a little detective work online, and while I couldn’t find that exact pattern title, I did stumble into the world of 60-degree triangle patchwork, and I was hooked.

I decided to practice before cutting into the gorgeous geranium print, so I went on the lookout for border prints, which are needed in this process. I asked three different older female employees at Joann Fabrics and not one had ever heard of a border print. Sigh. Fortunately, a few days later, I was at the Nancy’s Notions booth at the Quilt Expo in Madison and found 1+ yard border print pieces for only $6.50 each. I limited myself to two.

Unfortunately, I was so excited to get started on this new-to-me concept that I neglected to take “before photos” of the fabric pieces. Just in case you don’t know what a border print looks like, here are a couple of examples currently on sale at Hancock’s of Paducah, one of my favorite shopping sites on the Internet:

Usually, a border print has decorative and stripe designs running the length of the fabric, i.e. parallel to the selvages. By cutting the fabric into strips, then cutting the strips into 60-degree triangles, you can make kaleidoscope-like designs and turn them into table runners. Leftover triangles can then be turned into a hexagon-shaped table topper, making good use of almost all of the fabric.

This excellent video by Laura Ann Coia explains the process, and is what I used for my first two table runners. She uses a free pattern you can print out instead of a pricey plastic triangle template:

Here is my first table runner:

And here is the hexagon table topper made from the leftover triangles:

These are such fun to make! Next time, another table runner from different fabric.

 

Baby Quilt for My New Grandson

Last fall I saw a cute children’s fabric panel at a quilt show and bought it, figuring I was likely to have at least one more grandchild at some point, and I could use the panel for the basis of a baby quilt. Little did I know that a new grandchild was already on the way!

I finished the quilt before he was born this summer, but I didn’t learn until the day he was born that his middle name would be Fox. So I’m delighted to give him a quilt with a cute little fox on it:

The fabrics that surround the panel were all part of a fat quarter set I bought years ago from Hancock’s of Paducah. The panel itself was fun to quilt; I stitched along most of the lines, then put in some swirls for clouds and echoed a few motifs. I meander-quilted the blocks on the sides, but one block has a special message of love for our new little guy.

 

Our Endless Summer Quilt

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It all started when Hancock’s of Paducah put some charm packs on sale for $5 each. How could I pass that up when the fabric line, Saturday Morning by Basic Grey for Moda, was so cute? They weren’t the type of fabrics I would usually buy, but one design in particular, the lines of people, caught my eye. So I bought five charm packs.

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I started designing a quilt requiring over 200 5″ squares, and soon realized I was going to need a solid fabric to balance the wide variety of prints. Luckily H of P had an off-white grunge print from the line on sale, so I bought a few yards. Then I saw the Moda Love pattern on Pinterest and decided it would be perfect for the center of my quilt.

The quilt would be quite large, maybe bigger than any quilt I’d ever made. I decided it would be perfect for our bed. Wouldn’t you know, H of P put batting on sale, including an extra-light batting that I had never tried before. I bought one, figuring I could make a summer quilt. I also bought a very busy triangle print from the Saturday Morning line for the binding, and a wild streaky blue print for the borders.

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It took me a while to decide how to quilt this quilt. I decided on one design for the center, modified a flower design from Lori Kennedy’s blog for the squares, and modified another flower for the border from the same blog (she’s so talented, and has some awesome tutorials on her blog). Here’s the back of the quilt where the squares are:

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I named this the “Endless Summer Quilt” because my husband and I fell in love one summer over 40 years ago and married three years later; in the summer, of course. I hope we use this summer quilt for many, many years to come.

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A Love Affair with Fabric

IMG_20170125_145914_hdrIsn’t this gorgeous? I bought it not long ago from Hancock’s of Paducah, one of my current favorite sources of fabric. I haven’t decided what to do with it, but I suspect I won’t be able to make myself cut into it, so it’ll probably become the backing on a table runner. That way I can see it on my kitchen table every day.

My love affair with fabric began when I was a girl. I took a park district sewing class where I made myself a corduroy jumper, and then Home Economics in junior high, both of which required my mother to take me to a fabric store. It was love at first sight! All those rows of fabric bolts made me swoon.

After seeing my interest in sewing, my grandmother took me on the bus to Marshall Field’s downtown, where she bought me my first pattern, for making doll clothes, which I still have:

IMG_20170125_155556_hdrDuring one of my regular visits to Anna, Illinois, where my other grandmother lived, I discovered a small fabric store in town where bags of fabric remnants cost a quarter. I’d save up my allowance (a dime a week) so that I could buy some bags to take home. I used the remnants to make doll clothes for my sisters and me. I discovered that once you get good at making doll clothes, making people clothes becomes easier, because they’re so much larger.

Meanwhile, my Chicago grandmother, who lived in a brick bungalow on the South side of Chicago, decided to move to the suburbs, so she no longer needed the gorgeous pink cabbage rose curtains that had graced the windows of her bedroom in the old house. Guess who got them? I made my sisters and I maxi skirts out of them. We’d wear them around the house after school and think we were really cool 🙂

All through high school, I sewed for the fun of it. I took my sewing machine with me to college; when I became stressed from studying, I’d take a sewing break. Bliss!

I got married while I was in college; after we graduated, we moved back to the suburbs and bought a house. Now my love of fabric kicked into overdrive. We needed towels, sheets and curtains. I’d stop by TJ Maxx or Marshall’s on my way home from work and come out loaded down with gorgeous bed and bath linens. I also made window treatments for most of our windows. It was so much fun, and back then, it seemed like there were endless gorgeous designs.

These days most towels, sheets and decorator fabric bore me:

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There is little charm or originality in today’s designs. Much of it looks the same wherever I go. But when I shop in quilt stores or on quilt fabric websites, I find gorgeous fabric with all kinds of designs. There are even reproductions from different eras.

I’ve also found that estate sales are a good source of vintage fabric. When I find a lovely piece of fabric, sturdy Made-in-the-USA stuff from the mid-20th century, it’s like finding a treasure. I’ve made things for my grandchildren out of vintage fabric; it’s a joy to work with, and wears like iron. I just made my newest grandchild a crib sheet out of a lovely vintage sheet. So pretty!

Each spring, the Salvation Army in my town holds a fabric sale. Picture a large vacant storefront filled with donated fabric and craft supplies (all proceeds go to the Salvation Army). On the first day of the sale, there’s a very long line of women waiting to get in. Hundreds of women attend this sale every year, and I’m one of them. It’s so much fun, and I always come home with bags and bags of treasures to play with.

If it weren’t for vintage and quilt fabric, I might have fallen out of love with fabric (heaven forbid!) Instead, the love affair continues.