Having thrown 2025 into the dumpster and hoping for a better 2026, I made myself three sort-of goals to get out of my funk. One was to make a quilt for donation. Another was to make blocks to contribute to the quilting community, and a third was to ramp up my placemat making. January turned out to be a dumpster fire along with a deep freeze, but I did finish a quilt (yesterday) and I made eight blocks for donation to a community quilt. This was more grief sewing than joyful, but it did feel satisfying to try to do good and to make some pretty things (do you understand what I'm saying here?) to bring some measure of joy and comfort to others.
I hope you stick with me here. I got so involved in sewing, I forgot to take many pictures.I knew that my preoccupation with heavy thoughts would not allow me to do anything requiring a lot of complex planning, so I chose an online pattern by Purl Soho for a quilt: Tiny Tiles. Simple design and easy sewing. The directions are VERY detailed so not much thought on my part. For the past few years, I have been collecting rich, chocolate brown fabrics. Browns don't seem to be real popular among quilters. In fact, a quilt store owner told me that in an "of course" tone of voice. But I persisted and now have a nice collection. I was determined to make a modernish quilt that combined brown with another favorite color of mine: turquoise.
My first task was to find a background fabric at a nearby store. White with a bit of gray. Yup, found it. (A change of mind about the size of the quilt left me a bit short on background fabric, but I was able to fix that as our grandmas did--I made a few of the blocks with a vertical seam down the middle. Can you see one here?)
After I sorted out my browns and turquoises, I decided to add some yellow green for a bit of sparkle. There are 120 blocks in the pattern with 480 small squares for sew and flip corners. To get the ratio of colors I wanted, I followed the suggestion in the comment section of the pattern to make half of the small squares in the dominant color (brown), 2/3 of the remaining squares in the secondary color (turquoise) and the rest in the sparkle color (yellow green).
To make the placement random, the pattern called for putting the squares in a bag and pulling them out without looking to make ten blocks at a time.
To keep the mess down and ensure a good distribution of fabrics and color, I cut enough for 1/4 of the quilt at a time. Sewing was easy. But about halfway through, I needed a break to keep from getting bored, so I took an afternoon to make some blocks for a community quilt collection. (You can read about them in my next post.)
After I put the blocks up on the design wall, I made just a few minor flips of blocks to keep long sides of triangles of the same fabric from touching each other, but I didn't make any other changes. Random is (almost) random.
I bought the backing for the quilt at one of my favorite fabric stores, challenging myself to find a clearance fabric (my way of saving money for donation quilts). When I got home, I realized that it was actually leftover Halloween stock--see the pumpkins in the selvedge? I never would have known.
I followed the pattern guide for the quilting. It's much looser than my usual quilting, but I like how it added a diagonal element to the quilt. I did add some quilting in the end because there were 5-inch sections with no quilting, and that was a little too loose for me. I quilted around the colored tile in each section and the corresponding triangles along the edges. Quilt swinging (slinging? wrangling?) was a bit of a workout, but it didn't take long.
| This is truer in color. |
I used excess backing to make the binding. I don't usually do that, but I had enough, and I like how it turned out.
So here are the stats:
Pattern: Tiny Tiles by Purl Soho
Fabrics: A variety of mostly new collected, and some scraps
Dimensions: 120 5-inch (finished) blocks, set 10 by 12.
Size after piecing: 50 1/2 by 60 1/2 inches
Size after quilting: 50 by 60 inches
Size after washing: 48 by 57 1/2 inches
| Washed and cozy |
Batting: Hobbs 80/20
Thread: Superior Masterpiece in Granite for piecing; King Tut in Temple for quilting; Treasure in Old Lace for hand quilting.
Machines: Singer Featherweight for piecing; Singer 115 treadle with walking foot for quilting.
This quilt will be donated to a postpartum therapy program to bring comfort and a cozy hug for someone during sessions.
So I am on my way to meeting goals for a better quilting year (Don't forget to check out my next post for more.) I will continue to seek moments of joy, but failing that, I will still keep trying to resist cruelty by bringing comfort to others. Quilting is resistance and love. We need as much of that as we can get these days.
Keep doing good, keep making pretty things, keep quilting.
I'm linking up with Yvonne for January Favorite Finish at Quilting Jetgirl.
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