Apple Core Quilts
#11
ha, ha. i have some of those cut out of ten inch squares. one day i will have to sew them together. i sewed the tumbler blocks up but they are still not a complete quilt top. Look up drunkard's path tutes on sewing curves. that should help too.
#14
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Horse Country, FL
Posts: 7,341
Check YouTube tutorials on the "curve master." I was doing a double wedding ring and pinning was taking forever. Someone on here suggested the curve master. A bit spendy, but wow! It cut down on pinning and got the job done. It does take a wee bit of practice, but the results were good.
#16
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 9,585
You want to hear something funny? I bought a CurveMaster foot years ago at a show, watched the quilter who invented it demonstrate how to use it over and over and over and over. Went home and watched the videos over and over and over and over. Could not master it, tossed it in a drawer and forgot about it. Fast forward several years, I was sewing some curves and suddenly realized I was (successfully!) using the technique she had demonstrated with my regular, standard, came-with-the-machine quarter-inch foot!
#17
Super Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: S.E. Queensland, Australia
Posts: 1,503
[QUOTE=Peckish
However, sewing the rows together was a pain with this method, because every other block in a row of blocks is convex, and it's not very practical to sew a block, then pull it off the sewing machine, flip it around, then sew the next block, pull it off the sewing machine, flip it around, and so on. So in frustration, I wadded it up, threw it in a corner, and pouted.
Does Jenny's video address the assembly issue at all? My work computer doesn't have speakers.
Jenny did not say much about joining the strips, but I was wondering if you would be able to sew every alternate piece, then flip over and sew the missed ones. I recently 'almost' finished a hexagon quilt, and found if I only stitched to the 1/4" seam allowance it was simple to join those pieces.
However, sewing the rows together was a pain with this method, because every other block in a row of blocks is convex, and it's not very practical to sew a block, then pull it off the sewing machine, flip it around, then sew the next block, pull it off the sewing machine, flip it around, and so on. So in frustration, I wadded it up, threw it in a corner, and pouted.
Does Jenny's video address the assembly issue at all? My work computer doesn't have speakers.
Jenny did not say much about joining the strips, but I was wondering if you would be able to sew every alternate piece, then flip over and sew the missed ones. I recently 'almost' finished a hexagon quilt, and found if I only stitched to the 1/4" seam allowance it was simple to join those pieces.
#18
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2014
Location: Davenport, Iowa
Posts: 3,907
Ladies...I ended up ordering the book/template from Shar Jorgenson as in the provided link above. It should arrive sometime this coming week. Then I went to a quilt shop to drop off my Project Linus Quilts (and shop of course) and low and behold they were selling various templates/rulers from Missouri Star Quilt Co., including the applecore. I had no idea that other quilt shops carried Jenny's templates. Does your shop do this too?
#19
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: USA
Posts: 783
I made three apple core quilts and gave two of them to my daughters. I sewed them by hand during my lunch break and also taught some of my co-workers how to make them. I made them into blocks and sewed the blocks together, thereby reducing all the long rows. I loved making them.
#20
Member
Join Date: Jun 2018
Posts: 9
This is my apple core quilt. Cut with AccuQuilt. Wouldn't even think about it without the cutter. It isn't perfect. Tried stitching them every way recommended and never could decide if one worked better, but the end result was "acceptable" No advice from me though.
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