Help locating this pattern please
#11
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Middlebury, IN
Posts: 1,484
Just saw this one...or very similar... at a quilt show, it's really cute in bright colors!
https://www.crimsontate.com/letters-...omhome/dp/6937
https://www.crimsontate.com/letters-...omhome/dp/6937
#12
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
Even easier if you made the 'houses' as rectangles with two upper corners 'snowballed.
Cut the corner squares a little less than 1/2 of the width of the rectangle.
Jan in VA
Cut the corner squares a little less than 1/2 of the width of the rectangle.
Jan in VA
#14
looks to me like a square topped by a flying geese unit, then padded out with background (sky) fabric. The flying goose is the same width as the square. So for the larger ones, arbitrarily decide that they are 6X6 squares. top with a 3X6 flying goose, When these are sewn together, they make a 6X9" unit, so we need to add 3" to pad it out to a 9" block so you would add a 1.5" strip of fabric matching the sky of the flying goose to either side. If you look at the quilt, all the sky/border fabrics are solid which blends this seam in.
The dimensions I've quoted are finished dimensions. You would cut the square 6.5", the FG is 3.5 X 6.5 raw and the side strips would be cut 2X9. Should be able to figure out the smaller ones in the same way .
The dimensions I've quoted are finished dimensions. You would cut the square 6.5", the FG is 3.5 X 6.5 raw and the side strips would be cut 2X9. Should be able to figure out the smaller ones in the same way .
#15
Just saw this one...or very similar... at a quilt show, it's really cute in bright colors!
https://www.crimsontate.com/letters-...omhome/dp/6937
https://www.crimsontate.com/letters-...omhome/dp/6937
#16
looks to me like a square topped by a flying geese unit, then padded out with background (sky) fabric. The flying goose is the same width as the square. So for the larger ones, arbitrarily decide that they are 6X6 squares. top with a 3X6 flying goose, When these are sewn together, they make a 6X9" unit, so we need to add 3" to pad it out to a 9" block so you would add a 1.5" strip of fabric matching the sky of the flying goose to either side. If you look at the quilt, all the sky/border fabrics are solid which blends this seam in.
The dimensions I've quoted are finished dimensions. You would cut the square 6.5", the FG is 3.5 X 6.5 raw and the side strips would be cut 2X9. Should be able to figure out the smaller ones in the same way .
The dimensions I've quoted are finished dimensions. You would cut the square 6.5", the FG is 3.5 X 6.5 raw and the side strips would be cut 2X9. Should be able to figure out the smaller ones in the same way .
Reading further, seems I'm not the only one for easy!!
#17
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Michigan Thumb
Posts: 1,956
My first thought was the snowball corners at the roof, easy. Make each block any size desired.
#18
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 11,276
Thanks for posting this but wouldn't the cut size of the side strips be 2 x 9.5 ? By the way, I loved your term "raw" to describe the size of the flying geese when they have been squared up ready to sew into the block. I always called them "resized" but I like your term much better.
#19
I love this quilting board. I always learn something new when I read the posts. It helps me quilt better and avoid many mistakes. I've also learned a lot of easy short cuts. Thanks for all of the great tips you post.
#20
And now that y'al got the pattern figured out, I would like to comment on the quilting of this piece. I like how it starts out very straight and exact on the bottom row but then as the rows continue up the quilt, they becomes wavy. Love the feeling of movement.
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11-19-2011 11:12 AM