A waste of fabirc?
#1
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Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Wisconsin
Posts: 17
First I would like to say thanks for all of the invaluble tips that I get from this site. It has made me a better and smarter quilter in soooo many ways! I don't post much but MUST read every day to make my life complete. LOL. I need to know if I am crazy or just plain stingy for thinking this way so please help! OK here goes. I made a queen size quilt from the Brasstown Star blocks. The pattern had me cut 4.5" squares from fabric 1, and from fabric 2 & 3, 2.5" squares. Take a 4.5" square, place a 2.5" square on opposing corners and sew across the diagonal of the small square. cut off the corner 1/4 away from the seam, flip and press, repeat on the remaining 2 corners. what you end up with is a 4.5" square with a 2" square in the center of fabric 1. Now as I was working on these blocks and my scrap pile was growing I got more annoyed that I was wasting so much fabric! With all that being said this is my question.... would you have altered the pattern and cut the pieces to the correct finished size and done it that way or would you have followed the pattern? With the prices of fabric these days that added up to a lot. I figured that I wasted appoximatly half of the fabric used to make these!!! I did finish the quilt but it costed me almost twice as much? After my very long winded explaination my question is what would you have done?
Thanks in advance for your advice.
Thanks in advance for your advice.
#3
I keep my scraps and use them for paper piecing or other small projects, so I don't feel like it's a waste. I actually prefer to do my corners that way. I think I get better results because the stretch on the bias is reduced that way.
If you have enough space, you can sew another seam about 3/8 from the first one, towards the outside corner and cut in between them. You'd end up with a bunch of small 1/2 square triangle blocks in addition to your other blocks. I got this idea from the pineapple quilt on Quiltville - http://quiltville.com/pineappleblossom.shtml
If you have enough space, you can sew another seam about 3/8 from the first one, towards the outside corner and cut in between them. You'd end up with a bunch of small 1/2 square triangle blocks in addition to your other blocks. I got this idea from the pineapple quilt on Quiltville - http://quiltville.com/pineappleblossom.shtml
#5
I had a quilt like that, although my flying geese turned out nice I think if I ever made that pattern again I would use a different method with less waste. You might want to read the pattern and the cutting instructions next time you make a quilt from a pattern and make sure theres no waste. Fons and Porter patterns are easy to follow but have a lot of waste. The last quilt I made had you cut 2 12 7/8" strips wof for 4 squares and 2 12 1/2 " strips wof for 4 squares and 1 6 1/2 strip for for 4 squares. I changed it so I cut the 2 13" strips and cut out 5 13" squares then cut my 6 1/2 from one of the 13" squares then one 12 1/2 squares from the remaining 13" strip that saved me from cutting a 6 1/2 strip and the second 12 1/2 strip. total fabric save on that color was 19".
#6
mimom, that is using your head in the right way.
Beewild, I have never using squares to sew in the corners instead of triangles. It not only waste fabric, it wastes time, and is more work...or that's how I see it.
Beewild, I have never using squares to sew in the corners instead of triangles. It not only waste fabric, it wastes time, and is more work...or that's how I see it.
#8
Banned
Join Date: Nov 2010
Posts: 4,134
This pattern?
http://www.strictlypetsupplies.com/_...k-Party-Series
(and for the life of me I have NO idea why the Google search resulted in a link to a pet supply site.) :roll:
You're talking about the Snowball blocks, right?
The other way to make them is to cut the center square (Fab#1), cut 2 other squares (Fab #2 & #3) and cut them in half on the diagonal, and then sew those triangles to the four sides of the center square, to make a Square-in-a-Square block.
Personally, I prefer the Snowball route (a pretty standard technique)...I don't EVER have to deal with triangles and a bias edge (not even if it's inside).
And, btw, I only trim the underside of the smaller squares --- I always leave the center square corners intact. And I toss those little cut pieces. Others sew them together or use them as leaders.
The added layer in that part of the block causes no problems or issues (maybe it would if you were hand quilting), and actually causes less distortion in the block by keeping it square.
So, to answer your original question, in this case, I would have done it exactly as the pattern instructed. :lol:
http://www.strictlypetsupplies.com/_...k-Party-Series
(and for the life of me I have NO idea why the Google search resulted in a link to a pet supply site.) :roll:
You're talking about the Snowball blocks, right?
The other way to make them is to cut the center square (Fab#1), cut 2 other squares (Fab #2 & #3) and cut them in half on the diagonal, and then sew those triangles to the four sides of the center square, to make a Square-in-a-Square block.
Personally, I prefer the Snowball route (a pretty standard technique)...I don't EVER have to deal with triangles and a bias edge (not even if it's inside).
And, btw, I only trim the underside of the smaller squares --- I always leave the center square corners intact. And I toss those little cut pieces. Others sew them together or use them as leaders.
The added layer in that part of the block causes no problems or issues (maybe it would if you were hand quilting), and actually causes less distortion in the block by keeping it square.
So, to answer your original question, in this case, I would have done it exactly as the pattern instructed. :lol:
#9
Banned
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 7,286
Originally Posted by beewild
First I would like to say thanks for all of the invaluble tips that I get from this site. It has made me a better and smarter quilter in soooo many ways! I don't post much but MUST read every day to make my life complete. LOL. I need to know if I am crazy or just plain stingy for thinking this way so please help! OK here goes. I made a queen size quilt from the Brasstown Star blocks. The pattern had me cut 4.5" squares from fabric 1, and from fabric 2 & 3, 2.5" squares. Take a 4.5" square, place a 2.5" square on opposing corners and sew across the diagonal of the small square. cut off the corner 1/4 away from the seam, flip and press, repeat on the remaining 2 corners. what you end up with is a 4.5" square with a 2" square in the center of fabric 1. Now as I was working on these blocks and my scrap pile was growing I got more annoyed that I was wasting so much fabric! With all that being said this is my question.... would you have altered the pattern and cut the pieces to the correct finished size and done it that way or would you have followed the pattern? With the prices of fabric these days that added up to a lot. I figured that I wasted appoximatly half of the fabric used to make these!!! I did finish the quilt but it costed me almost twice as much? After my very long winded explaination my question is what would you have done?
Thanks in advance for your advice.
Thanks in advance for your advice.
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