question about blocks
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Northern Indiana
Posts: 20,306
#3
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
Stack and Whack is a paricular stacking of fabric 6 or 8 layers at a time and cutting for various designs. It came about through Bethany Reynolds book of the same name in the late 1990s.
OBW seems to use fewer stacks, making less complicaed blocks, of fabrics which can be used in eiher technique, usually large contrasting prints.
Jan in VA
OBW seems to use fewer stacks, making less complicaed blocks, of fabrics which can be used in eiher technique, usually large contrasting prints.
Jan in VA
#4
Junior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Western Washington
Posts: 154
Thank you, for some reason I can't download the tut. I do have Bethany Reynolds book. I found some fabric this week
end that I think I want to use for a OBW. Can't seem to find a pattern on line.
end that I think I want to use for a OBW. Can't seem to find a pattern on line.
#6
Originally Posted by vivianv
Thank you, for some reason I can't download the tut. I do have Bethany Reynolds book. I found some fabric this week
end that I think I want to use for a OBW. Can't seem to find a pattern on line.
end that I think I want to use for a OBW. Can't seem to find a pattern on line.
Cutebuns Tip Toe Through the Hexagon classes
Fabric Choices
http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-35100-1.htm
Cutting the Blocks
http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-35685-1.htm
Assembling the Blocks
http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-36316-1.htm
Layouts
http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-36954-1.htm
#7
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 11,276
Both these methods produce kalidescope blocks. To me a One Block Wonder quilt takes the fabric and reduces it to colors. Although you get beautiful blocks, the individual blocks are not important, it's the overall arrangement into a new fabric where the colors flow that counts. The individual blocks melt into each other. The Stack and Whack method highlights the individual kalidescope blocks that are created by surrounding them with other fabrics, making them the center piece of a larger block.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
craftybear
Links and Resources
13
07-05-2010 08:22 AM