I'm going to give you a quick head start here:
Start looking: Go through your stash and get out several pieces of fabric, including fat quarters. You need about 3.5 yards or roughly 3 metres for the top.
For the back, take your fashion fabrics, corduroy, wool, or a big piece of sheeting that measures about 62 by 82 or sew pieces together until you get that size. If you have quilting cottons that measure 3.5 yards or more, cut that fabrc in half and sew the long seams together for a backing so it measures about 84 by 64.
Start cutting: For pieces a half yard or bigger, cut them 8.5 inches width of fabric. You will need 15 strips WOF.
Start layering: Layer your backing, batting and top on the floor or on large tables, centering the top on the backing, on large tables, and tie in a square knot every four to six inches with crochet cotton or perle cotton. This is where you get the kids and husband to help.
Stitch a bit more: When the tieing is complete, take the whole thing back to your sewing machine and bind it by bringing back to front and stitching it down securely. The goal here is a well-constructed blanket that can be used for shelter and warmth. Mary Johnson has some good instructions for tieing a quilt and materials to use for batting and backing here.
Let me know if you need more help with this process, but I know it wouldn't be a big time commitment for most of you. I've cut and sewed a strippy top like that in less than an hour, and with three or four people, can tie it in another hour. Give yourself another hour for finishing it and sweeping up the scraps and you've kept someone in need warm for another night with three hours of your time and materials you already have at home. Happy blanket making!
4 comments:
Very Good idea Brenda...I may get started soon on one. I like the way you had the stripes for the rows and cutting them 8.5 wide. I do the flip and sew method. Really good idea.
Making blankets is a good thought. And perhaps quilts can be sold or raffled to raise funds for the folks in Haiti. Maybe someday we can send some quilts to some of the orphans. There will be a lot of orphans.
Thanks for the tutorial. Do you know how fussy they are about exact sizes? I have lots of quilts kicking around but maybe not that exact size.
Great post Brenda! I'll see what I can do, and spread the word! Thanks!
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