Saturday, September 14, 2024

ScrapHappy Saturday - Feeling Dark



Black and brights are surprisingly cheerful, and yet I always seem to save them for the end of the year. I would love to get a scrap basket or two made this month as well as some more border hexies. How are your dark scraps coming along?

Saturday, September 7, 2024

ScrapHappy Saturday - The Dark Side

So sorry for zooming past the start of the month without an official color announcement. It is going to be dark. If you have enough darks to separate out the browns from the blacks, then it is black this month and brown next month. If not, then it is dark this month and light next month. Next month will also be the time to catch up on whatever you missed during the year. I am focusing this month on dark scraps. For the Hen & Chick blocks I chose black with multi color designs and then pulled in some accent colors to keep it interesting. I will be working this month to finish the borders on my hexies as well, those are lights and darks. The end of the year is when I start to think about what I need to finish off projects.
Next on the list will be stabilizing these NC State panels for a t-shirt quilt.  I had planned on starting last weekend, but we ended up in Virginia unexpectedly for the long weekend. Nothing like a last minute trip to throw absolutely everything off. It was such beautiful fall weather! I will pretend that it is fall in Florida as I stitch away as my dark fall shades. In reality, it is still hot and soupy here. With the holiday weekend and training sessions for work, I was only in the office for 2 days last week.  I am still trying to catch back up and get on track again!

Sunday, September 1, 2024

Hen & Chicks September Block 4 - Mrs. Brown's Choice

 



I played around with the layout on this one quite a bit. There are so many different color arrangements to try out. Eventually I settled on hot pink star points with everything else in a black print with pink swirls. 


This is another set of Rolling Stone like snowball blocks. Traditionally it starts with a square on point with one of those 7/8 inch measurements.  I hate those!  I get that the flip and sew triangles lead to a bit more waste, but they avoid those tricky measurements, so I feel that it is worth it. 
Draw a line across the diagonal of all the small squares. Start with a small pink square in the corner of 4 black squares and sew on the drawn line before flipping, pressing and trimming.  

Add another pink triangle adjacent to the first. Sew, flip, press and trim. 

These will form the points of the center star.  

Rotate the black square and add a white square to the third corner. Sew, flip, press trim... same as before. 

Getting tedious yet?  Just one mor to go!
Here are your 9 subunits. 4 snowballs, 4 HSTs and the center square. 
The arranging is always the fun part. Point all the triangle points toward the center square and then fill the corners in with the HST units with the dark points facing in. 
Sew the nine patch and press away from the snowball units. That is where the bulk of the seams are and the trick is to get them to lay as flat as possible. 





Hen & Chicks September Block 3 - Chained Star

 

How many variations on an Ohio Star can there be?  Here is just one more, because I can't pass up a quilt block with a lovely chain through the center in terms of secondary patterns

I am focused on dark fabrics this month, but I keep finding black prints and then pulling out punchy accent colors.  



Layer your two large square right sides together and draw a line along the diagonal. 
Go ahead and layer your two strip sets at the same time so that you can sew it all up in one trip to the sewing machine. 
Sew on either side of the drawn line in of the square and sew your two strip sets together.  
Cut your HST units along the diagonal and press with the seams going toward the dark fabric. 

Layer your HST units with dark and light alternated and draw another center line. 
Sub cut your strip sets into segments with the same width a your initial strip. 


Sew your twosies into four patches
Sew again on either side of your drawn line

Press your QST and four patch units. Trim dog ears. 


The layout is just an Ohio Star with a colored center and then four patches in each corner. If you were making an entire quilt, you could use contrasting colors along the two diagonals and then replace the solid center square with a four patch combining both fabrics. I didn't do that here, because it doesn't make as much sense in a single block. 
This one is pretty sharp in darker colors. Classics remain popular for a reason. 


Hen & Chicks September Block 2 - Quatrefoil

 So here is my confession, this whole Rainbow Scrap Challenge thing that I do is really just a quest for new inspiration. I am always on the lookout for my next project or block. I was happy to stumble across this Quatrefoil block on Crazy by Design and knew that it would work perfectly for Hen & Chicks. Most of the information that I found about the block was from Missouri Star Quilt company, but there were enough other references and history of the block available that I felt OK to post it here. There are some great Youtube videos, but most of the Missouri Star blocks are just so BIG compared to what I usually do.  Giant blocks are great for finishing quilts fast, but that it no longer my goal at this stage in my quilt journey. 


This is a block that would be great for an entire quilt. Just one great focus patterned print with a few different accent colors would come together beautifully, The accent colors would create a great secondary pattern in multiple blocks. 

I chose two different accent colors here, but you could also use the same one instead. It all depends on what is in your scrap bin. Yellow would have also worked with the floral that I chose to use. Having two shorter strips makes sewing the four patches go smoothly, but you could make them both out of the same color, which is what I chose to do for the smaller block. 




Start with flip and sew corners on the focus fabric. Draw a line from corner to corner along the diagonal of your small background square. Sew on the drawn line and flip and press.  

Do this on all four of your focus fabric squares. 
Then repeat for the adjacent corner. Go ahead and sew your strip sets together on one of your trips to the sewing machine, and press away from the background fabric.  

Sub-cut your strip sets to make pairs of twosies which you will sew together into four patches.  
Press the four patches, swirling the seam to help them lie flat.  Now for the fun part!

With two colors, place the accent color which matches the center square closest to the center square. this gives you the look of a larger square peeking out from behind the edges which is quite nice. I just now noticed that one of my corner squares is rotated the wrong way. I must have fixed that while I was sewing, because it looks fine in the finished block. 

Now sew your nine patch together and press away from the corner four patches which have the most bulk.  I like this one a lot, it will go on my short list for future projects!






Hen & Chicks September Block 1 - Spiky Star

 





I have seen lots of versions of this star out there, so I am not sure to whom to attribute it. I feel like Bonnie Hunter did it as a leader and ender challenge at some point in the past. I also found a Lori Holt tutorial on You tube with a more controlled version which is what sparked my memory. I have a quirky fun quilt in Virginia with spiky wonky stars together with shoofly blocks that I just love. Wonky is a relaxing way to sew, but you can also do this more traditionally if that is what you prefer. 




Start with one center square and 8 background squares all of the same size.  Add in an assortment of smaller squares in a range of sizes. I happen to have a drawer full of 2 inch squares that I pulled from, but you should use whatever you have on hand. 

Place a square into one corner four of the background squares. You can draw a line of course, if you care about perfect consistent points, but I chose to be free and wing it!

When sewing, you can sew corner to corner along the diagonal, or any straight line closer to the corner. I tried to use a variety of distances to vary the spike size of the finished block. As long as the flip and sew triangle will cover the corner, then it is good. Make sure that your seams are straight though, that part is important
Flip and press. Depending on the seam that you sewed, you might have some amount of extra fabric extending beyond the edge of the original square. Trim everything even with the base square. 

Then trim away the extra layer of fabric to leave just the spike. You can use scissors or a rotary cutter as the seam allowance is no longer critical.  
Repeat this process with the other spike. 
Now you have 4 pieces with 2 spiky points each along with background and your center square. 
Arrange the spikes around the center square and fill in with background corner squares. 

Sew as a nine patch, pressing away from the spikes. One of the nice things about this block is that it doesn't have any points along the outside edges to try to match. That does leave quite a bit of blank space though, which would be fun to fill with some extra flip and sew triangles in the outer corners if you were making a full quilt.