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The finished quilt top
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I had a lot of fun with this quilt. First I had to make 10 house blocks to mail off to the captain of the exchange. |
My 10 exchange houses and some scrappy squares. |
Then I had to wait for 10 different blocks to be mailed to me.
When they came I decided that 10 blocks was a difficult number to work with and that even if I went up to 12 it would still be a tiny little quilt. I decided I would need 15 house blocks. Then I decided that I would add some trees to make it more interesting. And THEN I decided I would put some sashing between the houses to make the width a good size. Since there was no color cohesiveness in the quilt the sashing had to be black and white. Freddy Moran says so!
I really wanted to have some of the blocks that I had mailed away in my quilt so I decided to do my best to match them for the finished design.
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I liked the cat house I sent so this is the replacement
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I went looking for a dog to put in the doghouse I wanted to make. Instead I found this panel. It was almost perfect as is. I had to add some glow in the dark sky to make it the right size. |
My dog house block
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I had the beach house all finished when I found the perfect sand fabric. I HAD to rip out the bad sand and put it in. Of course I don't have a separate picture of it corrected. But you can see it in the finished top. |
The beach house
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I do not have a detail picture of this house. Another cat in the window. ;-) This is also the only detail of that tree. |
I wanted to have the snowy house in my quilt also. I did a little tweeking with a lead pencil to make a track through the snow instead of a sidewalk. I also did some enhancement of the smoke coming out of the chimney.
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The winter house.
After I made the 5 house blocks I made the trees. I just measured the width of one row and decided how much space I had left in the three other rows and made the three trees that width. Everything was 12.5 inches long so I didn't have to worry about deciding on a length.
The trees were created by a method I learned from Helen Howes. www.helenhowestextiles.co.uk. Her wonderful pattern Twelve Trees shows you the free form way to piece them. https://www.helenhowestextiles.co.uk/kitsandpatterns/treepatternsandkits.html In these trees I decided to have grass or, in one case, leaves at the bottom of the background. Just like the houses I start with an oversized piece of fabric. It is amazing how much better the blocks look once they are trimmed.
This tree had added leaves. I was inspired by my yard full of fall leaves. This tree was made before I decided to add grass. The trunk looks a little unnatural to me. Oh well.
And finally, about that border. The little squares on the border were me playing with scraps. I decided some of my scraps needed to be larger so they got light fabrics at the corners. Then I had the idea to use them in this border because then I wouldn't need to decide on one border fabric. I just used WOF strips of different colors that I had laying around for the border. The left one is Kaffe's shot cotton and was 54" long so that helped keep it asymmetrical.
That's it for now, Hugs, Nancy
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Great job on your house quilt. Thanks for telling us how you made your trees. I wish I'd had time to join in (I'm still behind).
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing! I love your quilt and the added trees. It makes it so homey! I haven’t started my quilt yet. I am trying to finish Quiltville’s last year’s quilt mystery with Bonnie Hunter.
ReplyDeleteThis was fun to create a little home for all who participated. Beautiful quilt!
Credit the trees, please
ReplyDeleteHH