Making Quilt Patterns

Making quilt patterns

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How to Make Rag Quilt: The Perfect Step by Step Guide on How making Rag quilt from Start to Finish with Screenshots

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Making quilt patterns

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Big Rooster Full Size Applique Quilting Quilt Pattern and Instruction Only, Quilter Quiltmaking Gift

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Making quilt patterns

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Encyclopedia Of Pieced Quilt Patterns

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Making quilt patterns

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Easy Quilts from Precut Fabrics

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Making quilt patterns

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Teeny-Tiny Quilts: 35 Miniature Projects • Tips & Techniques for Success

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Making quilt patterns

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Civil War Legacies: Quilt Patterns for Reproduction Fabrics

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Making quilt patterns

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Color Block Quilt Making: 12 Quick and Easy Statement Pieces to Decorate Your Space (Landauer) Mini Quilts, Throws, Pillow…

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Making quilt patterns

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Terrific T-Shirt Quilts:
Turn Tees into Treasured Quilts

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Making quilt patterns

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Urban Quilting: Quilt Patterns for the Modern-Day Home

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Making quilt patterns

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Sell Your Crafts Online: The Handmaker’s Guide to Selling from Etsy, Amazon, Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Shopify, Infl…

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Making quilt patterns

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Simple Quilts from Me and My Sister Designs: Easy as 1, 2, 3

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Making quilt patterns

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Animal Quilts: 12 Paper Piecing Patterns for Stunning Animal Quilt Designs

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Quilting \u0026 Sashiko

Quilting \u0026 Sashiko

8 great quilt designs that makeup in a hurry! This new book tells you the secrets to making each pattern into a lap, twin or queen/king size quilt. These patterns are great for quilt retreats projects, charity quilts, and gift-able quilts. Fabrics for enlarging to a twin or Queen/King topper require the following: Lap-size: 3 yards Twin-size: 6 yards; Queen/King topper: 12 yards. If you would like an autographed book, please message me when you place your order, and I’ll happily sign your copy. Sizes are as follows: • Attraction – 44 x 62 inches (111.76 x 157.48 cm) • Dash – 44 x 58 inches (111.76 x 147.32 cm) • Easy Street – 46 x 58 inches (116.84 x 147.32 cm) • Fun Times – 44 x 60 inches (111.76 x 152.4 cm) • Skip To My Lou – 45 x 58 inches (114.3 x 147.32 cm) • Sweet Times – 49 x 62 inches (124.46 x 157.48 cm) • Tic Tac – 46 x 58.5 inches (116.84 x 148.59 cm) • Town Square – 46 x 60 inches (116.84 x 152.4 cm)


Quilts

Quilts

Snowflake Quilt is my take on a modern and minimal winter quilt. There are two ways to assemble this quilt. You can follow along with the larger block assembly style on the 1-color or 4-color version or stay simple with the square and HST scrappy version. Links in pattern include: Coloring sheet to help you plan out your design Cutting diagrams to help visualize the best way of cutting your fabric. Printable cutting tags to help organize your fabric cuts on the larger block 1-color and 4-color versions. Skill level: Beginner Finished Size: 60” x 72” Versions included: 1-color / one color background and one color snowflake 4-color / four color background and one color snowflake Scrappy / Use the suggested minimum 13 FQ – add as many fabrics to make it as scrappy as you like Buffalo Check version not included in pattern but information can be found here in the blog: Snowflake Quilt – Buffalo Check Fabric Requirements Fabric Requirements: See back of pattern for material requirements PDF Delivery: A link to download the pattern will be emailed to you when the purchase is complete. Copyright Info: Quilt patterns cannot be reproduced and sold. Duplication of any kind is prohibited. Quilts made using Modern Handcraft patterns can be sold, however, design credit needs to be given. Please only use my photos with proper credit.  Share your creations on social media using #snowflakequilt


quilts for beginners

quilts for beginners

This prayer quilt is great for beginner/intermediate quilters. (INSTRUCTIONS are for piecing and quilting the top only. Some YouTube help on \


Quilts I want to make

Quilts I want to make

Finished size: 35\


Allison ideas

Allison ideas

SKU: PT543 Love Links is a modern quilt pattern from Studio 180 Designs that utilizes the Wing Clipper 1 Tool (not inlcuded). Pattern includes instructions to make 8 sizes of projects. Finished sizes range from wall hanging to king size. Companion pattern for the Wing Clipper Tool (NOT included) Modern Quilt
Pattern Paper


DIY and crafts

DIY and crafts

Quilters love their quilts…so much so that they will show them off anyway they can! They look great over a couch or the foot of a bed….on a wall and even to decorate the outside of your home. I’m not talking about hanging a fabric quilt outside…I’m talking about a barn quilt! A barn quilt is basically a large piece of wood that is painted to look like a large quilt block. We have a long history in our country of hanging barn quilts outside our homes and barns. They were thought to bring good luck and prosperity. Some 200 years ago when there wasn’t enough paint to paint an entire barn women would take a pattern of a quilt block that grandma had made and would paint barn quilt to hang on their barns. It was a way to decorate their farms and also was a source of family pride. Once paint was readily available and people began painting their entire barns, quilt block kind of disappeared. In 2000 a woman in Ohio wanted to increase tourism in her state and started a barn quilt tour…much like our local Parade of Homes. People would tour the farms in the state and view the barn quilts painted to represent the families who owned them. Last summer our family toured the east coast and mid-west and I fell in love with these barn quilts. So much so that I had to come home and make one…and I haven’t stopped! They are super easy to make and are pretty addicting. I find myself looking for new patterns to paint and ways to use them all. The first thing you need to find is a surface to paint on. Some people paint of solid wood, but I love making my own boards because they look more like the wall of a barn. So, here are the instructions for making a barn board. How to make a Barn Board… Materials Fence boards 6′ x 6\


Quilts

Quilts

The next stop on our Deco Pattern release train is my Baby Deco quilt! In case you missed it, the Deco Quilt pattern is now available! If you haven’t already read my initial blog post about the two-color Deco quilt that I made, be sure to check that out here. You’ll find my inspiration, pattern sizes fabric requirements and other details about Deco. Converting my original Deco design into a baby quilt took a lot of trial and error. I knew that I didn’t want to scale down the blocks, so I played around with different layouts of the same size blocks that are used in the Throw. Initially, the baby quilt looked more similar to the Throw, in that there were blocks on the top and bottom of the quilt as well. But then I accidentally landed on a really neat, sort of minimal layout that features a lot of negative space. At first glance, this design kind of mimics the look of lace. I get serious wedding dress vibes from the daintiness of the dots mixed with the solid blocks in the foreground. I love it so much that I contemplated making the throw size mirror this look, but in the end, I decided to leave it like this. Maybe one day I’ll convert this specific layout to other sizes! . . Since my other Deco quilts were more bold and moody, I wanted this one to be different. One of my favorite fabric combinations of all time is Kona Snow and Doeskin. You might recall that Peter’s Interwoven quilt uses these two colors and so does my Vintage Lace quilt that I made for myself. I absolutely love how soft and subtle both of these quilts are, so I wanted to create a Deco quilt using this fabric combination as well! The only difference is that I might a slight fabric substitution for what I had on hand. Instead of Snow, I used White, is it’s a little more bright and crisp. Here’s what I used for this quilt: Color: Kona White – 1 yard Background: Kona Doeskin – 2 yards Binding: Kona Leather – 1/2 yard Backing: AGF Happily Ever After – 3 yards (or less if you have multiple seams in your backing) We have quilt kits for this entire quilt (quilt top, backing and binding) in our shop!. I decided to machine quilt this quilt myself. Anytime I know that I’ll have a quick finish, or a relatively smaller quilt, I like to go ahead and do the quilting myself (versus sending it off to a long-armer). I sometimes get asked what my preferences are with basting and hands down, I like to pin baste over spray! Personally, I seem to get puckers on the backing whenever I spray baste, but I know people who will say the same thing about pins. I also really love that pins are more sustainable. Make one purchase and you’re set for life. With the spray, you have to keep buying it…and I don’t like using aerosolized chemicals if I don’t have to! You can find my pin basting tutorial here. . . Once my quilt sandwich was basted, I used my Janome Continental M7 for the straight line quilting. I loved the texture of the quilting on my Kismet Nightingale Quilt, so I wanted to recreate that. I also did something similar for my cover Celtic Crossing 2.0 quilt. Essentially, I quilted Horizontal lines that were ~2.75