Showing posts with label St. Paddy's Stonehenge 2 fabric. Show all posts
Showing posts with label St. Paddy's Stonehenge 2 fabric. Show all posts

Sunday, March 22, 2015

Green Spring Quilts

I ended up making several projects from the St. Paddy's Stonehenge 2 fabric I mentioned in a previous post. I began with eleven fat quarters which amounts to 2 and 3/4 yards of fabric.


My initial goal was four St. Patrick's Day themed placemats. 

One.


Two. 


Three. 


Four. 


Five. 


I ended up with five 14" x 20" quilted placemats.

But I still had leftover fabric and several odd size scraps of fabric. 



So I decided to see what else I could get out of the remaining fabric.

I ended up with four more scrappy patchwork pieces.




But I still have a pile of tiny scraps, and I have an idea for how to use them, 
but that will include some watercolor paper, paint, random stencils and maybe some collage papers. Not sure at all what this will turn out to be.



I wonder how many projects I can squeeze out of this one bundle of fat quarters?


Thanks for Reading.
Aileen


Monday, March 9, 2015

St. Patrick's Day Placemats

The St. Paddy's Stonehenge 2 fabric placemats are coming along nicely. I drew up several design options but initially settled on a couple clover patchwork designs. I searched my design encyclopedias and found nothing that looked like a clover so I sketched out an idea for a very simple to construct clover block.


After making several of the smaller clover blocks I found some heart patchwork patterns and realized they could be adapted to a clover layout and made this simple but larger clover block. 


After making several of the smaller clover blocks I began sketching different layout options and I decided on this simple plan for a 14" x 20" placemat. 



The larger clover block is also set in a 14" x 20" layout with side checkerboard blocks. 


I have two more placemats to piece and at this point I think I may try to scale the larger clover block pattern down in size and make a third clover block pattern. I also have some ideas for Celtic ribbon patterns that I am may piece last. These are a little trickier to piece and look best with a directional fabric.




Thanks for reading. 
Aileen