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How to Quilt>Space Quilt with 3D Boxes
A Space Quilt with 3D Boxes
I wish I still had it. I might have been able to cash it in. Although, Trans World Airways was the airline company, so maybe not. In any case, several years ago I invested in a book that showed how to make 3-dimensional boxes. There was a pretty cool looking wall hanging on the front, and I had every intention of making that wall hanging. But when it came right down to it, I decided to make a space quilt instead. It was simple in design, and it should have been simple in construction as well. But, as many of my friends and family know sometimes I turn a simple task into a complex one. (I’m getting better at avoiding that now.) In any case, I started with the boxes, and attached them to a single piece of fabric – black with gold stars. Instead of appliquéing the boxes onto the top, I cut holes in the black fabric and fit the boxes into the holes. Stupid idea because I couldn’t get some of the corners sharp. Plus, it just would have been easier to appliqué the boxes on top of the black and then cut the black fabric out from the back. Live and learn. Intending this to be a wall hanging, I quilted it and then hung it up, only to discover that when you have a single piece of fabric, you need to quilt a bunch – otherwise the front hangs like little half-bubbles away from the batting and backing. Simple solution – add more quilting. That actually turned into some fun. I quilted spaceships, planets, airplanes and some just plain fun designs. Along the bottom, I quilted a planetarium, an airplane, and other things that would be on earth. The quilting designs were gathered from a book of traditional quilting designs, shapes of planets - like Saturn - spaceships from movies, and other random shapes. Around each of the hollow cubes I quilted echo quilting, following the shape several times about 1/2 inch apart. Fortunately, I did some excellent basting initially, and didn’t end up with puckers and pleats as I added quilting stitches. Many lessons learned on one quilt. This quilt has a simple double fold bias binding, which is the binding I prefer for most of my quilts. Because it is a wall hanging, you could bind it using a single fold bias binding or a double fold straight grain binding. Learn how to bind quilts using all of those methods in The Ultimate How to Bind a Quilt DVD Mentor.
© 2009-, Penny Halgren. This article courtesy of http://www.How-To-Quilt.com. You may freely reprint this article on your website or in your newsletter provided this courtesy notice and the author name and URL remain intact.
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Learn to make this machine quilted quilt on your home sewing machine by following along with this DVD set. More
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