Thursday, July 01, 2010

Orphan No More

Several years ago, in our quilting "bee" meetings, a part of the program involved different members presenting a block of the month. When it came my turn, I pulled one of my favorites from Marcia Hohn's site:  the Next Door Neighbor block.  It's a simple block, but put several of them together and a nice secondary pattern emerges. I simplified it even more to show off the star.

We had talked of doing some red/white/blue blocks and combining them for a couple of community quilts, so that's how I made mine, but there was no follow-through, so the block came back home with me and got lost in a bin.  I pulled it out when I came across Jack's chessboard and have been pondering whether to send it to Finn for her Orphan Train, or to try and do something with it, as I don't have more than a scrap of any of those fabrics now.

Finally I took the easy way out: just kept adding borders to it until the large 12" star wasn't so overwhelming.  And here is the result:


Now it measures 29 1/4 inches square and will make a nice little table topper--if I can get it quilted by Sunday. Otherwise it might just sit in the UFO zone until next summer. Two things are holding me up here; one is the quilting, the other is the final border.

The red is so prominent , I tried to tone it down with the final blue fireworks border, but seeing it in a photograph makes me think it needs a final red border--if only a narrow one--as the blues seem to recede. What do you all think?

And I have a question for all you domestic machine quilters out there. Somewhere along the way I either read or heard it recommended that you pull the last upper thread of your quilting through to the back and then tie it off.  I tried that, and ended up with all these little "rabbit ears" at the ends of lines everywhere.  I didn't like the look of that, and sometimes it made the end of the quilt line a little short of its connecting point. 

Then I did a no-no: I back stitched a couple of stitches at the beginnings and ends of lines of quilting. It looked better from the back, but I've heard we aren't supposed to do that.  Now, I know long-armers go for the continuous line of quilting, but sometimes I do parallel rows, so how do you stop and start all those times and make it look neat? Hand-quilting it would solve the problem, but that's not always an option.  Anyone out there have the same problem?  Or am I missing something?


7 comments:

NCmountainwoman said...

I'm not a quilter so I have no ideas. But I do love the beautiful piece you have made.

Quilter Kathy said...

I do the backstitch thing to start and stop, but I don't like the way it looks. It's just easier. If I was doing a quilt for a juried show, I'd try the ends in, like I do when I'm hand quilting

MightyMom said...

Ask Jacquie about the quilting. As I have no clue

I would say just bind it in red and it'll look nice

MightyMom said...

looking at a zillion sets of instructions for baptist fan quilting..most instructions are for machine quilting.....

at any rate...ran across this instruction...for "short arm" machine quilting (like you)


Make sure you secure your stitching at the beginning and end of each row, using either small stitches or a tiny backtack.

Cathi said...

I'd be tempted to bind it with the red.

cockermom said...

I love the piece and the blue fireworks fabric. If it were mine, I would consider it finished.
I usually pull up the bobbin thread in the beginning, tie off, and use a cheater needle to bury the ends and then the same at the end of the run. UNLESS, it is for a baby or child, then I back stitch it to make sure it lasts thru the 1000's of washings!
Have a great holiday Stephanie!
BTW, my little Mouse just started crawling finally and will be walking very soon! We will have to batten down the hatches around here! But loving it!

cockermom said...

I love the piece and the blue fireworks fabric. If it were mine, I would consider it finished.
I usually pull up the bobbin thread in the beginning, tie off, and use a cheater needle to bury the ends and then the same at the end of the run. UNLESS, it is for a baby or child, then I back stitch it to make sure it lasts thru the 1000's of washings!
Have a great holiday Stephanie!
BTW, my little Mouse just started crawling finally and will be walking very soon! We will have to batten down the hatches around here! But loving it!