A few weeks ago I wrote a post about various methods of achieving Cathedral Window blocks, and showed some samples ready for a class I'm teaching.
A friend, Janet, saw the post and decided to have a go. I saw her blocks yesterday and realised this was a method I hadn't covered either in the previous post, or as a class sample!
Janet's blocks (pinned together *very* roughly by me) inspired me, so I decided to copy:
I had a pack of a dozen batik charms from Plum for Christmas sitting on my work bench, and the black from the cars quilts was still there, so I had a play this afternoon
I drew, with my trustie Flixon pen, 5" circles onto the batik, and cut them out, then placed each one on a black square, and stitched them together, all the way round
I cut out the black circle too then cut a 1" slit in the batik near the edge, and pulled the fabric through. I shaped it and pressed it, then drew a 3" square in the centre of each circle (the best fit of an edge to edge square)
I pinned the strips together making sure I matched the lines back and front
I stitched the seams, then pressed the petals open. Can you guess the " deliberate" mistake? Yep, all the frixon marks have now vanished!
Luckily the frixon pen leaves a slight scratch mark on the batik - usually a pain but this time it was an advantage so I was able to stitch the rows together, then press the new petals open too.
I rather like the scollopd edges but I hadn't thought it through and and some of the turning slits are at the edges, so I had to press over the outer petals too - luckily I rather like it like this too
Not sure what will happen to this next, but for now it's a very pretty sample for my class.
Thank you Janet, and thank you Plum
I started this blog for me - it expanded to show BFF Jackie what I was doing - and a few others have invited themselves too - everybody welcome! Mostly about patchwork, with random comments about embroidery, family and life in general, come on in, put your feet up, and I'll put the [virtual] kettle on.
don't you just love it when "playing" works out and the beauty in your head appears in your hands ? xx
ReplyDeleteWow! That looks amazing! Love it!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, I love it.
ReplyDeleteOoo, pretty! I have always loved cathedral windows, but have never attempted them.
ReplyDeleteThat looks wonderful!
ReplyDeleteSo many ways to put a window in a cathedral, so little time!
ReplyDeleteThey are are just Stunning!
ReplyDeleteI love Cathedral Windows blocks,they are so colorful.
Have fun week.
These look great. Do you think this technique would work for a whole bed quilt or would it be bulky around the petals?
ReplyDelete