Showing posts with label quilt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label quilt. Show all posts

Just for ME! {Memory T-Shirt Quilt}

 It feels like a rarity, but I finally completed a project for myself! The last time I visited my parents they shoved a trash bag full of random "treasures" into the back of my van...I peaked in, put it in the attic and forgot about it. Then last year I decided I had to get rid of the excess, which caused me to pull out my overflowing t-shirt drawer and pile up the shirts that needed to be included in a t-shirt quilt. When emptying out the attic this fall, I came across the bag from my parents--it even included my Girl Scout uniform, which I decided to make into a NY State quilt block (seen on the bottom left corner--the green is the skirt, the white stripes are the uniform shirt, and the blue is part of a Girl Scout sweat shirt!)

The quilt includes shirts from elementary school, high school, volleyball, college, mission trips, Disney, family reunions, and vacations. This is a project I have wanted to complete for YEARS! Some of these shirts are over 20-30 years old!

I cut all of the shirts to 12.5" squares (or for the small blocks 6.5") and then added iron on stabilizer to the back of each block, then retrimmed the blocks. After deciding the layout of the blocks, I sewed the blocks into strips, then joined the strips--and make it sound really simple, but before I knew it I had the quilt top finished! I backed this quilt in a silly sushi flannel. I used clear thread on the top, and white quilting thread on the bottom. I quilted 1" spaced lines starting off a 1" square in the middle of the quilt, lining up the corner into the top/bottom/sides of the 1" square. I used white flannel for binding and actually hand stitched the binding down! I haven't hand sewn a binding in so long I can't even remember the last time I did!

I love the finished quilt!! I have a few points I need to go back and fix (puckers) but who knows if that will ever happen! I did wash the quilt to wash out the chalk I used to draw the quilting lines, one of the volleyball jerseys completely disintegrated in the washer/dryer...and one of the shirts had tie dye that I hadn't washed much before and it bled onto some of the other shirts! Ooops. Making a quilt for myself takes off some of the pressure of needing/wanting it to be perfect!

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Baby Delaney's Room {Our Home}


Delaney's room used to be her big brother Cole's room...he now shares a room with his big brother (I need to show you that still!) It also serves as our guest room, and my goal for this bedroom was to have it girly, without being TOO girly, and being something she can grow into without a major redo!

This room is filled with tons of projects and is now my favorite room in our house!

Welcome! 



This wreath was made by my friend and was put on our front door to announce Delaney's arrival. She orginally had a message written in chalk, but once I moved it inside, I used gold vinyl (cut with the Silhouette machine) to personalize. 



 The above picture is with the light on. I love the shadows this light fixture creates! 

{The light was purchased at Lowes on clearance for just under $50!!}




{A very full closet, it is so nice to have some pink and purple in our house!}

{her crib was painted with Miss Mustard Seeds Chalk Paint--Apron Strings and is the same crib used by her brothers who had used all of the edges to chew on...}

{this dog rocker was picked up at an awesome local marketplace, it reminds me of our dog Mason, and is holding our video monitor at the moment}

{a future play area}

{the dresser, updated with pink knobs, serves as a changing area}

{cute hangers I picked up at Gordmans display dresses I've made for Delaney, her hair bows, and random other things like her towel and tutu--that I also made but still haven't put on her!}

{The quilt made by her BeeMa}

{The quilt I made for her, the backing fabric is the color inspiration for the room; I also made the crib skirt and fitted sheet}


{Collage wall, put up last week when my mom was in town visiting}

{her personalized onesie inside a shadowbox--frames are from IKEA or Hobby Lobby}




{Painting the scallop wall was a fun project from last summer, I used freezer paper ironed onto the wall to make the scallops. I also painted the heart canvas. Inspiration.}



{The guest bed headboard was made for under $50 by my husband and I, and the quilt was made with the help of my mother in law.}

{This rack holds socks, hats, and tights...and you can see the changing pad cover I made peaking out.}

{my assistant}


Aren't you ready to come visit??
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Quilted Family Photo Pillow {Sewing}

{If you happen to be my mother in law, avert your eyes, it's likely you may receive this as a gift...}

Earlier this week, my mom celebrated her birthday. Her birthday falls in the beginning of the month and sometimes it sneaks up on me...{I'll just go ahead and blame February for being such a short month!}

This year, about three days before her birthday, I realized I needed to get my act together and send her something special. 

I'd seen this beautiful quilted pillow, and remembered this other beautiful pillow both from Polka Dot Chair, and decided to morph the two pillows into one.



The instructions I used were from the Patchwork Quilted Pillows tutorial, the only difference is that I did not cut the 4 1/2" square prints. Instead I substituted a photo I printed out on printable fabric. I trimmed the fabric down to 9.5" square, but then decided to add a small border. (I had first started with a rectangular photo, and decided it looked funny so I added the small border all around. I think I cut a 1" strip and sewed that around the edges of the photo that was cut to 9"?) 

The printable fabric I used can be found here

Here is the front before I added the quilting. 


To quilt, I simply stitched in the ditch along the photo, along the picture border, and then again along all of the triangles. I then used those lines as guides and used my presser foot as my guide so the stitching is fairly close together.


Using the instructions, I sewed a zipper, and printed a special message to my Mom on the printable fabric, and then used Heat 'n Bond Ultra to iron on that fabric.


And the final part of this project is that I ordered a pillow insert and had it mailed directly to my mom!
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A Nautical Wedding Gift for a Friend {Quilt}

Right around Thanksgiving, one of my college roommates called inquiring if I might be able to whip together a quilt as a wedding gift for her younger brother. Always up for a challenge, I decided to take it on...because the lead up to Christmas isn't crazy enough. Thankfully, this beauty came together pretty quickly and enabled me to mail this off in time for the wedding {a few days after Christmas!}


Part of the process of making someone else a quilt is figuring out what design to actually use. I know what I like, and have a Pinterest Page to prove it, but just because it's something I like, doesn't mean that everyone is going to like {or love} it...

My friend mentioned that she would like to have a nautical theme because her brother is in the Coast Guard and grew up enjoying the ocean. She also mentioned that lobsters mate for life. I had no idea...so we used that as our starting point, and I began searching for nautical fabrics to work with. I also sent her a bunch of options for quilt tops that I liked and thought she might like as a wedding quilt/gift.

I used a variety of nautical fabrics available right now, and then a few non-nautical but somewhat preppy/beachy fabrics mixed with red {the color of love...}

The quilt-top pattern is called Metro Rings {from Sew Kind of Wonderful} it is an awesome pattern that requires a special Quick Curve Ruler that makes the quilt go together seamlessly. Having never made a double wedding ring quilt before, I was a little surprised about the amount of fabric that is wasted + cut away...but I think the final result makes it well worth it. Oh, I should add, that I actually did the inverse of what the quilt says...the pattern calls for the rings to be a variety of patterned fabrics and the insides to be a solid fabric. Because of the time constraint, I decided to do the inverse, and I think the result is lovely.


I love the way the back of a quilt looks when it's finished:


To quilt this project I really had NO idea where to start. I knew I didn't have all the time in the world to make a decision. I actually tried a few things and decided to rip them out and start over. I ended up loving what I ultimately ended up with:

I actually saw this image on Pinterest and loved the swirly design: 


Inside each of the swirls I created a wave.

And inside each of the smaller sections I created what I was envisioning as a string of clam shells.

The final piece was a special note {okay label} that I didn't want to seem lost in a sea of blue...so a made a little mini quilt of 1" squares around the edge:


The scariest part about any quilt project is if the recipient will like it...I was so happy to hear that it exceeded their expectations. Hopefully it will be cherished and loved for years to come. 

Linked at:

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Christmas Prep {Quilt Project}

The lead up to Christmas this year was bizarre, and crazy. {As expected, right?!}

Here is one of our oversized frames, I updated all the pictures to be old Christmas photos. I printed poster sized copies at Sam's Club for about $8 each. I love the final outcome!


In addition to updating the house for Christmas, I also had numerous projects to prepare for the Holidays, and a few events (a baby shower) plus had been asked by a dear friend to make a wedding quilt for her brother, who is going to be married between Christmas and New Years.

So in the midst of it all, I found myself working on this:
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T-Shirt Quilt {Graduation Gift}

My baby cousin Kimberly graduated from High School back in June. I remember when she was born, so it's hard to believe that she's already in college. I always feel like I'm in a huge time warp! 

Although my family has moved around quite a bit the last few years, it seems like every chance we get we link up with extended family, and thankfully Kim is an accomplished soccer goalie, every time her team played nearby, we'd try to watch her play...She has played on many, many teams...knowing all of that...I offered to sew Kim a quilt using her jerseys as her graduation gift. She accepted and before starting her freshman year of college, she mailed me a huge box of her jerseys. This is what I created: 


And here she is with her quilt: 



She is seriously the cutest, sweetest thing...she's turned into a lovely young woman, with a kind + loving heart. And she's a rock star goalie! I hope she loves this quilt until it's filled with holes and is a sad little bunch of threads...in my opinion, that's the sign of a really good quilt....

For some reason, I always anticipate making a t-shirt quilt will be an extreme challenge, but in the end I actually really loved working on this project. 

So, I'm sorry for the all of the pictures, but here is how I made a t-shirt quilt: 

Start with a stack of t-shirts. 

Going one shirt at a time, use scissors to trim the sides of the shirt up to the armpits:


Cut the bottom of the sleeves open, to the armpits. Push the opposite side of the shirt toward the neckline, so that only one side of the shirt remains on the cutting mat.


Using a rotary cutter and quilting ruler (on a self healing mat) carefully align the ruler and trim the jersey.


This quilt was made with 12.5" square blocks, but any size block should work, depending on the pattern selected. 



Once the block has been cut from the shirt, this is what is left: 


T-shirts are made from cotton jersey, an extremely stretchy fabric. One of the most important part of quilting is having blocks that are consistent size. It is necessary to use iron-on, fusible interfacing, cut to the same size (12.5" square) to backside of each quilt block. {Follow the directions of the interfacing, I believe I used Pellon light-weight iron-on interfacing.}

 

Here is the interfacing ironed on to the jersey. Notice that little corner isn't floppy?! Yay, interfacing!


Once all of the jerseys have been cut, and interfacing applied, I determined I needed additional blocks/fillers. For the first time, I used iron-on printable on black jersey blocks to create additional blocks. I also used iron-on vinyl from my Silhouette machine to write a special message. {These pictures are after the quilt was finished:}


Here is a graduation picture: 


I used a variety of family photos as well as special quotes:


Once I had enough blocks, I determined my layout. I decided rather than sewing even rows, I would bump the 2nd + 4th columns using 6.25" blocks. The smaller blocks were cut to 6.5" and sewed into 12.5" blocks (using 1/4" seams) and put into the center "heart" of the quilt. 


I mixed and matched the layout, trying to avoid having similar colors too close. In the end, I liked having the jersey numbers on the outer columns, in numerical order. 


Once I was happy with the final layout, each column (from top to bottom) was sewed together (using 1/4" seams.) I ironed the 1st, 3rd, and 5th columns towards the top; and the 2nd + 4th columns towards the bottom. That helped when sewing the columns together. Once all of the blocks in the column are sewn together, sew the columns together (1st + 2nds together, then 4th + 5th together then 2nd to 3rd and 3rd to 4th.)

My finalized quilt was large and required the backing fabric to be pieced together. Then create a quilt sandwich (quilt backing, wrong side facing up, followed by batting, and then the quilt top) pin together all three layers with safety pins, being certain no folds, wrinkles, or creases are in any of the layers. Quilt the layers together, being careful to avoid sewing over any safety pins.



Finish the quilt by sewing on a quilting cotton (non-jersey) bias binding.

The quilt backing I chose was a flannel plaid, sort of 70s. Fabulous like a stadium blanket. Cozy. Soft. The pattern I chose included the color of her new college team, as well as many of the colors from the teams of her past. I really love the backing!

And a final tid-bit of the quilt, I always have little helpers nearby. It makes every project take a little longer. Dinner get started a little later. And of course, I let them play with the pins and the magnetic holder. Here is my little guy coloring while I was quilting:


But, somehow projects do get finished, sometimes while I share a chair with my little guy. Oh well.


Have you ever made a t-shirt quilt? Isn't it a great way of using old t-shirts?
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