Crown of Thorns made from West African basin and batiks |
Crown of Thorns...
Done! I got this quilt cut, sewn, quilted and bound in only two and a half weeks. And I just love how it turned out. Phil and Kim seemed to like it and that makes me a very happy camper. Phil took a picture of it with Will and me, last night, and plans to send it to the lady who gave him the basin, Juliet Contay. Living in Sierra Leone, I'm sure she has never even seen a quilt so it might be interesting to know what she thinks of this strange technique of cutting perfectly good fabric up into little pieces and then sewing them back together again. A strange practice, indeed!
For the quilters out there, I thought I'd share a couple of things that make my life so much easier. Most of the veterans of quilting already use these tools but, for the newbies, I thought you'd like to check 'em out.
Strip tube ruler in action |
project board |
insulin pump- all girly |
yet another doily |
2 comments:
I'm intrigued with the batting covered board and the one you mention with a binding. Could you link to that one as well? I looked in your sidebar and the first name Sarah Fran is the logical one but that link does not work. That method of making hst's sounds like it must be the way to do it if you got so many made in such a short time. Wish I had seen this before a quilt show over the weekend to look for it! It is now on my list, tho!
The Crown of Thorns quilt is just perfect ... fabric, pattern and color placement ... for the Morgans. I'm sure they are amazed and will get a lot of pleasure out of it (for so many reasons)
Hope this mean the shoulder is much better?
Love Sandy's latest trick - had to chuckle over the binding.
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