
I finished these three quilts today. By “finished” I mean “attached the labels.” Two of them were waiting for the third to catch up. How about a little story?

This summer I went on a Shop Hop and bought three charm packs with the intention of making some pinwheel quilts. The method is super simple . . . place two charms right sides together and stitch on all four edges. Cut each pair from corner to corner twice – like an X. Press the HSTs that result and sew them back together.
Quilt #1:

I paired all the charms from one package, which resulted in 21 blocks. That’s not enough for a lap quilt, so I dug around in my stash and found this green that worked great with the collections (Moda’s Merriment). A quarter yard of red and it’s ready to quilt.

For some reason, I decided to do the border with parallel lines . . . 3/8 of an inch apart. Do you have any idea how long it takes to stitch all those lines?!?!! That was just toooo much!
Quilt #2:

In the meantime, I’ve read an article that says you need two charm packs for a lap size quilt. So I picked out a Bella Solid or two (or three, they’re inexpensive!) to coordinate with this collection (Moda’s Snowbird). Not bad, but it needs a border, so back to buy some yardage from the collection. So much for “just a charm pack!”

Hoping to save on quilting time, I decided on a meandering ribbon pattern. It’s been awhile since I’ve done any free motion quilting and I guess I should have done a little practice first. My ribbons are too far apart and pretty jerky and lumpy. This time it was toooo little.
Quilt #3:

At this point I’m thinking I’d like to try something different. What if I added strips to make bigger blocks? And how about some sashing, too. That works pretty well and since I was buying fabric anyway, I got some yardage to match this collection, too. This is my favorite anyway – Snowman Frolic. Those snowmen are just too cute!

I found a fairly easy quilting pattern involving wavy lines and circles. It went much better, probably because I was already warmed up from the second quilt. On the borders I did a wide diagonal grid which worked up nice and quick. This one was juuuuust right!
Now I know how Goldilocks felt!
These three quilts are destined to go to my quilt guild’s charity project. I enjoyed making the pinwheels, but I think I’ve done enough for now. Time to get back to something more complex. Hmmm. Maybe some paper piecing.