Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Vintage sheet Asterisk Chenille Quilt


Vintage Sheet Asterisk Chenille Quilt Tutorial and Giveaway!
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AND THE WINNER IS  NUMBER 13!  Jennadesigns is the winner!  Please contact me and let me know what colors of chenille you would like to have and I will get them right out to you along with my new book Re-Inventing Chenille.  Thanks to everyone for the wonderful comments.  I hope some of you try this run way of making an Asterix Quilt!


A tutorial and a Giveaway!   Learn how to make this fun Chenille Asterisk Quilt and have a chance to win 3 rolls of 3/8 inch wide Chenille-It Blooming Bias as well as a Book!I spent last week end making this "Asterisk" inspired quilt using fat quarters of vintage sheets that I received in a recent flickr swap!  It was fast and easy to make and was truly a "week-end" project that I completed in just over two days!  I made a "real" asterisk quilt for one of the Old Red Barn quilt alongs on flickr last fall and loved the look and style but wasn't quite as happy about all of the time it took to do all of the inset pieces in each block to create the design.  I decided it might be easier to use the 3/8 inch wide Chenille-It Blooming Bias to make the design lines and after it was washed I would have the same design lines become the texture and feel of old fashioned chenille.  I've had several requests  for a tutorial so here it is!




I decided that the look and feel of vintage sheets would be perfect for this project but you can you any quilt fabrics of your choice!  This is a perfect charm pack project or a stash buster quilt!  I worked with 5 1/2 inch squares because that made the most use of my fat quarters but charm pack 5 inch squares will work just as well.  I cut 12 fat quarters into blocks and my finished quilt is 55X60 inches. I also pressed each block in half in both directions before I started stitching my chenille.  You will have a perfect center mark to follow as well as a line for the vertical and horizontal  stitching. I chose six different colors of 3/8 inch wide Chenille-It Blooming Bias (available here  http://www.fauxchenille.com/ on the fabric by the yard page) to coordinate with my blocks.
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Begin stitching the corner to corner lines on each block first. Be careful not to stretch the bias chenille tape as you sew.  It can also be helpful to use a walking foot if you have one but it is definitely not necessary.  The quilt I made was with a regular foot. Set your stitch length to 2.0 to 1.5.  The shortened stitch length will be sure to secure the chenille securely.  I stitched all of the blocks of one color at the same time chain stitching  as I did each row of the chenille. This makes your stitching fast and easy and I had virtually no waste on my chenille tape! 
Stitch the second diagonal row!  The stitching is simply down the center of the tape!  See how easy peasy this is?  It's almost like cheating!  Next you will do the vertical and horizontal rows.  Hint:  If you fold your block in half and press both ways before you stitch your chenille.....you will have a line to follow for your strips!  (Cheating again!)
See how easy that was?  I did these blocks in an afternoon!   I recommend that you press each one flat from the wrong side before piecing them together just in case your machine has caused any puckering of the fabric when you stitched down the bias strips.
With my 12 fat quarters worth of blocks I was able to lay out 12 rows with 10 blocks in each row and I had a few left ofter to use for throw pillow as well!  Stitch your blocks together one row at a time with a 1/4 inch seam allowance.  Pressing your seams is your preference whether you like to press to one side or press open.  On this quilt I decided that I prefered pressing them to one side alternating the pressing on each row.  It makes it so easy to match up my blocks when I sew the rows together.  I sewed my blocks together the next morning and was ready to quilt by afternoon.
This is what your finished quilt will look like.  Now you are ready to quilt!  I used vintage sheets for the back of my quilt and did a stached coin panel down the center of the back with my scraps from the vintage sheet fat quarters!  Be sure to have as much fun with the back of your quilt as you did with the front!  Layer and stack your quilt with your favorite batting and pin baste for machine quilting.  This is the next part that is cheating for sure!  I really like to use a machine with a walking foot for this type of machine quilting.  We will be doing straight line quilting and the walking foot keeps everything moving through nice and even without any puckering or bunching up of the top layer as you stitch.  Most machine manufacturers offer a walking foot for their machines!  If you don't have one it's really worth the investment!

I started quilting   on one end of my quilt on the first horizontal line of chenille bias.  You will simply stitch right on top of your stitching on each row of bias!  Try and stay right on the same row of stitching so that you won't affect the chenille when it blooms!  Stitch all of the horizontal rows unrolling your quilt as you go and then reroll the other direction and do the opposite rows.  And finally...roll your quilt corners to the center and starting with the center diagonal row, stitch all of the diagonal rolls again on top of the original stitching!  This made it so fast as easy to quilt and all of my rows were perfect and straight without any marking! 



Trim the edges of your quilt and bind with your favorite technique. If you don't like binding you can serge the edges of your quilt and stitch a double layer of the 5/8 inch wide Chenille-It Blooming Bias to both the front and the back of the quilt with the edge extending a good 1/8 inch beyond your serged edge.  This is the fastest and easiest way to finish an edge ever and when it is washed you will have a soft fluffly chenille edge to your quilt.  For this quilt I finished it with a traditional binding and then stitched a row of the pink 3/8 inch over the seam so add a line a pink around my quilt.

Now the fun part!  Throw your quilt in your washer.  You will get the best result with a top loading washer!  Front loading machines don't agitate so if you have a front loader you may want to go to a laundramat.  Another note!  This is NOT A RAG QUILT!  You will NOT get any mess when you wash this quilt.  All of the tape is on the true bias so when you stitch your rows you are catching all of the threads!  All it's going to do is fluff up....not leave any mess in your machine unless it's a little (very little) bit of lint when you dry it!

Rag quilts make a huge mess in your washer and dryer because they are cut on the straight of grain!  Plus you also clip all of those seams so when you wash it all of the threads come out into your machine.  There are many laundramats that won't even let you wash that type of quilt in their machines!  I promise you this quilt will not do that!

The finished result!  The soft texture of chenille!  I hope you like this version of the asterisk quilt!  It is fun and easy to make.  Try it for a childrens quilt....they love the soft feel and they are soooo cuddly!


I think it's time for a giveaway!  Your choice of three 3/8 inch wide rolls of Chenille-It Blooming bias!  You pick the colors and I'll hrow in a copy of my book Re-Inventing Chenille.  Just leave a comment for one chance.  Follow my blog for a second chance and Blog about this tutorial for a third chance to win!    I will leave the giveaway open until Valentines Day!