"Quilt Green"
And I'm Not Talking About St. Patrick's Day
or Making Quilts with Green Fabric

 

Using Bonnie Hunter's Scrap User's System, Your Scrap Quilts will Save the Environment and your Sanity (Because Your Fabric Will Be Organized and Easy to Use - without Spending Hours and Hours Organizing it)

And - Oh! - You Will Create Some Amazing Heirlooms Just Using Fabric From Your Stash, the Local Thrift Shop, or Worn Clothes From Your Closets

 

bonnie k hunter quilter
Bonnie Hunter joins us on February 8 to talk about scrap quilts and how we can create unusual and beautiful family heirlooms using our stash or scrap fabric.

 

Greetings Quilter -

 

Family members of quilters - Beware!

Your clothes may become part of an heirloom quilt.

Scrap quilts have always been popular with quilters.

As we look back in history, probably most of the first quilts made in America were scrap quilts - made from real scraps!

Quilts were made from scraps of fabric, whether they were clothes that had been outgrown or worn out, or curtains that had been taken down, or old sheets that had been replaced on the bed.

And scrap quilts are much the same today. Many quilters who love to make scrap quilts, will use fabric from clothes purchased at a thrift shop, fat quarters from the fabric shop, outgrown or worn out clothes from their family, or fabric traded with other quilters.

Some quilters make scrap quilts with a particular purpose. For example, you could make a quilt from the clothes of a person in your family. It could be from a child's outgrown clothes, made for him or her as they go away to college or start their own family. Or, it could be a Remembrance Quilt made from the clothes of a family member recently passed away.

There are charm quilts, where you choose one shape of patch and then sew together pieces of fabric, none of them the same. This is where it is great to have quilting friends to trade fabric with.

Even using old, left over fabric, quilters often pay attention to the design of the quilt - both in the shapes of the patches and the placement of colors.

In the mid 1980s, Judy Martin wrote a book called Scrap Quilts, and in the book she put forth some ideas about designing a scrap quilt:

  • include something dark
  • include something light
  • include something dull
  • include something bright
  • combine large, medium and small-scale prints
  • use bright accent colors sparingly and consistently throughout the quilt to keep your eye moving
  • use neutrals to give your eye a rest (black and/or white could be considered neutral
  • pay attention to the amount of dark and light contrast within the individual prints of the fabrics you choose
scrap quilt with hearts
This wall hanging was made in a workshop, and I remember struggling with how to place the patches in the quilt so it would develop a overall design.

If you have ever made a scrap quilt, you might have noticed that, in some ways, it is more difficult to make than a quilt using all new fabric.

Several years ago, I took a workshop and made the little heart wall hanging on the right.

The project was to take your quarter-square triangle patches and surround the heart applique patches, creating a secondary design - like maybe stars points around the hearts.

I spent hours moving the patches around, and eventually I just sewed them together. In some places, you might be able to see the stars.

Mostly, though, I just saw frustration, and I was never inclined to try another scrap quilt.

Until recently.

Considering everything that is going on in the world, and looking at my growing collection of fabric - both my yardage and scraps, I thought it might be a good idea to take another look at scrap quilts.

After all, I already have enough fabric to make tons of quilts, I just need to figure out a way to use it, since most of my quilts have been created from coordinated quilt shop fabric.

Then I discovered Bonnie Hunter - an expert in scrap quilts; and the creator of the Scrap Users System.

One of my more recent problems was my scrap stash. For years, my scraps have been housed in small cardboard boxes. Well, the boxes are now overflowing and a mess.

I have tried to keep one or two colors in each box, and that has worked by and large. But, there are all kinds of different sizes and shapes of scraps - strips, triangles, rectangles, leftover binding, and totally random shapes.

When I read Bonnie's article in Quiltmaker magazine, it all started making sense. She sorts all of the strips that are longer than 12 inches by width - 1 1/2 inches; 2 inches; 2 1/2 inches and 3 inches.

Anything smaller than 12 inches gets cut into squares and bricks (rectangles). The squares are the same sizes as the width of the strips (1 1/2," 2," 2 1/2," and 3") and the bricks are cut into pieces that are 2" by 3 1/2," 2 1/2" by 4 1/2," or 3 1/2" by 6 1/2."

bonnie hunter scrap quilt
This scrap quilt from Bonnie's book shows that scrap quilts can be quite interesting and beautiful.

Now that makes sense. Because there is not much more frustrating than finding a color of fabric that is perfect for the space in the quilt, and then discovering that it is 1/2 inch too small. Better not to look at it in the first place.

As amazing as Bonnie's Scrap User's System was, what was even more amazing to me were her scrap quilts, and one of her overriding reasons for turning to scrap quilts.

Her scrap quilts go way beyond what I had thought of as a possiblity for a scrap quilt. My thoughts go to Log Cabin, Tumbling Blocks, and Courthouse Steps.

The quilt on the right is made using the Rocky Road to Kansas quilt block. Typically this block has solid fabric between the points, but Bonnie has used fabric strips in those pieces. In this quilt, you can see how she uses the strips of fabric from her scrap stash.

The interesting thing is that one of Bonnie's goals with her scrap quilts is to "Quilt Green." By re-using, re-purposing and recycling fabric, we can create beautiful heirlooms for future generations to enjoy on walls, beds, couches or laps - instead of filling the landfills with fabric.

During our Conversation, Bonnie will told us:

     

  • how to choose the right treasures at the thrift shop to guarantee a beautiful quilt
  • how to know which fabric manufacturers produce "green" fabric
  • how to tell the fiber content of a fabric - without a label
  • how to choose a fabulous design for a scrap quilt, not one that is "just a scrap quilt"
  • how to create interesting scrap borders, backing and binding
  • quick methods for piecing batting - so you can even use your scrap batting!
  • and much, more

 

If you missed this call, you missed a lot. Bonnie divulged tips and techniques for making scrap quilts that will make your quilting easier and much less frustrating. Following her guidelines, the garments you choose will be perfect for your quilt, and you will know exactly how to prepare them for patches in your quilt.

 

interview with a quilter Yes, please Send me a recording of the interview with Bonnie Hunter, for the special price of just $24.97, plus a tiny charge for shipping and handling.

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Happy Quilting!


Penny Halgren

www.How-to-Quilt.com
www.TheQuiltingCoach.com

p.s. You'll be happy you have a copy of this call, whether you make a scrap quilt this month or during the summer. You'll get creative ideas from Bonnie Hunter, a scrap quilt expert.

 

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