This started out as just a proof of concept. While knocked down with a dreadful flu, I mainlined Missouri Star Quilt Co. tutorials. This one in particular blew my freaking mind.
I have a hard time with scrappy quilts. I like things to be clean, and symmetrical, and orderly. But I wanted to break out of my comfort zone and try a scrappy quilt. The Into the Woods line has all of these fabrics in it:
(pic from Emerald City Fabrics)
First you make the small units, then you separate your big stack of half color, half white squares into 2 equal piles. One of those stacks you'll sew color to color. (Photo above left.) The other half you'll sew white to white. It's imperative for this block the the parallelograms you're creating all go the same direction. (See photo above right.) These 4 square units become the building block for the overall pattern. I had a *really* hard time putting the 4 square units together. I kept trying to make them all a perfect balance of patterns and colors, which math has proven would be impossible with 2 charm packs. My quilting friend, PM, was watching me try to mix it up, then stall, then sigh, then mix them up, then try... She finally came over to my work table and gently moves a few around to help me get out of my head. At any rate, four of those become your full block.
There's your block! And when you put a bunch of them together...
I love how this pattern comes out! All told I ended up with 21 blocks. And, that's all she wrote on that one for now. I don't have a specific plan for it, so I'm going to tuck away the completed blocks until inspiration strikes again.
One thing I want to say about using MSQCO's method for making half square triangles: all your edges become bias edges. Take special care to not stretch or tug your fabric as it goes through the machine. I tend to be a little lax on such things and my final blocks were all slightly wonky as a result. I'll probably use this technique again but I'll be much more careful about the bias stretching.
On to the next project!
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