Simply Triangles: 11 Deceptively Easy Quilts Featuring Stars, Daisies & Pinwheels
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Simply Triangles: 11 Deceptively Easy Quilts Featuring Stars, Daisies & Pinwheels Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Star Struck Quilts: Dazzling Diamonds & Traditional Blocks—13 Skill-Building Projects Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsMake Star Quilts: 11 Stellar Projects to Sew Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Magic Add-a-Strip Quilts: Transform Simple Shapes into Dynamic Designs Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsAmazingly Simple Triangle Stars: Deceptively Easy Quilts from One Block Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Diamond Chain Quilts: 10 Skill-Building Projects • Dynamic Star, Daisy & Pinwheel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Simply Triangles - Barbara H. Cline
My Quilting Journey
I was brought up with six sisters and a brother in a loving Mennonite home in the beautiful Virginia countryside. My memories are rich with happy times spent frolicking along the banks of the North River and joining in the escapades of a rambunctious tribe. Of course, there were less delightful days when long rows of green beans needed to be picked and canned, and weeds hoed in seemingly endless rows of corn. But the rewards of our summer labor stored in the cellar—home-canned jars and well-filled freezers—assured us of abundant, delicious meals all winter.
Winter was also the time for sewing. Sewing has been a part of my life since I was a little girl. Mother used her talent to provide practical and beautiful garments for our family. Her sewing machine kept humming long after the girls’ dresses were completed, turning out an assortment of lingerie, nightgowns, caps, coats, and mittens for the growing family. Both of my grandmothers, Mary Wenger and Vera Heatwole, found spare minutes with a needle and thread to create elaborate embroidered works of art, which graced the bureaus, tabletops, and beds in our homes.
Scrappy Stars, 41˝ × 43˝, made and machine quilted by Barbara Cline
Grandmother Vera introduced me to quilting when I was ten years old. It was during those early childhood days that the seeds of sewing were planted that would later yield a harvest of piecing, designing, and quilting. The world of fabric came alive for me when my parents purchased a fabric store in my preteen years. I enjoyed learning about different fabrics and color combinations as well as working with people. Some of the store employees were expert quilters, and this further piqued my interest in the craft.
My six sisters have been another source of inspiration; they have inspired me to join a quilt guild, enter quilt contests, publish patterns, and learn new techniques. We also get together once a year for a sewing retreat. As our little ones grew up they started to join us, and it has been a great opportunity for them to focus on sewing as well as on building relationships and interacting with their grandmother, aunts, and cousins. The retreat has become one of the highlights of my year. Throughout this book, you’ll find Life Lessons—simple, inspiring stories from some of these important people in my life.
About This Book
The eleven quilts featured in this book all have triangles as components. The triangle components themselves are constructed in a variety of ways using smaller triangles, trapezoids, and other shapes. Here are a few examples of the triangle designs used in this book. However, there is no limit to the number of ways you can create designs within a triangle; see what you can come up with on your own!
In some quilt designs, such as Tumbling Stars (page 26), the same triangle is repeated; in others, two different triangle designs are paired, as in Fall Stars (page 21).
The quilt projects in this book are presented in three sections. In Triangles to Stars (page 16), the triangles are put together to make star designs, beginning with simple one-piece triangles and moving on to more complex pieced triangles.
In Triangles to Daisies (page 53), triangles become daisies with the use of appliqué. Heart shapes that look like flower petals are appliquéd onto triangles, and six triangle points come together in the center to form a daisy.
In the final section, Triangles to Pinwheels (page 65), triangles are almost magically transformed into jazzy pinwheel designs.
Supplies
A few simple techniques are used to create this wonderful variety of designs with triangles. Cutting techniques include cutting components with templates and cutting from strips, strip sets, and layers of fussy-cut fabric. Sewing techniques include appliquéing, sewing Y-seams, and using overlays.
In this chapter, you’ll find information on the supplies and techniques you’ll need to make the quilts in this book. All the quilts can be made using just basic quilting supplies. The following is a list of my favorites.
• Rotary cutter, with a sharp new blade
• Rotary cutting mat, 24˝ × 36˝
• Rotary cutting rulers, 6˝ × 24˝ and 4˝ × 14˝—The smaller ruler is not so clumsy and is easier to handle when cutting strips into triangles.
• Creative Grids 60° Triangle (8˝ finished size) ruler—It is important to use this brand; others measure differently.
• Pins—I like the Nifty Notions Flower Head Pins. At 2˝ long and .05mm thick, they are thin, long, and easy to pick up.
• Sewing thread to match fabric—You may need several different colors for each quilt.
• ¼˝-wide presser foot for your sewing machine—Check to make sure it is accurate.
• Double-sided fusible web—My choice is Shades SoftFuse; it leaves the projects soft.
• Scissors for clipping threads and trimming dog-ears
• Seam ripper
• Template plastic
• Gluestick
• Iron and ironing board
• Spray starch—I like Mary Ellen’s Best Press because it doesn’t have a lot of sizing. It doesn’t make the fabric too stiff, but it does provide enough stability to keep the fabric from stretching.
• Retayne (G&K Craft Industries), optional—You can add this in your washing machine to keep fabrics from bleeding.
• Perfect Piecer (Jinny Beyer)—This tool has different angles to mark the ¼˝ dots that are crucial for the pieces joined in a Y-seam.
• Pen-style Chaco Liner (Clover)—This marker is great for marking pattern pieces.
Fabric Preparation and Pressing
I prefer to preshrink my fabrics. Some fabrics shrink more than others. If you don’t preshrink, they might shrink to different sizes after the quilt is pieced and washed, and the finished quilt may not lie flat. Also, I like to add Retayne to the washing machine when preshrinking to keep dark fabrics from bleeding.
As you cut template shapes and triangles, some of the edges will be cut on the bias. To keep these edges from stretching and distorting, handle the cut fabric pieces as little as possible and use spray starch to keep the fabric from stretching. Before cutting the fabric, spray it lightly with Best Press spray starch and press until dry.
In all the quilt instructions in this book, you will be told which way the seams should be pressed. Follow the pressing directions so that the seams will nest together. After each sewing step, I press without steam until I have sewn a completed