Years ago, we kept foster teenagers on an emergency basis. "30 days, that often got stretched."
Making a full sized quilt was a project to pass the time and something they could take wherever they went next.
The kid would cut and sew the top.I would buy the backing, and all would sit at the quilt frame and hand quilt in the Japanese fan design. Then I would bind the border on my commercial binding machine.
Iddee,
Sounds like you’ve done your share of quilts. I’m thinking of taking it to somebody with the table machines and let them stitch through all over it. I don’t know what that’s called, but I have one somebody made me that has leaf like patterns all over it, front to back to help keep the fill from shifting I suppose. Seems that would also make it a little more durable.
This was just kind of on a whim. I was gonna buy a quilt for her and then though, wait a minute, we can sew some squares together. We didn’t actually measure or mark anything. We just folded the fabric into rough rectangles and cut the edges. Then the girls took turns making ribbons of squares, a single row wide. The long ribbons got stitched together, then I just spread it out on the floor and did the batting and backing, pinned the border and took it back to the kitchen table to sew it.
Thanks everyone. The girls had fun with it.
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