Welcome to part 3 of my Hugs ‘n Kisses Quilt Along!
This week we will cut our strips into pieces and sew the bow tie units that make up the hugs and kisses blocks. Today’s post is pretty lengthy but I want to remind you to work at your own pace. Making this quilt is not a race; rather it is about enjoying the process.
I timed each step as I completed it to give you an idea of how long it will take to sew (total of 9 hours). Rather than try to hurry and finish it all at once, I completed 1-2 steps per day so I never felt rushed.
Before cutting into segments, I starched my strips.
I also replaced a few jelly roll strips with a couple from my stash. (That’s because I borrowed them to make a previous Valentine’s Table Runner last month, LOL!!)
Optional Step 1 – Starching the Strips (1 Hour, 15 Minutes)
I sprayed a light mist on the backside, let it soak in, then gently pressed from the front. Take care not to stretch your skinny strips out of alignment. It’s not mandatory, but I do get better results by starching. You can read my previous post about using starch here.
If you decide to starch your background strips, take care that you don’t scorch them. I would suggest testing on a piece of white fabric first to make sure you don’t get any yellowing or flaking of the starch. Here’s a hint – cut some of your starched strips into units while you are waiting for other starched strips to dry in between pressing.
If you select any one of the layouts from last week’s post you can cut all of your fabrics according to the chart below. But feel free to modify your design further if it pleases you.
Step 2 – Cutting the Print Strips into Segments (2 Hours)
From each of 35 print jelly roll strips (2 .5″ x 42″), cut:
- 8 – 2.5″ squares (2o inches so far)
- 8 – 1.5″ squares (32 inches so far)
- 1 – 2.5″ x 4.5″ brick (37 inches total)
Be sure to cut off the selvedges first and stack up to 4 layers of strips for cutting efficiency. Just remember – measure twice, cut once! I found it easiest to cut the 2.5″ squares, then the brick, then trim the rest of the strip down to 1.5″ before cutting the smaller squares.
You should have one stack of squares (8 large, 8 small) for every complete X or O block.
From 3 print jelly roll strips, cut:
- a total of 19 more 2.5″ x 4.5″ bricks
You should have a total of 54 bricks that measure 2.5″ x 4.5″. Stack all of your bricks together and set aside for now. Keep your squares above sorted by color.
Step 3 – Cutting the Solid Background Strips (30 Minutes)
From 18 solid background strips (2 .5″ x 42″):
- Cut a total of 280 – 2.5″ squares. Yes, this is a lot of background squares.
- You need 8 squares per large block and will be making 35 blocks total.
- You can get 16 – 2.5″ squares per strip.
Here’s a hint: fold one of your background strips into 4 layers so that it is at least 10 inches wide.
Cut one background strip at a time into 4 stacks of 4 squares each.
Continue cutting until you have a total of 280 squares. You will use a total 17.5 strips exactly for the squares.
Set aside 6 extra full strips for borders = 24 background strips total.
Step 4 – Sew and Trim the Bow Tie Corners (1 Hour, 15 Minutes)
- Layer one smaller print square in the corner of one larger background square.
- Sew diagonally from corner to corner on the print square.
- Trim off the corner, leaving 1/4″ seam allowance.
- Press the print corner down to complete the square.
Practice making one bow tie corner unit so you get the hang of it.
I didn’t worry about marking my sewing line since it was such a small square.
Assembly line sew all of your squares until you have a total of 280 pieced corners (8 of each fabric).
This is also called chain piecing. Sew all of the squares before cutting in between each one.
Step 5 – Press All the Pieced Squares (45 Minutes)
Taking care not to scorch your fabrics, press all 280 pieced squares with the fabric towards the dark side. At this point, they can all face the same direction.
Step 6 – Sewing the Bow Tie Blocks (3 Hours, 15 Minutes)
It takes 2 print squares and two pieced background squares per bow tie unit. For efficiency, you can turn the pieces all the same way and join them together assembly line style. Be sure to sew one test unit first so you know you are putting it together correctly.
Sew two half units together to complete one bow tie unit.
Pressing tips: I like to “finger” press each half of the bow tie unit with a wooden seam roller. Then, after sewing the halves to complete the bow tie, I will press open with an iron.
Sew a total of 140 bow tie units, 4 of each color. You may have 8 bow ties of some colors if you have duplicate strips. Next week we will sew them into blocks.
If you have any questions about this week’s homework, please be sure to join my flickr discussion or email me directly at christa@christaquilts.com.
Quilt Along Schedule – Links will go to each active post when published.
- 5.1 – 2/27/13 Supply List
- 5.2 – 3/6/13 Choosing Fabrics and Alternate Layouts
- 5.3 – 3/13/13 Cutting and Sewing the Bow Tie Blocks
- 5.4 – 3/20/13 Sewing the X and O Blocks (or alternates)
- 5.5 – 3/27/13 Finishing the Quilt Top and Pieced Borders
- 5.6 – 4/3/13 Piecing the Backing
- 5.7 – 4/10/13 Pin Basting
- 5.8 – 4/17/13 Stitching in the Ditch
- 5.9 – 4/24/13 Decorative FMQ
- 5.10 – 5/1/13 Additional Quilting
- 5.11 – 5/8/13 Binding – It’s Finished!
I like how you add the approximate time.
Thank you – we have a winner! Rose – I will email you directly!
I made a picture for my avatar, at grecomara, and I got your vacuum packed bag of goodies on Friday and if the kids take a nap today I plan on doing some cutting.
I set up an avatar and read some of the faq’s. Days before you posted this I made comments and looked around. I’m learning! My name on flickr is contentncm
This is looking great! I’m very tempted to join in 🙂
Love your tutorial. I have just decided to start your quilt-a-long, and am trying to find fabric.
I began a Flickr account last week, and this week managed to upload my icon! (pippirose59).
Not much, I know, but at least it’s a start!
Even though I’d really like to do this one Christa, I’m working on about 4 right now. I would like to save them though because I have about 30 jelly rolls (some are duplicates) and I need to use them. I sure love your fabric choices.
That’s the great thing about my blog – these pages will stay up there permanently, and you can always come back to them later when you are ready to make the quilt. 🙂
Great tutorial! The photos are really helpful. I left a comment on flickr earlier. I’m Menolly13.
Love how you have given a timeframe for each step! Christa, I have not yet posted about this quilt a long, do you have a linky for it I can add to my site?
Thanks Heidi! Making a Christa’s Quilt Along button is next on my to do list! I’ll announce when one is ready 🙂
Ooo yes a time frame is such a great idea Christa. Thank you.
Love the way you did the tutorial. I am an avid flickr user. Just yesterday I uploaded some new photos. I am Rebeckah Austin (rraustin)
I was surprised to find out I had done most of those things last week. So I checked out some of the FAQ’s on Flicker. And it was pretty interesting. Also I posted a comment in the “Sea of Squares” discussion letting yoiu know how I was comming along. I did sew some more on it this week making more blocks and put one row together. (Need to finish rest of squares just got excited and wanted to see it.)