Once I finally got all my ducks in a row, this baby quilt (36″ x 40″) was easy and quick to assemble and finish.
This is made from 90 4.5″ half square triangles units I had left over from a twin-sized flying geese quilt I made last year. I didn’t know what I wanted to do with them until I saw this quilt made by Sarah at Confessions of a Fabric Addict. Then she made a tiny one, which motivated me to pull out my squares and start. Mine is somewhere in the middle of these two.
I didn’t occur to me till I looked back at these posts and her tutorial that she paired her fabrics to create same-color diamonds. I bet that would have been a lot easier to arrange correctly! Oh, well, I like the color and movement in mine.

This is headed off to Jack’s Basket to welcome a new baby.
I’m linking up to Whoop Whoop Friday at Confessions of a Fabric Addict.



I have some finishes this week. I made this tote bag for me! Mostly I made it so that I could incorporate parts of a favorite old sweatshirt I was discarding. (My Canadian friends will understand about Roots!)
Also, I was tired of my water bottle falling over and leaking in whatever random tote bag I grabbed for the gym. I added loops of some wide elastic belting I had.
Also, sloths.
Yesterday I made this tiny zipper pouch for my friend’s birthday.
And today I finished up this baby quilt made from scraps from a recent project.
I quilted it all with the walking foot.










I used
I quilted between all the blocks, and then used pink Fantastico to quilt wavy diagonal lines, some of them with butterflies.










And here’s another of my “quilts from panels” series. This fabric really struck me as fresh and wintery. The panel and border are “Holiday Wishes” by Henry Glass. The red and green are also Henry Glass fabrics, but from other collections. And the gray is Kona. It was 50″ x 65″ before washing.
And I love, love the unrelated glittery tree print (Robert Kaufman) that I found for the back.
Each block has a large snowflake quilted on it, surrounded by strippling. This was almost totally ineffective. Next time I would use a very heavy thread/yarn to do a snowflake outline in couching or bobbin work.
The gray border turned out much better.

“Summer Stars on Fawn Lake”, the mystery quilt designed by
I made the smaller version (3″ stars!) that finished at 79 x 88″ with the borders. This is the first one of these where I used a dark background. I had a lot of dark batik scraps from a space quilt I made a long time ago. I bought a little more to make enough, and the “feathery” batik for the borders and backing. The rest was scraps, especially bright, multi-color and juvenile scraps.
This is quilted with black Bottom Line on the bottom, and black and purple Bottom Line and purple Art Studio Colors on the top. The effect is pretty subtle, but it can be seen up close. I needed a thread that would blend well with the dark batik, but not be too dark on the bright fabrics. So purple was my neutral.

