In Process: Log Cabin Star

Recently, I wrapped every individual piece of my fabric stash around cardboard sheets (comic book/magazine boards) that I bought from Amazon. As I did so, I cut 2 1.5″ strips off of each piece so that I could have an ongoing leader-ender project this year, enjoying the fabrics that I have accumulated rather than just accumulating them.

The process took a while, but I did finally get it all wrapped. I LOVE being able to see my fabrics this way!

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Naturally, I couldn’t stand it and had to start making little log cabin blocks with these fabric strips. At the end of January, this is what I had.

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Not wanting to take them down off of my design wall to go down to the Red Rooster (which doesn’t have a design wall), I just took the partial blocks I had and the bins of strips and made more. 

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At the end of the weekend, I combined the two piles of blocks and started playing with layout concepts. This one made me happy, so I decided to finish sewing blocks to complete the design.

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It also took a while.

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I did finally prevail, and I sewed the blocks into rows and sewed the rows together over a period of about two weeks, between other projects.  Ella helped. 

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And in case you wondered, Fibonacci is lurking in this one, too– each block has 13 pieces, and there are 144 blocks. Both are Fibonacci numbers, of course. The logs are 3/4″ wide (I trimmed to a precise width after every seam, so that accuracy did not depend on my seam allowance), so the blocks finish to 5 1/4″ and the quilt top will finish to 63″ square.

Last weekend I pieced a back for it from scraps that hadn’t been folded back onto boards, and I hope to get it layered and quilted very soon. I love the simplicity of the log cabin design, and the versatility that it affords. Even though it’s not particularly challenging to make, I savored the slow process of making the small blocks, and as a result I’m very attached to this quilt. I already have 35 more log cabin blocks made and more in process, as I’ve continued to pull strips from that bin between other projects. What a fun way to work!

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Quilting/Sewing

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8 Responses

  1. This is beautiful and congratulations on winning the prize! You certainly deserve it! I was wondering how you secure your fabric onto each comic book board. I just wrapped some of my fabric around cardboard, but find it difficult to pull them in and out without messing everything up.

  2. Elaine

    The Real Person!

    Author Elaine acts as a real person and passed all tests against spambots. Anti-Spam by CleanTalk.

    They’re all pinned, one on each edge of one side of the board. I went through a huge number of pins, but they can be accessed easily. I just don’t rip them out fast since I don’t want to damage anything.

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