I made a 25-sided polygon mini-quilt last year because of a sketch I drew at the beginning of church one Sunday. I came home after the service, drew it in Illustrator, and put it together.
I love how this turned out, but it did require some surgery during the construction process because my angles at the center weren’t an exact 14.4 degrees. This matters when you multiply a small error by 25 wedges– suddenly it’s not a small error anymore.
I got help from my friend Pete (who teaches Graphic Design at our school) so that my Illustrator drawings would be more accurate, and made it again.
This attempt was much more successful. I sold that one to a friend out of state, and then was asked to teach a workshop on it in July of this year. I needed another sample.
So I decided to make a patriotic one, since I do plan to extend the wedges and make a holiday tree skirt, so I didn’t want to make two more Christmassy ones.
I got the wedges made yesterday when I was so completely socially drained from the exam week-baccalaureate-graduation extravaganza and just couldn’t handle any more. I closed myself in my sewing room and just meditated. But then I wasn’t sure… Should the geese fly in towards the center of the circle this time?
Or should they fly out of the center like I had done the last one? I couldn’t decide, so I asked Instagram.
Opinions leaned slightly in favor of the geese flying in, so that’s what I decided to do (after messing up and sewing them backwards first because I’m a dork). And I glue-basted and pieced a center too.
I marked, basted, and quilted it this afternoon, and hand-bound it with a bias binding tonight. Ella was available immediately for quality control testing the second I finished it.
The only bad thing is that I can’t get the SewLine pen to come out of the red center. I tried cold water, warm water, mild soap, Aveda shampoo, and an OxiClean slurry. A friend on Instagram has suggested a product called SewClean and I will look into that tomorrow.
Friday was completely fascinated as I tried to get the markings out. He really wanted to help.
Now the piece is drying flat on the counter in the kitchen. We shall see how it looks in the morning, I guess. I have a work-around (threadplay of with blue over the marking lines) if I can’t get the marks out of that center circle (what IS it about red and orange fabric that clings so mightily to water-soluble pens?!), but I hope I don’t have to. I want the quilted stars to be subtle and not the first thing you notice when you look at it.
Hmph.
In any case, I’m pleased with it, and now I have a class sample for my workshop and can mark that off my list!
3 Responses
i love this quilt. Any chance you are going to try to write/sell the pattern?
It is in process, actually! I should be finished with it sometime this summer. I’ve made it twice now and will make a third for the tree skirt variation, and then photos and the PDF will be ready to go. 🙂
Y