October 5th, 2008
I chose to quilt using a coordinating pattern for the main diamond in this round.
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The small accent diamonds were quilted using a straight line stitch 1/8th inch apart. |
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The zigzag stitch on the blue border coordinates with the brown triangles. I established guides by marking tips of brown triangle with a water soluble marker. |
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September 4th, 2008

Sugar Bowl
I’m in the process of making 54 of these blocks.
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 Sugar Bowl corner block
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I’ll need to make 4 corner blocks |
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July 19th, 2008
I’m down to quilting the last 2 squares of this round. Seems to take forever….so much going on….so little time.
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June 1st, 2008
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I’ve finished piecing together 14 additional Navajo squares. I then assembled 2 rows of 3 squares (sides) and 2 rows of 4 squares (top and bottom). I attached these rows (sides first) to the quilt using the same procedure utilized for Round 1. |
Next..quilting this round..
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May 30th, 2008
I’m still plugging away at making the Round 2 Navajo squares. At the same time, I’ve been making some modifications to my design.
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My original pattern called for a 3-inch sash border after the Round 2 Navajo squares. I realized this created a problem for my final round of 9-inch squares. The horizontal rows for the final round were made up of squares a different size than the vertical rows for the round. Since I plan to paper-piece this round, it resulted in two different patterns for the round. I realized I needed to increase the sash border to 6 inches and reduce the final round squares to 6 inches to accomodate using 1 pattern for the final round. The result being all the squares are identical in size…6 x 6 inch squares. |
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Once I increased the sash size to 6 inches, I decided that a solid brown sash was too much for the overall look of the quilt. So I divided that round into 2 sections. The first is 4 inches wide with a series of big and little diamonds. The second is 2 inches wide with 1/2 inch strips of cream surrounding 1 inch of the blue fabric.
The overall size of the quilt remains the same. And I like the additional interest of the diamond borders between the two square rounds. The blue sash border breaks up the predominant browns on the outer edges of the quilt nicely. |
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May 22nd, 2008
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I’ve completed assembling the blocks for the first round. I sewed together the blocks making 4 rows (one for each side). Two rows contained 2 middle blocks and 2 corner blocks. The other two rows contained 4 middle blocks each. To the outer side of each row I added a 2-inch strip (40-inches long) of brown fabric for the outer border of this round. I centered the strip on the outside and left the excess tails on so I can miter the corners after it is all pinned together.
First I joined the rows with four middle blocks. I placed the blocks on top of the center section of the quilt right sides together and sewed together using a 1/4 seam allowance Matching the the block row edge to the top quilt edge (not the backing). After sewing the seam, I trimmed away the excess batting and backing from the seam allowance. Leaving the excess on while sewing this seam, makes feeding the layers through the machine much easier and reduces puckering. Then I flipped the quilt over and placed the backing (cut several inches larger than necessary) on the back of the quilt right sides together. Then I sewed together over the seam I made with the front side.
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With the front and back sewn to the quilt but still right sides together (not yet opened), I a butted the batting strip (again cut several inches wider and longer than the block row) next to the seem allowance and zigzaged together with no overlap (this eliminates any bulging that would have resulted with sewing into seam allowance. Then I flipped open the front and backs and pinned together. I repeated the process for the other three sides. Once all the sides were sewn on and pinned over, I mitered the borders, pinned into place and trimmed off the excess brown strip tails. The miter will be sewn down during the quilting process.
This same process will be used each time I add a round to the quilt. And, with each round, I will cut the backing and batting several inches wider and longer than necessary. I learned the hard way that it is much easier to assemble and quilt and there is no danger of running short when I add subsequent rounds.
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