Monday, May 24, 2010

Circle This with Libby Lehman


I had the great pleasure of taking two classes this past weekend from Libby Lehman at our local quilt shop, Quiltworks Northwest. The first class was called 'Circle This'. Whenever I take a class, I assume that whatever I work on may very well end up in the trash or in my drawer of samples. Much to my delight, I actually ended up with something that I really like.

The project shown above was created by using reverse applique' and a nifty tool, called the circle maker, on my Bernina sewing machine. The gadget allows you sew perfect circles onto fabric from very small to wide. If you place one fabric on top of another, sew a circle, and cut away the top layer, you end up with a reverse appliqued circle. Then, using that nifty circle maker, you can sew over the raw edge using the decorative stitiches provided by your sewing machine. I tried it with with different variegated threads.

The bright green circle was created using two layers of organza. Because organza is so slippery, a circle cut out of freezer paper and ironed onto the fabric helps stabilize it for sewing. Some of the other circles were created by couching decorative piping and by bobbin drawing. Bobbin drawing is used for threads and embellishments that are too thick to go through your sewing machine's standard tension plates. Instead, you load your bobbin with the thread and sew with the wrong side of the fabric up.

Once I finished creating the top, I sandwiched the quilt as usual and quilted around the circles and did an overall looping pattern in the background. I applied the binding to the front of the quilt using my sewing machine and used 1/4 inch fusible tape to secure the binding to the back of the quilt. Fusibles aren't really permanent, so you have to sew down the edges. This is when I added the bright yellow frame inside the binding. I couched the irridescent thread onto the top using gold thread and a very narrow zig zag stitch. This not only secures the thread, but secures the back of the binding to the quilt at the same time. So easy!

1 comment:

  1. Nancy, Thanks for posting. Loved the binding technique - I plan on trying on 2 quilts I have ready. How wide did you cut the binding?
    Peggy

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