Sunday, October 18, 2015

Quilt Camp Review - Part II

Days 1 and 2

Geese on the Pond
To me, the best part about Peg Bingham's Quilt Camp at Cedar Lakes is the 2-day classes.  There is enough time for me to do some in-depth teaching and time for the students to get a lot accomplished.

Black and Tan Pineapple
by Libby Smith 2014
My Monday-Tuesday Class was Exploding Pineapple.

The pattern is in Karin Hellaby's booklet Sew Simple Pineapple.  It is not a traditional pineapple block.  There is no special ruler required, no paper to tear off the back.  Instead, it's constructed from a series of squares in graduated sizes.  Start with two squares the same size, right sides together.  Stitch around all 4 sides, cut the top square diagonally in both directions and peel the resulting triangles back like the petals of a flower.  Add another square of this new larger size and repeat.


Peggy's Fussy-cut Centers
Yes, it's mindless, repetitive sewing, but sometimes that's just what we need. The hardest part is deciding which 6 fabrics you're going to use in any given block!

There was quite a variety among the students, from 19th century repros to modern brights. 

Wendy's Repros


Cher's Modern Brights



















And organization went from 2-color combos to totally scrappy.


Cathy's Scrappiness
Sue's Planned Blocks











Kathy's Pinks and Browns

We were shooting for 80 blocks; finishes ranged from 20 to 60 (she worked the extra 2 days).  I can't wait to see the finished projects!












4 comments:

  1. A very versatile pattern. It looks great in all the fabrics.

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  2. What a fascinating way to make pineapple blocks! Now I want to try it. Like I need another project... Thanks for the description.

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  3. I've seen a tutorial for square-in-squares done that way, but was always concerned about the bias edges. Is there any problem with these blocks laying flat?

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  4. I'm trying to figure out how you cut the top square open without slicing into the bottom square? Scissors rather than rotary cutter?

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