It all started with this article in Quilters Newsletter Magazine, dated October 2003.
The fabric above was bought specifically for the making of a wallhanging. The fabric at top is a panel print and there are 4 fabrics below it.
After cutting the pieces for 1 block, I decided I didn't want to make a whole bunch more – a little too much fussy-cutting. So, I set the fabric and the block aside.
Then, came the winter of 2010. It was cold. More days in a row of cold than we've ever experienced living in South Florida for 38 years. We bought a portable room radiator and used it more times in January thru March than I care to think about.
I knew just by looking at that radiator that it was going to be a dust-catcher! It needed a cover. I remembered that fabric and the lonely block.
I went into my EQ7 with my measurements for the radiator cover and started to design. I even scanned my fabric so I could use it in the design in EQ7. In order to make what looks like the panel print, I took a digital picture of the actual fabric and brought the image into EQ7. If you do that, make sure the image is “square” so that the proportion will be correct. You end up with some real silly looking images if you use rectangle-shaped images.I took a screenshot of the upside-down back portion of design and brought it into MS Paint. I am delighted with Windows7 version of MS Paint. I can manipulate images with ease and it doesn’t have the learning curve that the high-end graphics programs do.
Here’s the layout, in progress, on the design wall.
Here's all the layers pinned together, ready to be quilted.
After a couple of movies on the Hallmark Movie Channel, the "bones" of the cover are quilted and now the "fun quilting" begins …
I used Sulky Blendable 12 wt cotton thread for the quilting. I like the heaviness of that thread. Makes the stitching stand out. I use a 90/14 Topstitch needle for the 12 wt. thread.
I find I get a better fit if I wash & dry the piece after quilting and before sewing the sides together. Especially if I use cotton batting as I did in this project.
Dolphins on a radiator?
In South Florida - but of course!
Such a nice article, i enjoyed to read it.
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