Ok, show of hands, who has scraps? Or make that Capital S Scraps, as in a Scrap-berg or Scrap-bank (nice
wintry thoughts) taking over your sewing room? I know I do, so I decided to experiment with a
railfence block to try using some up. The square above is the modern variation I came up with. I call it a Scrappy Random
Railfence block. It was easy and fun to put together. Here's how I did it in case you want to try too ...
Dig in your scraps for any 2.5 inch strips you have left from anything -- binding bits, jelly roll leftovers, etc. If you have 5 inch charm squares left, just slice them in half. Then take all your scraps of other sizes and get cutting. You need lots and lots of 2.5 inch strips of many different fabrics. Even cut your little pieces, as short bits will be needed too.
Take your 2.5 inch strips and cut them in random lengths between 2 and 10 inches long. Cut, cut, cut.
Start randomly grabbing any two pieces and sew them together. Chain piecing will help this go faster. Really try not to think about what pieces you are using, just grab them and really mix up fabrics and lengths. The focus here is
Random.
After you've joined some in groups of two, keep joining those groups. Keep adding and adding.
Keep going until you have a giant long piece, twenty feet long, fifty feet long, whatever -- the longer it is the more variety you will have to choose from when making your squares, and the more squares you will be able to make.
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Press your seams. I press mine open, just because that's what I prefer. Do it however you like.
Start cutting 12.5 inch strips from the long piece. Cut them all consecutively. Just let your ruler fall wherever. Again, the emphasis is on
Random.
Cut, cut, cut.
If you come to a part where a cut is going to land right on a seam, or annoyingly close to it, then just cut that little bit out and keep going.
Soon enough you will have a great selection of strips made up of random bits of patchwork. Oh so pretty and scrappy!
Pick six strips, or if you want to be even more random, grab any six strips and line them up side by side. Sew them together using a 1/4 inch seam.
Voila! Your block will now be 12.5 inches square. As a finishing touch, I would suggest stay stitching the edge.
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Now make a whole pile more!
When it comes time to lay out your quilt, arrange your squares so they alternate between strips going horizontally and strips going vertically.
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If you try this, I'd love to see what you make.
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Happy Quilting!
25 comments:
YOU. ARE. BRILLIANT!
I would have never thunk how to do this but am totally going to earmark my jelly roll leftovers for this purpose... soon I will have a whole wall of containers collecting bits to turn into Riel's blocks! Thanks for another great and lively and beginner-do-able idea!!!
Hello Riel! That's really great way to make blocks with tiny patches! Thank you for showing - I love to use small scraps!
Sunny wishes!
I like it! I'll make a block today and bring it with me to show it to you tomorrow. My dining room table is covered with scraps, but soon I can say, not any more.
Blue Chickadee
I am linking this to SewSara's blog for the Scrap Swap idea linky. thank you for sharing.
Greetings, Riel! I found your blog through your Mother's blog, which I visit daily! Your blog is also fantastic! I' m going to try your technique for using scraps, since I have a lot growing in my tiny sewing room! Thanks for the very helpful tutorial and the inspiration!
Great tutorial. Our styles are SO similar. I've bookmarked your blog so I can continue reading your posts.
No no no no no! These are NOT the quilts I want to see LOL! Not a scrappy strippy or a preemie...but a red and pink quilt! :) First, you tease me then you make me wait! LOL! Reil!! Love the legs on the preemie quilt!
Hi, Riel- just wanted to make sure it's ok to add you to the list of blogs I follow! Thanks! I still have a stubborn cold I can't seem to shake, so I'm sitting by the wood stove, cutting 2.5" strips!
Love this idea! Thanks, it might help to tame the overflowing basket of off cuts!
What a cute block those scraps make, I may be playing with this today.
Ooooo, nifty! Thank you for the great idea and tute! I see a doll quilt in my head..
oh this is great! im working on a project right now- make a quilt out of all donated or old fabric, buying nothing new! and i'm totally going to use this! thanks!!
I love the vibrant color combination. Thanks for the fresh concept. I think I'm going to have to try this one.
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I love what you did here! I was searching for scrap inspiration and I found it here. While I don't quilt I will be putting this idea into some other sewing projects. So much easier than cutting everything into a certain size block. Thanks for sharing.
Today several of us worked on making one of these quilts, which we are going to donate to victoria's quilts organization. (www.victoriasquilts.ca). We had a great time slashing our stash and chopping up jelly rolls in order to make 3 mega jelly rolls in order to chop it up again. Oh the joy of quilting!! and of eating the pot-luck lunch that went along with our day out,post snow storm :)
Thanks for the great tutorial! I got a little carried away...
http://arslongavitabrevisblog.blogspot.com/2011/04/scrappy-goodness.html
hi! just wanted to let you know that i posted about this DIY today on my blog! i love your helpful hints btw, you have a great blog!
What a wonderful idea! I have tons of scraps and they would be great used in this manner!
Thank you!
Love this - thank you!
; )
I had read this post a while back and then couldn't remember where I read it. So glad I found it today. This is definitely going to be my next quilt. I have way too many scraps and I have already give bag fulls away.
This TOTALLY speaks to me!
I love this idea! Thank you.
I've become a follower, too.
Great blog!
Deborah
Glad to know I'm not the only one that presses seams open when quilting...I have never admitted it for fear I was doing something wrong. It just makes sense to me.
Great idea and tutorial. Had to make one block up right away. Question: should you be cutting 12 1/2 inch pieced strips to sew together for a block that measures 12 1/2 inches including seam allowance?
I had to include a link to your tutorial on my blog today.
http://www.heatherpearson.com/2012/03/needlework-tuesday-its-too-gorgeous.html
Thanks Heather. Yes, typo by me. That is my 12.5 inch ruler cutting the bits, so yes, 12.5 inch. Corrected now.
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