Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Start of the Flannel Elk Quilt

Item 19 on the list to the right is the Flannel Elk Quilt.  This has been a vague concept since I found the following flannel in what was one of my favorite quilt shops (The Great American Quilt Factory--which has unfortunately since closed) over two years ago:


I fell in love with it.  Unfortunately, The Great American Quilt Factory didn't have any of the fabric left on the bolt.  The only fabric left was in a pack of 6 fat quarters.  I bought it.  I wasn't sure at the time what I was going to do with it, but I bought it anyway.

I still wasn't sure what I was going to do with the fabric when I finally found a yard of the fabric in a quilt store in Kansas on the way to a family reunion.  But, it has been in the back of my mind.

Last November, I bought cream fuzzy fabric and a chocolate brown fuzzy fabric for the quilt.

Finally, a few weeks ago in Colorado Springs, I found the last piece of fabric.

There was still the question of design.  This question was answered Sunday night when I was looking at the fabric.  Because it is mainly flannel, I didn't want to do too complicated of a design--flannel is thicker than regular quilting cotton and therefore, can be a bit more bulky at the seams.  I settled on alternating a diamond pattern with a plain square of the last flannel that I purchased.  I decided to start on the diamond squares.

Using my new handy-dandy Accuquilt GO fabric cutter, I cut out triangles of two different fabrics (placing right sides together on the cutter).  After carefully pealing a pair of triangles from the mat, I sewed the triangles together, and repeated 4 times.  After ironing the seams, I had the following:


By flipping the top squares over the lower squares (keeping the right sides together) and sewing along one side, I wound up with two halves of the final square:


Then, it was just putting the right sides together and sewing one more seam to get the first square:


Several more squares were soon to follow:



I now have 9 squares complete.  But, as you can see by the second to the last photo, it is messy working with the brown fuzzy fabric...

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