June is the month to sew our blue scraps at RSC. But before I work on the various block sets I'm making I decided it was a good opportunity to machine quilt Artic Blue. After all, this quilt has been all pinned up and waiting very patiently for a while now. It all started with a fat quarter of seals, penguins, polar bears, snow leopards, lynxes and birds included in in several boxes of fabrics I received when my elderly neighbour Dorothy went into a rest home. The plaid binding was a few strips of Dorothy's fabric too.
Artic wild life
This lovely fabric was much too interesting to cut up, I decided, so I added a few borders to make it into a cot sized quilt. The inner cream border was a piece of sleepy polar bear fabric, a gift from my quilty friend in Canada ages ago, it would go nicely too, I decided. Enough pieces of batting were Frankenbatted together to fit, and I used some pale blue wincyette (flannel) for the backing.
More polar bears
As the quilt top was already layered and pinned, it didn't take me too long to do some serpentine quilting stitches done.
14 comments:
It’s such a good feeling to finish a quilt! This cute quilt will be much appreciated by d’Hoover receives it. A Flannel back will make it very cozy.
Lovely cot quilt you've finished--nice work on this--it's always great to find borders in your stash!! Gemma looks so darling with that "over the shoulder" please pet me look;)))
Hugs, Julierose
the panel is very cute - flannel makes a nice warm quilt.
Wow, that fabric is so vibrant and what wonderful renditions of those animals. I just love what you did with it and now it is a most wonderful and cozy quilt! And sweet Gemma is so encouraging too.
That is a beautiful piece. You must enjoy working with it!
That is a sweet little quilt, Jenny! I love that arctic animals print - you're right, too fun to cut up. Congratulations on your finish!
What a lovely quilt. I don't blame you at all for not wanting to cut apart that fabric.
God bless.
I handstitch the binding of a quilt, too, but I can't say I love the process. =) Your baby quilt is lovely, Jenny. Such fun and fabulous fabric. It would've been a shame to cut it up. I can imagine a wee child will look at all the animals for hours. So much fun to be had imagining stories around all the animals.
Great finish.
That is a great finish and a lovely way to use that gorgeous panel.
As I've followed your makes, I'm seeing again and again that Dorothy's fabrics have gone a long way! You've used them well to make donation quilts, and this is another lovely example of your generosity. Good work, Jenny!
What a great fabric - a good way to show case it too. Isn't Serpentine useful?? LOL
Arctic Blue is a great finish!
You turned the panel into a warm cosy quilt Jenny.
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