I don't think we had any idea of what we were getting into when we first started this, nor do we know how long we will continue, but we're starting to get quite a collection of mini quilts.
This weekend's challenge was borders. And it was extra challenging. I think there were a few reasons for this. First, we were busy on Friday night, so we had less planning time than we were used to. Second, this was a very broad and vauge topic, so searching for inspiration was a little more difficult. And finally, we're working with such small dimensions, lots of what you might do in a larger quilt is not really doable at this size. Nothing we had made thus far has had borders on it, so this was a completely new avenue of thought.
My friend decide to make something with a few "blocks" and then a few borders around it. This meant she was working with some very tiny pieces, since the finished size was 8.5"x6".
These pinwheel blocks ended up being 1" finished (craziness!).
She also made a pieced border for the outside which consisted of on point squares side by side. These were done by strip pieces (they can be seen in the previous picture and she claims that they were "pretty easy"). Here they are attached into the 4 sides.
I'm impressed that she managed to get things consistent enough to get the 4 corner squares to work out. She added an inner white border (which was mitred) and a middle colourful border (her colour scheme was based on a previous baby quilt that she has made). Her beautiful tiny piecing makes that white border look huge, but it's only just over an inch wide.
She machine quilted the outer pieced border and the inner blocks and then did some lovely hand-quilting in the white border.
Here is the cute back, which is fussy cut for some of those front blocks.
And the final product with a ruler for comparison, just to give you a sense of how tiny things are.
I played around with a few ideas before I settled on mine. When we were bouncing some ideas off of each other we kept talking about whether we should be starting with a border idea and then figure out what to put inside it or start with what was going to be on the inside and then build the border ideas around it. Mine kind of came together at the same time. When I started looking at ideas, I tried to pull out what I like about borders, or what I wanted to try, and one thing that stood out for me was that I really like borders that extend the quilt, and also quilts that extend into the borders. And when I started thinking about what could go inside my quilt that was focused on borders, what started out as a cheeky idea, turned out to be exactly what I needed. I started thinking about country borders, mostly as a joke at first, I mean there was no way I was going to fit a picture of Canada inside my borders in that small of a space. But then I was reminded of a trip we took in my childhood to Waterton National Park where we hiked from Canada down into Glacier National Park in the United States. I remember stopping at the border marker, where the trees are clear cut, and them lining up the Americans on their side and the Canadians on our side and having us shake hands.
This is the image that I used for inspiration for my quilt.
I started by making my scene. I first attached the top two sections of the path, and the top two sections of the mountain, and then cut a section for the path and attached it (after adding in the seam allowance). Once that was done, I added in the curved piecing between the mountain and the sky, and added the bottom tree section with its path.
I made it much larger than it needed to be (mostly I was worried about seam allowances and angles of the path and curves affecting things). Once that was done I trimmed it down and added a black border around it.
Originally I was just going to "insert" the black border into the scene and just have the scene continue on the other side of the black border. But I couldn't just cut it because the curved piece was not going to line up once the seams were sewn, and I didn't want to have to bother with figuring out how to recreate the same curve but with the seam allowance accounted for. And since the challenge was about borders, it felt like cheating to just add the black on top of the whole piece. So I did some more googling and out of the corner of my eye I noticed a pieced border that extended the colours/design of the interior, but wasn't an exact replica. The original one I saw was angled pieces radiating out from the middle. I decided to go with straight lines instead.
I made sure to change colours when the interior changed, and put half square triangles in the corners. This is what I originally had when I went to bed on Saturday night, but I wasn't happy with the dark colour being the highest thing on the mountain on the right, so on Sunday I took it apart and turned it around. I also decided while I had it apart that I would also like to follow the line of the mountain more. I think with the colour switch, it might have been okay as a straight line, but I didn't want to stitch it and change my mind and have to unpick it again (there was enough unplanned unpicking that had to happen I didn't want to deal with planned unpicking), so I changed the angle at the same time. I just eyeballed it, and had to do it a couple times, but in the end, I'm really glad I made the change
For quilting, I added a double line in the outer border, which also matched the colours of the section it was in, so that was a lot of ends to work in. On the mountain on the left, I think there were 3 or 4 stitches in each line and then 4 ends to work in just for those 3-4 stitches.
After that I struggled with whether or not I wanted to add in some tree quilting. I was happy with the abstract sections of the mountain, but I had originally pictured it having trees in the bottom section to help show the perspective. I did a bit of test quilting (it was in the wrong colours because I didn't have all the green thread I wanted in the first place — as it stands I did run out of at least one of my green threads — so I didn't want to waste any). But even that didn't help me decide what I wanted to do.
Eventually I decided that the whole point of these was to try new things and develop skills, and if I didn't try it, then I would never know if that was something I was capable of pulling off, but also something that would look good (sometimes you have to do something in order to figure out you don't want to do it). I was really worried about "ruining" my quilt, but I think I did a fairly good job, and I like the way it turned out.
I originally had the trees a little more spread out, but then I added one that was closer to the others than I had intended, so then I had to add a few more that were close to the others so that one didn't seem out of place. I had even "mapped" it out a bit, but I had to be fairly fluid with where they went and how they looked based on how the quilting went and how much thread I had. It also helps to reiterate a lesson I need to learn, which is that things don't have to "match" as much as I think they should/want them to. A couple of those threads when they were sitting with the other ones really stood out, and if I had more green thread options, I never would have chosen them, but they really helped give things some depth and variety.
I decided because of the borders/design that binding wasn't the way I wanted to go, so I tried my hand at facing again. I tried a slightly different technique this time, and each one has it's pros/cons. I also made the facing much skinner than last time (since I'm working on a much smaller scale. I decided not to worry too much about the quilting on the back on this one — I didn't have enough green thread to worry about it too much and I didn't want to ruin the front by worrying too much about the back.
I pieced and attached the border marker over top of the quilted border lines and the inner black border (before the facing) to finish the look.
This is definitely one of my favourites and I can definitely see where things I've done in other challenges helped me with this one (not necessarily particular techniques, though I did use curved piecing again, but also just some general confidence and ideas and willingness to try things).