The sewing group I joined when I first moved
to northern Alberta no longer meets but
we still manage a retreat each year.
I took along the second hopscotch box
to work on. There were about 1/3 of
blocks made up so I had a pleasant afternoon
stitching away on twosies to get it underway.
Then, I arrived at the edges.
The original pattern shows a confetti like
border but I wanted the blocks to flow
into the border and appear to be floating.
That meant the blocks touching the edge
have to have the border fabric added.
There were three choices for the border fabric.
Once again the winner was the one with
enough quantity! It was going to be tight
but the math didn't lie.
The winner was sliced up,
and all the edge blocks were modified to
flow into the border.
Only a few snuck by without their border
partners, but they were soon altered.
Tada! Here it is in all its wonder.
I am not sure if the center really floats but the
thought was nice.
The border fabric was the perfect amount!
Just a few scraps remaining!
Stay safe and sew on!
Linking up with :
The top does float and the border works for all the fabrics. Love it
ReplyDeleteYay, that is what I was trying to do!!Thank you !
DeleteI love how you extended the center into the border, nice work!
ReplyDeleteIt was fun to do too!
DeleteVery nice! A fun quilt!
ReplyDeleteThe different fabrics make it interesting too! Thank you !
DeleteThat is a fun quilt design with all the scrappy color! And I love the border fabric - perfect for this quilt!
ReplyDeleteI'd say you were very successful at making the center float. Very pretty quilt.
ReplyDeleteYou have to love when there is a little excess versus a little shy fabric at the end. Great idea to modify the border such that hopscotch blocks appear to float.
ReplyDeleteFun quilts. I love the scrappy look and the border is perfect.
ReplyDeleteI love how you did that border! Perfect!
ReplyDelete