I have a new finish and I am so excited to show it to you!
Meet Pesto Mushrooms :-)
Pesto Mushrooms |
When I was asked to make a Birthday Quilt for a 6-year old boy who loves the color Green and is fascinated with Mushrooms, I said Yes, please :-D
The Pesto (Green Fabrics) was the easy part. I wasn't sure how to incorporate mushrooms.
Pieced or Appliqued? Small or Large? A mix of large portabellas and tiny enokis?
I turned to EQ8 and found a template for mushroom applique. BINGO!!!! In EQ8, the dots are applique as well. I think I can do with using dotted fabric instead of adding each dot. Insert eye roll here.
EQ8 Mock-up |
I had fun raiding my box of green scraps and I found plenty of 2.5" strips in various lengths.
Variety of Greens!!! |
Chocolate Dots Added |
Making the base blocks was a simple process. Making the mushrooms was a fun albeit a multi-step process.
I transferred the three shapes - the mushroom cap, the gills, and the stem on to a thin cardboard from a box of cereal. I cut out the three shapes and traced them on to the Steam-A-Seam 2 sheets. Repeat 24 times :-) It took six sheets.
I then rough cut all 75 shapes out of the Steam-A-Seam 2.
Then I chose fun fabrics. Bright dots for the caps, light yellow/beige for the gills and brown for the stems. The next step required peeling the 75 paper slivers and sticking the sticky side (of Steam-A-Seam 2) to the wrong side of the fabrics.
Now I had to carefully cut the exact shapes, ensuring the slight curve of the mushroom caps and the gentle line of the gills. This took a while. Oh but it was so worth it.
The first Mushroom |
The second one! |
One 5" square |
Two Mushroom Caps (very carefully cut) |
Was I ready to add the mushrooms to my blocks? Not yet.
I arranged the base blocks on my design wall in the desired layout, making sure that no two white squares were touching.
I did not add the mushrooms to the individual blocks until after the layout was finalized. I wanted to make sure that all mushrooms were upright, whereas the blocks could be oriented in any way.
Once I was happy with the layout, I started adding the mushrooms, one column at a time.
Adding Shrooms |
I added one mushroom at a time, peeling away the paper, ironing and stitching in place and returning it to the design wall, before picking the next block.
Stitched in place |
Step 1 - Make the Base Blocks. Set aside.
Step 2 - Make the Mushroom Parts (Cap, Gills and Stem). Set aside.
Step 3 - Finalize the Layout, separating the white squares.
Step 4 - Working with one block at a time, place and iron the Mushrooms. Gills first, followed by the stem and lastly the cap on top of both (I messed up the first one). Stitch in place.
Oops NO!!! |
Step 5 - Stitch the mushroom blocks into a flimsy, making sure that the layout stays intact.
It is fun and looks simple but there are many steps and the order of the steps is important! Here is the completed quilt!
Honestly, I think the whole quilt is a tad too busy, with so many greens, chocolate dots and all the bright mushroom caps. I could have used fewer greens, or a solid brown instead of dots. But for a six-year old, who needs a lot of stimulation, it will do just fine.
Pesto Mushrooms finished at 50" square. The backing is pieced from a directional mushroom fabric. I added narrow brown strips (when joining two pieces) to avoid the weird look of an ill-matched pieced print. All mushrooms are upright - even in the backing!
Pieced Backing |
A yellow striped binding completes the look.
Yellow Striped Binding |
Let me show a few close-ups. These mushrooms are so stinking cute.
Labelled |
Bright and Dotty |
Thank you, Kaffe |
Who says mushrooms grow in damp, dark places. Look at these beauties thrive in the bright sun :-)
My Happiness Mushrooms |
Red and Pink |
And one last look!
Such Fun Guys! |
Once the quilt reaches its intended recipient, I will add another picture. I am hoping for big smiles. If Pesto Mushrooms made you smile, please let me know.
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