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| Blocks made as Leader/Enders |
Goal number 11 on my June
list was to figure out which Bonnie Hunter project I would work on when my Mavens group meets the first and third Monday of the month. I decided that I would begin putting together the blocks for
Triple Treat. This was Bonnie's Leader/Ender project for 2022.
Every July, Bonnie releases a new Leader/Ender project each July. The idea behind Leader/Ender is to begin sewing on a short piece of fabric. This is the leader. When the end of the fabric approaches, begin piecing the unit of your pattern. Chain stitch 10 repetitions of that unit. End the chain with another strip of fabric. This is the ender.
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| Twenty blocks kitted and ready to go |
Starting and stopping in another fabric, helps fabric from being pulled into the hole in the throat plate. It helps me start and end with a better quarter inch seam. For big projects, it is an easy way to count how many units you've completed.
Many people use a scrap of folded fabric as their Leader/Ender. Bonnie decided that since she was stitching anyway, why not make a second quilt and make a better use of thread and scraps!
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| One block laid out |
I started Triple Treat in 2022 because this block was a good way to use the 2 1/2 inch colorful scraps that I couldn't categorized as one specific color. It also used some 1 1/2 squares which I had a lot. I cut enough parts to make 20 blocks.
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| Four blocks ready to stitch into one unit |
Many of these parts came from my friend
Martha's scraps. I kitted these parts which I stored in a zip lock bag. When I sewed on my project, I had one block of the Leader/Ender next to the machine. As I reached the end of a section, I'd stitch a unit of the Leader/Ender.
It didn't take long to cut the block pieces because I used the scraps that I had saved from other projects. Bonnie's
Scrap Users System is a good way to process the bits at the end of a project. When a pattern calls for a specific size unit, I check my pre-cuts to see what I can use. Over time, I cut and organized many kits. I did cut strips from neutrals; but, otherwise, all the pieces in this project are project leftovers.
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| Progress at the end of the sew day |
I bundled 12 blocks together as an easy way to track how many blocks I had made. I had about 120 blocks made so I decided it was time to begin setting the blocks together to see what size quilt I could make! This is the point in the project when the Leader/Ender becomes its own project!
I started selecting four blocks that had enough variety to sew together. As I finished a unit, I put it up on the design wall. At the end of the day, I had pieced 22 units and used 88 blocks! Stepping back from the design wall, I was amazed at how great all these bits looked together!
My friend Martha would be impressed with how many of her scraps went into this project She would also be shocked that I sewed such scrappy blocks! While I had 28 blocks remaining, I knew I wanted to make enough blocks so that quilt would be about 60 x 72 inches. This meant that I needed to cut 20 more blocks. I cut the parts and kitted them.
I'll sew them at our next Mavens Sew day. Now, I have a new Leader/Ender at the ready.
Four Patch Fun is the name Bonnie gave it when she released it last July. My Mavens group is calling it
Pink Lemonade. We exchanged pink and yellow strips to make this project.
Linking to Oh Scrap and Sew & Tell.
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