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Saturday, October 3, 2020

ALL of the Orphans

 Five years ago, I completed my term as president of the Prairie Quilt Guild in Wichita, KS. Our guild has a tradition that the outgoing president may ask for guild members to make a block for her. Having no idea how many blocks I would receive, I decided to ask for UFO blocks to challenge myself in setting them together. During the year, we had an unofficial theme of finishing UFO's.

I used to know how many I received but it was many. Quilters are generous and somehow I suspect a few guild members gave me all the UFO blocks they had! 

It took me 5 years but I just finished piecing and binding all 6 of the orphan block quilts I made. The sleeves and labels still have to be made and stitched on.

This is one of the latest finishes. Earlier, I named it the Quilt Math quilt because of all the crazy math I did which was usually wrong but I'm changing the name to "Two Gold Bars". It measures 65x79 and was machine quilted by Annette Haga of Bluebird Quilting. I hope you see the two vertical gold bars on either side of the medallion. I'm don't know why I didn't notice how prominent they are until after the quilting was done. I tried to think of a way to make them less noticeable without going to a lot of extra work but for now have simply decided to allow them to "be". Besides gold bars make me think of actual gold bars which sounds much better than quilt math!


The Orphanage Quilt was the last finish! I decided to put all the remaining blocks in one quilt. It measures 84x89 and was quilted by Annette Haga of Bluebird Quilting. I added some spool blocks which I won in a guild giveaway back in 2015. Its a combination of antique, vintage, hand pieced, machine pieced, and just about every style of block known. Very quirky but I rather like it! I bound the top and bottom along the double wedding ring block edges which is something I'd never done before. I doubt I want to do it again.

 

Patriotic Orphan was one of the first orphan block quilt finishes (1996) and was supposed to resemble a flag. I need to do some searching for the name of the quilter of this wall hanging. It measures 53x75. I think this is the only red, white, and blue quilt I've made. I like the colors but I've just never made one before.

 

This is Orphan Heart, made in 2016, measures 82x90" and was quilted by Pam and Kurt Sackschewsky. It was inspired by a Jen Kingwell's "Gypsy Wife" quilt I saw on Pinterest. She now has a pattern out called "Boho Heart" which would be much easier to make than to follow my technique. I just put blocks on my design wall in a heart shape and then filled in the empty spaces.


 Utility Orphan which you've seen before, about 55x55" and quilted by me. Does anyone know the name of this block?

I don't have a name for this one yet so until I do, I call it the "Orange and Purple Orphan", measuring about 72x72". Quilted by Annette Haga of Bluebird Quilting. This was also made back in 2016. I think its a good example of adding Kaffe Fassett fabrics to traditional color blocks. I think the quilt blocks are unified by his fabrics. Before I started quilting with his fabrics, I probably wouldn't have put the color orange in this quilt but I like it!


This is my supervisor who was watching while I photographed quilts on my design wall yesterday! He's sitting on top a wall unit about 6 1/2 feet tall.

Until next time, Mayleen

3 comments:

audrey said...

Wow! Random Sampler quilts are hard, not just because of balancing color etc., but because of that Math thing! You did good! I really, really like the second one. So rich looking and interesting because of how you did the binding. And the heart one is very sweet. Might have to try that myself some day!

Exuberantcolor/Wanda S Hanson said...

The utility orphan: the closest block I can find in block encyclopedias is Clay's Choice. The pinwheel center is spinning in the opposite direction on your blocks and the coloring in the plain squares is placed differently.
All of these turned out great and I applaud you sticking with it until you used all of the blocks.

Sandy said...

Dang, Mayleen, that’s a lot of blocks! Congratulations and good job corralling them all into these wonderful quilts.