Schnitzel and Boo Mini Swap (round 4)

In November, I shipped off my Schnitzel and Boo Swap package. My partner, Margaret, told me that she likes interesting animals. And she had some Tula Pink in her inspiration mosaic. I immediately knew that I had to do something to feature a purple Tula raccoon and had a great time pulling Tula fabric to coordinate.

Margaret also had a stripey 8-point star in her mosaic, so I decided to design my own 8-point star with an octagon in the middle. I used EQ7 to create my paper pieced segments to go around my octagon and fussy cut the raccoon to fit in the middle. Of course, adding eight segments around an octagon created y-seams. Now, I don't know the "proper" way to go about this, so I'll tell you the "how I just made it up" way.

Once I had pieced all 8 outer sections (and leaving the paper on), I attached each of them to the center octagon only. Then I went back and pieced the seams connecting the segments. Two demerits for not changing to white thread for those white to white seams. :-/ Overall, I'm really happy with the process and result. Then came the quilting.

Sometimes I have this thing about not wanting to quilt on top of some part of my design to not detract from the pretty, pretty fabric. Yeah, I need to get over that. This time, I decided to just quilt the white background and chose graffiti quilting. I started with an M for Margaret in the lower right. I was a little rusty, but I did a little graffiti doodling to warm up and then jumped it. I'm looking forward to doing some graffiti quilting on a larger quilt, using a larger scale, but I really love the look of the dense quilting on this mini.

I attached my lazy mini quilt label to the back with fusible before quilting. I figure a wall hanging won't be washed much, so it works. I was so happy to send it off to Margaret and am so glad she loved it!

 

Here's the awesome mini I received from Melissa for the swap. I like to encourage my swap partners to try something new and to make something they love. I was so excited to receive this beautiful mini! I love that it's not something I would have made myself. Just look at all those awesome curves! And the amazing quilting! I found the perfect place for it next to our colorful wedding ketubah in our dining room. Score! (P.S. I really need to change the quilt on the right to be another colorful 24" mini instead of this smaller one.) All the extras she sent were so thoughtful as well. A lovely zipper pouch, fun office supplies, chocolate, and neat wind up toys for the kids and I to enjoy. Thank you again, Melissa!

(Pardon the wonky shadow from the light fixture. ;-))

Thank you for visiting!

I'm linking up to Finish It Friday, TGIFF at Quokka Quilts, Fabric Frenzy Friday, Link-a-Finish FridayNeedle and Thread Thursday and Adrienne's 2015 Q4 Finish Along post. See all my Q4 goals here.

22 thoughts on “Schnitzel and Boo Mini Swap (round 4)

  1. Sherry Duarte

    Loved your mini-quilt, the Racoon in the center was adorable. Is graffiti quilting a planned pattern, or free form. You described it well as dense--well done.

    Reply
    1. sarah

      Post author

      Graffiti quilting is free-form. I have a number of different types of patterns in my arsenal (arrows, triangles, spirals, etc.) and just start with one and make something different next to it. I think the hardest part of doing this style of quilting was learning how to travel between designs when I needed to get to another area. Thanks for visiting, Sherry.

      Reply
    1. sarah

      Post author

      I tried to do daily practice a while back (first on paper, then by machine) and that really helped me initial get it, though I didn't keep it up with the daily practice as long as intended. Now I've used it on a couple small projects. When I practiced I worked on a solid fabric on fusible fleece with contrasting thread so I'll be able to cut up that panel to make zipper bags.

      Reply
    1. sarah

      Post author

      Thanks Bernie. I was a very happy swapper! My next swap is the Rainbow Mini Swap... how can you go wrong with rainbows? :-)

      Reply
    1. sarah

      Post author

      Thanks, Abigail. Graffiti quilting is a lot of fun, and not too hard to get the hang of. You should definitely try it!

      Reply

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