Thursday, June 4, 2020

T-shirt Quilt



This quilt top has been two years in the making. The t-shirts belonged to Toni the wife of my ex boss. She was an amazing person. One of those people that was just plain fun to have around. After she passed away suddenly I told her husband Dean that I would like to make a t-shirt quilt for him. Well things in my life were in constant flux and I was moving around a good deal, living in the RV in 5 different states. I trimmed the t-shirts right after I got them and put them in a project bag with the fusible interfacing and it traveled around with me. It kept nagging at me to get it started.

Every February I go to a quilt retreat every year in Phoenix Arizona. I decided that my main project would be to get a start on this quilt. I went to Hobby Lobby and bought yardage of blue Kona cotton for the sashing and the border. I also got a yard of yellow Kona cotton for an accent. I now had everything I needed to bring this to the retreat.
My friend Cathy had done a t-shirt quilt recently and she was sitting near me so I decided to just ask her to give me the inspiration to begin. Her suggestion was to arrange the pieces up on the design wall and figure out what would go where. After some time I can up with this as a beginning. Things moved around as the design evolved but at least I had a plan. Cathy's biggest piece of advice was to start with a column so I began in the center.




The top center quilt was a giant wolf face. I guess it must have been Toni's favorite because it had holes in it. The area around the wolfs mussel was not only full of holes but really worn thin so I decided to just trim that off and cut right above the holes. There was a polyester nightgown that had sleepy bears with a pink background. I thought it would be fun to incorporate the nightgown into the design sprinkled around the quilt. I began by cutting out a bear and backed the fabric with interfacing to give it a bit of stability. Then came the tiny pinwheel which set the stage for more pinwheels and pops of yellow. I started at the top and worked down adding a few fun elements like the yellow strips to the sashing in the two blocks near the bottom and a little border of the pink nightgown to the cow at the bottom. That little border around the cow took quite some fiddling and quite a chunk of time. Once I had the center column I packed this project up to finish at home. I pulled it back out during quarantine and was determined to get it finished.

There was a baseball cap with the t-shirts and this was the hardest thing to figure out. I cut the plane out the best I could. 
 
There was foam on the back and it was all fused together so separating all of the layers was not going to happen. I finally decided to frame it in an oval shape as there was not enough for a rectangle around it.

I made a paper template and trimmed it into an oval shape. I needleturned the oval cutout to the plane piece.



I was very pleased with the final result!

I just laid it all out on the bed and decided to work on the right column next. I added more pops of the yellow fabric and some more of the pink nightgown.
With the yellow I just looked at what I had and tried to sprinkle pops of yellow around the quilt and do similar things to what I had already done. The little squares here are an example. They mirror the squares on the motorcycle block.

I worked on the left column balancing elements that I had done on the right side.


I finally got the columns done and needed a bit more yellow accent but not too much for the final border. Humm.............more pinwheels. I decided to just sew them up and see how they looked. I spent a lovely morning enjoying the view out of the widow chain sewing them in three sizes.

The moment of truth had arrived and I previewed the pinwheels on the top right and bottom left. Yep I really loved how that looked. Just enough to draw the eye across the quilt but still very simple and not fussy.


I will definitely use this border idea again for future quilts. I really love the asymmetry. It also mirrors the little squares around the motorcycle and chocolate world blocks.


And then for the back. Everything was shut down and I did not want to rely on mail order for fabric that might be out of stock or take weeks to arrive so I dug thru the small amount of fabric stash I had with me in quarantine. Most of my fabric was back up in the RV in Colorado. I found a large piece of batik but it was just not big enough. Humm...............maybe piece some big blocks in the back to get just that little extra I needed. I had pinwheels on the front so dug thru the stash some more and found a few extra pieces that were large enough to cut giant triangles. I just worked one step at a time with the fabric and did not cut out all the pieces in advance. In the end I had only scraps of the big piece left. I always like fun backs and am pleased with how this turned out.

Now the next step is quilting and binding. I have already made the binding so once the quilting is done I can get that on. My quilt machine is up in Colorado and we are in New Mexico for a few more weeks. We are planning on going back up to Colorado in a few weeks so this quilt just needs to wait a little longer for the finish but at least the hard part is done. For me quilting is my happy place so once I get this on the machine it will be fun!

4 comments:

Ramona said...

I love how you made your t shirt quilt. I just found a pile of t shirts that belonged to my younger daughter and I had planned on making a quilt a number of years ago. She would still like one, so I may use your idea. When I've made them before, graph paper and a lot of time was involved. The idea of creating columns is a good one! Your quilt is so fun and colorful.

Daryl @ Patchouli Moon Studio said...

Hola! I found you through Wendy's blog on her Peacock Party linky party. I also live in the Land of Enchantment and have been blogging since 2008, so small world!

For the love of geese said...

Great job on the tshirt quilt and I love that you added pinwheels. Thank you for stopping by my blog today.

Jenny said...

You have done a wonderful job with the tee shirt memory quilt, they are so personal and special to the one left behind. I have made a couple myself over the years, and working out what goes where is always the tricky bit.