Showing posts with label Chinese Checkers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese Checkers. Show all posts

Friday, February 21, 2014

A Reappearance

Last fall I participated in the Get Ready to Play series at I'm Feelin' Crafty, and I figured it was finally time to bring Chinese Checkers home to the blog.
If you missed the intro post and all the quilty details, click the links to check those out. Meanwhile, here's the tutorial. (pdf here)

Supplies needed for quilt top:
1 1/2 yards background fabric
1/3 each of 4 focus fabrics

Cut all fabrics in 4" strips across width of fabric.

Using a 60-degree triangle ruler, begin at one end of each strip and cut triangles with the 4" mark along bottom of strip, and top of ruler even with the top edge.


Continue cutting triangles across each strip, rotating the ruler with each new cut. (I got 14 triangles out of each strip.)


Continue until you have cut all the triangles you will need:
203 background triangles
18 triangles of one color (the teal in my case)
15 triangles of each of 3 colors

Lay out all your triangles to make the Chinese Checkers pattern. The side edges will look jagged at this point and will be trimmed off after quilting.

The piecing for triangles is done in diagonal rows, not horizontal.

 And here is the finished quilt top!

Next up is the infamous "Quilt and finish as desired." Your quilt top is now ready to be basted, quilted, sides trimmed (with your ruler 1/4" from edge of accent triangles), and bound, finishing at 36x45".
Baby-sized maybe, but this is the quilt I reach for every morning as I turn on my computer and sip my coffee. Hope you enjoy it too.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Another Round of Chinese Checkers

It was a relief to finally be able to show off Chinese Checkers yesterday as part of the Sew Ready to Play series. And though I already shared the tutorial at I'm Feelin' Crafty, I thought there might be more details you quilty-types would like to know.
First off, as I designed Chinese Checkers, I had a baby quilt in mind, and my research showed that these dimensions would be appropriate: a width of 36-45" and a length of 45-54". Mine ended up 36x48" which seemed right in the ballpark.

About the fabrics . . . the background is a lovely gray "textured solid" by Andover called "Sidewalk" - my first use of this fabric, and I'm a fan. As the name suggests, it gives really great texture to this quilt - both in tactility and visually - especially used with such vivid solids as Kona Bright Periwinkle, Free Spirit Citrine, and Michael Miller Cotton Couture Mermaid and Charcoal. I loved this combo when I chose it for this quilt, and I love it still.
For a backing, I chose "yonder star" from Alexander Henry - to me, it looked like marbles, which was perfect for obvious reasons. If budget allowed, I'd purchase several yards in every colorway - this print is just downright happy.
I don't want to neglect mentioning the batting I used though that's not something I routinely do. To be honest, the majority of the quilts I've made have been filled with Warm & White. And I have no complaints. But Pellon kindly sent me a few of their batts to sample, and the Legacy Bamboo Blend I used in Chinese Checkers was like a quilting holiday. Since it was the first time using the bamboo batt and the textured solids, I'm really curious if the combo was what made it such a pleasure to quilt. But I'll definitely be trying the bamboo blend again. The finished quilt is super soft and just plain comfy.

When it came to quilting, I stuck with the marble theme and free-motion quilted organic circles using Aurifil 50wt #2600 (light gray). The gray was just the right shade to stand out but not overpower - exactly the look I was after.
By referring to the circles as 'organic' I mean that I was shooting for circles but in reality purposefully made them 'sloppy'. The circles were about 3" wide, which made it slightly more difficult to control than when I'd done smaller ones, but still, I think this is a perfect 'design' for beginning free-motion quilters. I'm still working on consistency in stitch length, but am hoping that comes with more practice. Anyway - my genius marking method - to ensure some consistency in the size of the circles, I used the rim of a drinking glass as a template. The rim was too thick to leave an impression that lasted very long, so I used the back-end of a crochet hook to 'trace' around the glass. I would trace 12-15 circles, go quilt, trace more, etc. It worked well enough.
The quilt was bound in more of the gray textured solid to leave the 'game boards' as the focus, and then taken out on the requisite photo shoot. The setting was near a small lake in our neighborhood, sleeping duck and all.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Sew Ready to Play Chinese Checkers

Louise from I’m Feelin’ Crafty was one of the first friends I made when I joined the SMQG. When she invited me to participate in her Sew Ready to Play series where bloggers share sewing projects inspired by games, I couldn't resist. I come from a long line of game-players! 
My birth family loved to play family games - Rook, Aggravation, Yahtzee. And when I met hubby, his family was the same, playing Uno, Dominoes, and more Yahtzee. So it was only natural, when we were raising our own family, that we played alot of games too, Monopoly, lots of Uno, of course, and even more Yahtzee. When deciding what to make for Sew Ready to Play, I kept coming back to another game that was common among all these family groupings, and that was Chinese Checkers.

So here's a peek at what I came up with!
Please head on over to I'm Feelin' Crafty (cuz you are, right?) and check out my project! I've even provided a tutorial. All the other participants are listed right here. And I'll be back tomorrow with all the 'technical' details that us quilters know and love!