Welcome to Scrap Basket Quilts!
I decided to start a blog so I could keep track of all the quilts I'm making/made and just share my love of making scrap quilts with the world.
I began quilting my senior year of high school. Well, maybe I technically started earlier while playing with extra quilt blocks from my mom's quilts. I do vaguely remember asking her to teach me and she had me use a needle and thread to sew the extra blocks together. I think it might've been a saw tooth star made with her extra half square triangles, but I could be wrong, I was probably about 7 or 8 at the time. I'm honestly not sure what happened to it, I don't think it was ever bound, but I still used it as a doll quilt regardless.
Fast forward to my senior year of high school. There was a Home Ec class where you could learn to sew. I tried to get into that class every year but it never happened. That's when I decided to teach myself to sew. My mom still had all her supplies but hadn't quilted in years due to life circumstances. I asked her if I could use her machine and fabric and she showed me the basics of using the machine and handed me a bunch of saved Quiltmaker magazines. Between those and YouTube which was just starting to get sewing videos, I taught myself to quilt.
Those first quilts were made from scraps and cheap Walmart or Joann fabric and I even used some old thin blankets as batting for some. My mom was a scrap quilter too, she inherited fabric from her grandma and her sister's mother in law who were also quilters. I'm still a scrap quilter for the most part but I enjoy the fabric bundles as much as the next person.
Two of those first quilts
I just dug out two of those first quilts I made. These were made with the intention of giving to any future children or nieces or nephews. I was too afraid of binding them so I used the birthing method on both. The blue one was "machine tied" by just stitching in the same place a few times. every few inches. Not sure what I was thinking then. The purple one doesn't even have batting, just backed in the same purple fleece that I bordered it in. It's definitely a snugly quilt. I did actually quilt that one in the ditch so I'm proud of myself there.
So what am I working on now? Well, I have a few on going current projects, but a bunch of UFOs. I hesitate to call them UFOs because they are on a list and I do want to finish them, they just aren't currently being worked on. So for starters, I'm working on hand quilting my Barnstar Sampler quilt by Shelley Cavana. I'm a little over halfway done quilting it and have a plan to finish it before Thanksgiving. I absolutely love this quilt and how it has turned out. Most of the fabric is from Lori Holt's Bee Vintage line, though there are some of her calicos mixed in as well and the neutral backgrounds are mostly her fabrics but also some from my stash.
Barnstar Sampler top
What else, I just finished quilting a jelly roll quilt that I made last year on national jelly roll day. I still need to finish sewing the binding on that, so the hand quilting might take a backseat for a few nights so the binding can be finished and I can check that one off on my list.
Debating on binding color, but a sneak peak of Pocket Change
As for what am I piecing at the moment, that would be a scrappy hourglass quilt. I received a jelly roll for my birthday back in May and it's been sitting on the corner of my cutting mat since then. I had no idea what I wanted to make with it. It was an Aunt Grace Calicos 2 jelly roll and I felt like it needed to make something vintage looking. I finally settled on pulling out my triangle ruler and cutting it up into quarter square triangles to make hourglasses. It won't be a huge quilt, and if I've done the math right will end up being a square quilt. But I'm not sure yet. I might end up adding sashing between the blocks, but there is also a good chance I just butt them up against each other and go for it.
That's about all that I'm actively working on. I'll probably share some of the other not currently working on but hesitate to call UFOs in the future.
Happy Quilting!