She is giving it to her grandmother for her 90th birthday.
She e-mailed me 20 pictures in sepia tone, spanning five generations.
She also bought the fabrics.
She e-mailed me 20 pictures in sepia tone, spanning five generations.
She also bought the fabrics.
To put the photos on fabric you can buy ready to print sheets at craft stores,OR
you can treat 100% cotton with Bubble Jet. It is a liquid you soak your fabric in and let dry. Then you iron freezer wrap, shinny side down towards fabric, it will stick to it.
This is the more cost effective way of doing it.
Using a rotary cutter with a paper blade (this would be a dull one, not a good one saved for fabric only), measure and trim the sheet to the size of 8.5" by 11", to run through the printer.
First I had the pictures printed at Wal-Mart and ran them through the printer, but they looked more black and white than sepia. So then I ran them directly from the computer to the printer. This helped the color greatly.
I cut strips of yellow, 2" wide and framed in each pictureand then squared them up leaving a 1" frame.
I laid them out on the bed. Because these pictures are vertical and horizontal it caused a bit of a problem, so on some of the squares I added an extra strip to make the rows even.
To do again, I would have cut the orange strips to be 5-6" wide,then squared them up so I would not have had to add the
extra strips to make the blocks large enough.
I sewed 5 rows of 4 squares. Evened them up, then sewed the rows together.Then square the whole quilt up.
Cut yellow strips 2" wide.Sewed these as a boarder to the quilt top,
sides first, then the top and bottom.
Spray baste the top to the batting.
After sandwiching the quilt together,
I stipple quilted it on the machine.














































Beautiful. I did one for my mom, and one for my mother in law, but used a much harder pattern… this looks so nice!
Does the spray really hold the batting together enough to not need to baste? That may make quilting close to heaven!
Kathy, I am so impressed! Thanks for sharing your knowledge, skills, and faith to all of us in blogland! My four daughters and I have been tremendously blessed and encouraged by you and your sweet daughters.
Sisters in Christ,
Rixja
Hey Rixja!
So good to hear from you!!!
Please send me your mailing address so I can get your name to you!
Thanks!
This has got to be the best idea ever! I have never heard of a photo quilt and didn’t know that printing onto the fabric in that way was possible. My parents will celebrate their 40th anniversary next year, and my in-laws will celebrate their 45th. I am going to try to make these quilts for them!
[...] can see a picture tutorial here on how to make a photo [...]
You do such good work. Thanks for all your sharing. I am learning so much about a lot of things from you, in my “autumn” years. Have been trying to get enough nerve to try the picture quilt.