With a plan in place, I got out my new quilting sewing machine and dug in.
Straight lines around the hand dyes and meandering lines around the batiks. Thread was another consideration so I chose to match the threads on the hand dyes and use a variegated gray on the batiks (most, if not all, had some gray in the pattern).
A hand-dyed binding made a great finish.
Now was the moment of truth. I knew Anita's hand dyes wouldn't bleed; she takes great care when making them. Adding three sheets of
eased my nerves a little but I was still nervous.A cold wash on a gentle cycle later it looked like success.
The white sheet is the before wash. I can't imagine what the quilt would have looked like if I hadn't used those sheets.
So, without further adieu. Here's the finished quilt.
I bought some fabric that you can use to make labels in your printer but after reading the instructions I was saddened to learn that you need to use Scotchgard so it won't fade in the wash. I didn't have any and the local fabric store didn't have the right kind.
Time to break out my fabric pens and design a label. This was almost as much fun as making the quilt. I used some Zentangles around the border, printed the pertinent information and voila, a label was born.
On to my next project. While I've started piecing a couple of quilts, I have some sewing projects that need to be done first.
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