Tu-Na Quilts: Catching Some Z’s

Welcome to Day 26 of the 30 Quilt Blocks in 30 Days Blog Hop. It happens to be my day to show off my project and it’s also my daughter’s birthday—Happy Birthday Emily!

buttonI hope you’ve been following Carla each and every day in April as she features a blogger and their project using one of her free block designs. She also has a giveaway going on that you can enter every day. Thank you Carla for designing these wonderful blocks and for hosting this blog hop.

These blocks are quick and easy to make. They would make a great quilt project for a beginner quilter or for charity quilts. Pillows make great projects for beginner quilters or for gift giving. 

You can find the pattern for this block here. You can find a complete list of all 30 blocks and project designers for this hop at the end of this post.

tunaquilts 2aIn less than 2 hours, I had 4 blocks cut out, sewn back together, and had started the quilting process. Tu-Na Helper shakes his head over that idea (cutting up perfectly good fabric only to sew it back together again).

tunaquilts 12a

I accidently cut all the rectangles 1/4″ wider than directed.

I had a few blunder’s along the way and I learned some things in the process. 

tunaquilts 10a

Which way to orient the blocks? This way…

tunaquilts 11a

or this way?

My mama always says, “You don’t want to hear the word “oops” from your surgeon but it’s ok if it comes from a quilter.” At least our mistakes are not life threatening and most can be fixed.

tunaquilts 9a

I pressed the seams toward the dark fabric and alternated pressing the rows so they would interlock making it easy to match the few seams that needed to be matched.

I grabbed a can of spray baste, the top, and a piece of batting and made quick work of connecting the two. I laid a piece of blue painter’s tape from one corner to the diagonal corner to help me sew that first seam as straight as I could (oops, I forgot to take the picture). After completing the first two rows of diagonal quilting, I remembered something…….!

tunaquilts 8a

My quilt sandwich was missing it’s bottom! I had forgotten to add the muslin backing onto the batting. It’s nothing that a little more spray baste can’t solve so I added it now. 

I then went back to quilting.

tunaquilts 7a

Once I’ve stitched the first seam, I use my guide to help me stitch lines that were 3/4″ apart. Once I’ve completed stitching all the lines going one direction, I reposition the tape on the other two corners, sew that first line, and continue stitching using the seam guide.

It would only be seen whenever I remove the pillow cover for washing. Since Tu-Na Helper rarely does the laundry, I would be the only one to know that my backing is missing two rows of quilting.

tunaquilts 6a

And now YOU also know! Oops.

The crosshatch is my favorite quilting method for small projects.

tunaquilts 5a

Doesn’t it look pretty?

Tu-Na Helper helped pick out a nice, plump, 20″, pillow insert.

tunaquilts 4a

Even though the label says I can cut it off, I still feel like I’m breaking the law in doing so.

In just a few hours, I had a new pillow for my living room.

tunaquilts 13a

If you look closely at the picture on the wall of my entry behind the couch, you will see that I have oranges, yellows, greens, and reds in my house.

I made an envelope-style back. I accidently cut the back 1/4″ too small. Oops! I fretted and fumed. While I was quilting the top, I planned on how I should piece the back to make it fit and look good, too. Luckily for me, the top shrunk 1/4″ during the quilting process making my back pieces now the perfect size.

tunaquilts 14a

The two color back is a design element. I didn’t have enough of either of these two fabrics to use for the back so I had to make it this way. I allowed for a 5″ overlap.

This block is called Catching Z’s. I think the name is very fitting.

tunaquilts 3a

I caught Tu-Na Helper “trying out” his new pillow.

Be sure to visit Carla’s blog, Creatin’ in the Sticks, to enter the giveaway for some fantastic Tula Pink fabric.

Here’s the block schedule with direct links to all the project designer posts for this hop. The links for the Blocks take you directly to Carla’s tutorial for that particular block.

Date Project Designer Block
April 1st Creatin’ in the Sticks Block 1- 4 Patch
April 2nd Kwilty Pleasures Blog Block 2 – Double Stuffed
April 3rd Sew Incredibly Crazy Block 3 – Baby in a Corner
April 4th SBD Embroidery and Quilting Block 4 – Dutch Door
April 5th What About Rheema Block 5- Surrounded
April 6th Quilted Delights Block 6 – Tacked Up
April 7th Joy Studio Block 7 – Stripper
April 8th Just Sew Quilter Block 8 – Staggered
April 9th Quiltscapes Block 9 – Topsy Turvy
April 10th beaquilter Block 10 – Chunky Pinwheel
April 11th Freemotion by the River Block 11 – Painted Window
April 12th krislovesfabric Block 12 – Broken Cinder Block
April 13th MooseStashQuilting Block 13 – Reaction
April 14th Quilts by Joanne Block 14 – Median Strip
April 15th Persimon Dreams Block 15 – Center of Attention
April 16th Needled Mom Block 16 – Bounce
April 17th Just Let Me Quilt Block 17 – Sweet Sixteen
April 18th Life in Scrapatch Block 18 – Yeah Eights
April 19th Quarter Inch Crafter Block 19 – Weave
April 20th Seams To Be Sew Block 20 – Classic
April 21st Just Let Me Quilt Block 21 – Spot
April 22nd Something Rosemade Block 22 – Cross Walk
April 23rd Thimblemouse and Spouse Block 23 – Opposites Attract
April 24th Books, Hooks, Sticks, etc. Block 24 – Possibility
April 25th Words & Stitches Block 25 – Camper Window
April 26th Tu-Na Quilts, Travels, and Eats Block 26 – Catching Z’s
April 27th Selinaquilts Block 27 – Broken Stripes
April 28th QuiltFabrication Block 28 – Stockade
April 29th  Lakeshore Stitches Block 29 – Dovetail
April 30th Creatin’ in the Sticks Block 30 – Slow Tee

If you enjoyed your visit here and would like to receive notices when I publish again, please choose one of the ways to subscribe: email, WordPress, or Bloglovin, located on my sidebar.

What I Learned Today:

  1. Read directions twice so I only have to cut once.
  2. It’s a good thing I am not a surgeon.
  3. It’s ok if quilting mistakes happen; they can be fixed or become design elements.
  4. Sometimes things have a way of working themselves out.
  5. Do not cut out the back pieces for a pillow until the quilting is done and the front has been measured again.

Question: Tell me about a mistake you’ve made. Oh, I’ve made plenty but somehow all my other ones (not included here) have been forgotten. Mistakes are what usually makes me fold up my projects and tuck them away to finish later. I need to learn to look past some of those mistakes and keep on working.

Completing this pillow, completes one of my goals for the 2018 Quarter Two Finish-A-Long. My original list can be found here.

Thanks for stopping by and do come again.

Karen, Tu-Na Quilts

Linking to:

2018 Finish-A-Long at She Can Quilt when it becomes available

Finished or Not Friday at Busy Hands Quilts

Can I Get a Whoop Whoop? at Confessions of a Fabric Addict

Thank Goodness It’s Finished Friday held at Celtic  Thistle Stitches

Show Off Saturday at Sew Can She

Main Crush Monday at Cooking Up Quilts

Monday Making at Love, Laugh, Quilt

48 thoughts on “Tu-Na Quilts: Catching Some Z’s

  1. Leslie Schmidt

    Your pillow looks great. I also love the cross-hatching quilting pattern. I think it looks so impressive! My biggest mistakes are all cutting errors. I know it can make for a design choice, but it still is frustrating to think I goofed again!

    Like

    Reply
  2. Becca // Pretty Piney

    Oh, the mistakes I’ve made! The most recent was yesterday when I was quilting a wall hanging and didn’t notice that it picked up a scrap of fabric until I had finished. There was a dark brown patch quilted right onto the back of the beige, pink, and blue backing fabric! Oops.

    Like

    Reply
  3. Becky

    I make so many cutting errors. I’m also finding spots where my seam alliance shifted on a fabric, after I’ve started quilting and can’t really fix it.

    Like

    Reply
  4. Lisa Marie

    Your pillow looks great! I’ve made all kinds of mistakes while sewing and quilting and I generally fix them right away. The frustrating ones are the ones I don’t notice until I take a photo of the finished project. I hate when that happens! I am usually bad to point out the flaws, but recently watched a video from Angela Walters that said we quilters need to stop pointing out our mistakes to those who don’t notice them. So I’m not going to say any more about my little “oops” moments!

    Like

    Reply
  5. rl2b2017

    Hi Karen,
    What a great finish for that block, and what a fun block. Perfect for Ta-Na Helper to nap on. Heck, I make mistakes all the time. That’s why a seam ripper was created in the first place, and I would hate to deny it a job now and then. No one will ever see those couple of missing quilting rows, and I agree – the crosshatch pattern is one of my very favorites. And it’s in my wheelhouse! ~smile~ Roseanne

    Like

    Reply
  6. Rosalind Gutierrez

    Which oops shall I list….the other day I sewed a row together and the muted grey block was sewn on backwards. Yes, thank goodness we can redo things. Wow! on your cross hatching.

    Like

    Reply
  7. davemelvanolan

    Nice! You could link that up with 2018 color challenge. 😉 Happy birthday Emily! Mistakes? Many! But I’ll never tell! haha…

    Like

    Reply
  8. Carla

    Oh, Karen, your pillow looks so inviting and it’s fun to see Tu-Na Helper enjoying it. A fantastic way to use the Catching Z’s quilt block. Thank you, so much, for your post in the 30 Quilt Blocks in 30 Days Blog Hop and Quilt Along. You always inspire and have great ideas.
    I always have a flaw somewhere. I’ve learned to call them my designer tweaks. I need to put my mark in it somehow. lol

    Like

    Reply
  9. piecefulwendy

    I have a quilt top that’s been finished, and waiting for quilting, for quite some time. The other day I was looking at it and realized I’d flipped a few of the blocks. Oops. However, there’s enough movement in the quilt that they are noticeable unless you know to look for it. I’m not tellin’ what quilt it is, by the way, and I’m just leaving it as is. I love your pillow, and apparently Tu-Na Helper does too!

    Like

    Reply
  10. Kathy E.

    You had me giggling while reading today! Sometimes it seems a project is just doomed from the start. I’m glad your pillow was able to “correct” itself and turn out so lovely! Tuna Helper is certainly in agreement! One big blunder I made early on was using too many layers of fusible interfacing and the darned quilt top is so stiff is almost stands against the wall on its own. It is nicely tucked away for some future generation to wonder about.

    Like

    Reply
  11. Judy B

    I love your Catching Z’s pillow. All your “oopsies” were fixable, that’s the best part. I hate it when I cut a rectangle 1/4″ too small instead of too big. Your crosshatching looks great! I need a new pillow, I may steal your idea!

    Like

    Reply
  12. Joan

    That is so cute as a pillow. I almost had a heart attack when I saw you cut off the label from the pillow you bought. Glad to hear I am not the only one who looks around to see if the pillow police are coming after me! hahahahaha

    Like

    Reply
  13. Shirley Clark

    I love this design and the name for your pillow! I’ve made too many mistakes to even mention in this little block. Happy Birthday to your Emily! My Emilys birthday was the 21st.

    Like

    Reply
  14. Melody Lutz

    My mistake was not realizing how to mark satin and silk for a trapunto ring bearers pillow, I committed to providing for my brothers wedding. Panic set in. In sharing my panic with a crafty coworker, she said use the purple quick air erase marker, put the pillow in a dark closet until I get it finished. WHEW! Saved! Thank you for sharing today.

    Like

    Reply
  15. somethingrosemade14

    Oh Karen, this was such a fun read. You bring meaning to lots of wrongs do make a right because your pillow turned out gorgeous, it has a modern retro look and looks perfect on your couch. Thanks for the tips, funny but useful. The 30 day blocks are wonderful to make and what a great idea to make a pillow.

    Like

    Reply
  16. Patricia Ludwiczak

    I made a beautiful Mariner’s Star and everybody loved it . It wasn’t until after I had quilted it and saw it on the wall I realized I had sewn some of the right hand sections to the left and the pattern was off.
    No one noticed but me – every time I looked at it! It bothered me so much I appliqued pieces on to the quilt to fix the pattern. Now I love it too!

    Like

    Reply
  17. Janet T

    Great question. Years ago I had tried a EPP project. The book came with a printed hexie sheet. I put it on top of the fabric and cut out all the hexies. It would have helped to read the book first. The strip of hexies I made were a lot smaller than they should have been. It is now in a UFO box. If I ever need a doll quilt, I will have one partially done.

    Like

    Reply
  18. Barbara Mitchell

    I love reading your blog…I am trying to learn that I do not need to be a perfectionist with my sewing projects…….my 10 years of 4 H sewing and having it judged is still on my mind. The pillow looks great on your couch…love your decor…..

    Like

    Reply
  19. selina

    The pillow is a great idea for these blocks, yours is beautiful. Love that it has alread y been successfully “head” tested. The crosshatch quilting gives it such a crisp look. Thanks for hopping with us.

    Like

    Reply
  20. Sandra Walker

    That is such a cute pillow and I sure like fast! I’ve made SO MANY mistakes…the new quilt for my quilt along has been ripped more times in just two blocks than probably the entire rest of the quilt!! Fingers crossed I don’t jinx it! Easy quilt; just a rather inattentive piecer at present!

    Like

    Reply
  21. Nicole Sender

    Love your pillow! I have done too many mistakes to talk about! Either I redo or find a way to camouflage the error!

    Like

    Reply
  22. Mary Ann Maciel

    Great pillow. Love the cheerful colors and glad to see it passed the “zzz’s” test. Thanks for sharing.

    Like

    Reply
  23. tierneycreates

    Glad you had a pillow tester – I mean how can it be a decent pillow unless it gets tested?
    That orange and the coordinating print are gorgeous and I love the crosshatch quilting – I am inspired 🙂

    Like

    Reply
  24. Carol Kussart

    Love your colors and the pillow! The seam ripper is my best friend–stotching wrong edges together, wrong size seams, or even right to wrong sides. Usually get it right eventually. 🙂

    Like

    Reply
  25. Cindy Shelley

    Oh, the mistakes I have made…. I have a very close relationship with my frog…rip it, rip it, rip it….. unsew, re-sew.

    Like

    Reply
  26. Barb K.

    I have been reading your blog for quite some time and really enjoy it–I’m from Nebraska so not far from your home state. Your pillow is so pretty–glad to know other quilters make a few “Oops!” once in a while too!

    Like

    Reply
  27. Brenda Ackerman

    I enjoyed your post and reading about the name of your blog. Your pillow turned out wonderfully. I like the crosshatch quilting that you did. After all of my years quilting, I laugh at the mistakes that I make most of the time and say out loud that if it is not fun and I am not learning, then it is not worth doing! Thank you for sharing!

    Like

    Reply
  28. Delaine

    Your pillow is awesome (despite all of the oops’s). I have made every one of those mistakes, and then some. I have learned that you can always fix it somehow, or if you can’t, just change the plan to suit the mistakes! Thanks!

    Like

    Reply
  29. Kathleen McCormick

    Great pillow and it seems to work just fine. Yes, it is a good thing we can fix our mistakes, most of the time…and this time it worked out just right. Love the crosshatching – it really is a terrific quilting job.

    Like

    Reply
  30. Lisa

    Hi Karen: I love the fabrics you used in this project. It’s a great, fun post and the photos are great as well. I agree that these blocks would make great charity quilts and I have some of them on my radar for that already…not this one yet so thanks to you now I do.

    Like

    Reply
  31. Pingback: Tu-Na Quilts: Starting Tomorrow-30 Blocks in 30 Days | Tu-Na Quilts, Travels, and Eats

  32. thedarlingdogwood

    I also love crosshatch quilting, and I worry every time I cut the tag off of one of my pillows! Great pillow and we won’t tell that there are a few rows of quilting missing on the back!

    Like

    Reply
  33. Pingback: Tu-Na Quilts: A Review of Tu-Na’s 2018 Quilting and Blogging Goals | Tu-Na Quilts, Travels, and Eats

I'm intersted in what you think. Thanks for leaving a comment.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.