Granny Square Quilt

I did it! I finished a UFO! Woohoo!

Granny Square Quilt

Here is my finished Granny Square quilt. I caught the granny square bug almost immediately when these first started popping up over blog land and lure proved too strong for me to resist. No. I didn’t need another project by any means. Yes. I had to push myself to finish this.

But it was worth it right?

Granny Square Quilt

This quilt was made entirely from stash fabrics. All scraps for the granny squares, some left over linen, and some yardage from my stash for the back. I even broke out a fabric for the fussy cut squares in the sashing. Necessity was the mother of invention here! I kept running out a fabric and then my plan would change. At one point, I made the decision to add the Japanese gauze as a border to the whole quilt. And that fabric was not particularly happy to be used. 😉

Granny Square Quilt

I was all worried about color bleeding on this one, but it turned out that I needed to be worried about fabric fraying. This has never happened to me before with a quilted finished piece, so I had to do some thinking about how to fix it. After considering a number of options, I decided to simply create a patch. I had to make sure that fabric would not continue to fray.

Granny Square Quilt

I have a micro shot of the patch here but it actually blends in pretty well when looking at the whole quilt. The nice thing about the gauze is that it is pretty forgiving ultimately. I may throw a little label over that patch just to make it feel more deliberate but we’ll see if I get the inclination between now and tomorrow night. It’s headed off to a new home and a new baby girl.

Granny Square Quilt

The quilt was definitely Caitlyn approved, so hopefully this soon to be baby girl will one day love the quilt too.

43 thoughts on “Granny Square Quilt”

  1. i just love the variance between the sashing and the border–so fabulous! what did you use for sashing? Kona ash?
    I think the new baby's name on that patch would make it totally on purpose 🙂

    1. Kelly, the background fabric is a linen that I bought at Joann's a few years ago for another project. This was what I had left over and I used it up! Thus there was corner stones and a different border fabric. lol

  2. It's really pretty, Angela! Sorry about your mishap with the gauze fabric, but your fix is just fine. I completed my Great Granny quilt top this week and I'm ready for basting when the backing arrives in the mail. I have some detailed ideas about how to quilt it, but will see what actually happens!

    1. lol! NO! This is going to a good friend of mine who is having a baby girl soon.

      trust me, if I am fortunate enough to get pregnant again there will so much hoopla made that you won't be able to miss the announcement. 😉

  3. Nice fix – and a great finish! I had that same thing happen to a finished quilt that had a lovely linen on the edge. It pulled and frayed after the first wash in a couple of small sections

  4. While I am smitten with the design and the finish, what I love most is how you used stash and stash and more stash and that you let that stash drive the quilt's design to its final place. I ♥ the buzz from using what I have and making something that not only accomplishes stash busting but looks beautiful to boot. You did that!

  5. I love your quilt . I've been admiring these in blog land for a while now ……but yours is definitely making me think I might like to make one too . It's gorgeous . I have lots of scraps too .

  6. Congratulations on the finish, Angela! I actually took stock of all my WIPs and UFOs last week and was horrified to find I have no fewer than 25 projects going. That doesn't even count VQB blocks. *sob* Guess I need to get serious about the UFO plan again.

  7. I love it, and it gives me two ideas to try (like I need more, right?) 1: Use a lighter color border than the sashing because it provides a cool contrast, and 2: Find mini-medallions to fussy cut for squares in between the sashing. Bravo!! My Granny Square quilt top and back have been ready and waiting for quite a while to be quilted.

  8. This is exceptionally pretty! Little mishaps really bring out the creative thinking. That in itself is so rewarding, don't you think? I love the look of the linen but am terrified to try using it.

  9. This quilt is amazing and thank you so much for posting about the fraying! I had the same thing happen and I've been wondering what to do about it (especially since I didn't notice it until after I got the binding on and I've ripped stitches out like maybe 10 times so it's just going to have to stay on haha). So thank you! I'm going to put a patch over it and a label. Not where I usually put a label but oh well. 🙂 I feel so much better.

  10. Angela, I think a label over the patch is a great idea as a way to secure the fabric that wants to fray and having a lovely quilt with a personalized label so that in the years to come, they will remember whose loving hands made this for the fortunate owner.

    Michelle

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