English Paper Piecing Star Coasters

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For your browsing pleasure, a photographic mish-mash of assorted English paper pieced star coasters in their various stages of construction:

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And a kit made for my little sister in law who wants to learn English paper piecing:

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It contains a Happy Doggie needle book, red, white and blue fabric, batting, felt backing, scissors, thread, thread conditioner and a little soap box to hold the paper piecing templates.  (I used 1.5″ 60 degree diamonds from Quilt Laughing on Etsy.)  I added a label for fun.

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And I have a large paper piecing project that I’ve been away from for too long, so back to it!

sarahsigres

Recent Small Sewing Projects

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During larger sewing projects, I often take a break and make quick little items, either out of need of the item itself or just for want of some instant gratification. These are a few recent projects that I especially liked.

New Grocery List Book

After our large post-it notepad ran out, I made a fancy new grocery list notebook.  The pattern is from Pretty in Patchwork Holidays by John Q. Adams.  I bought this book to read over vacation and I just LOVED it.  I’m not much of a “holiday” person, but many of the projects don’t have to be holiday specific.  There’s a “read between the lines” pillow that I’ll probably end up making, too.

Pokemon Key Chain

My older daughter specifically asked for a Pokemon key fob.  (Instructions for making key fobs found here.)  I was happy that even if she’s grown up, she’s not that grown up.  Love the little peeking Pokey faces!

Chickie Coin Purse

I know I saw chickie coin purses when searching for vacation reading materials, but I can’t remember where!  It did inspire my own coin purse though.  And I’ll probably be looking for that book again, because it was full of cute stuff.

This last one is a continuing project.  A friend of mine recently lost her husband, and I just can’t stand it for her.  She took a picture days before, when she was beside him, of the sun breaking through the clouds.  It brought her comfort to have that picture, so I am attempting to recreate it somewhat.  But instead of trying to have a literal copy of the picture, I’ve changed it to hexies/English paper piecing to “pixelize” her picture.  The plan is that from up close it makes no sense, but from a distance you’ll be able to bring it into focus.  Someday, I trust that we’ll be able to step back and see more clearly the things that just haven’t made sense here.

Hexie Pixel-Picture Progress

This is the lower left section, with nine more rows needed to mostly finish the left half.  (The larger sections will still need to be stitched together.)  The right side will bring in the sun and its reflection on the water below.  And I still don’t know what this hexie-picture will be — a wall hanging?  Small quilt?  I’m just trusting it will be what it needs to be, too.

sarahsigres

Hexie Pouch

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Just for fun, a colorful, scrappy pouch made by English paper piecing hexagons together:

Hexie Pouch

Lined with a bright, happy blue to pop against the tangerine zipper, a “robot in love” zipper pull …

Hexie Pouch

and a flat bottom so it can stand on its own.

Hexie Pouch

Because functional starts with “fun”.

Hexies!

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Hexies

Stenciling our bedroom wall is monopolizing my crafting time, but I’ve happily discovered English paper piecing.  Wrap little scraps of fabric around a paper hexagon, use tiny corner stitches to tack it into place, then sew them together.  Since all of this is done by hand, not by machine, it’s a perfect craft to leave in a little basket on my coffee table.  During our “vegging out in front of the TV time” in the evenings, I’ll end up with stacks of these colorful little hexies.  It’s like getting bonus crafting time!

I think I’ll make these into a quilted pillow top.  Here’s what I have so far.

Hexagons

And here’s a view of the back, so you can see the paper templates and the stitches that hold the fabrics in place.

Hexies, the Back Story

Once the pieces are all sewn together, I can slide a large needle though the hole in each template to help pop it out of the fabric.  The templates can then be reused, which is handy because making these is pretty addictive!