Balance Quilt 02

A folded quilt on a bed. There is an orange sun on a lighter orange background with quilted rays coming out of the sun.
A folded quilt on a bed. There's a white moon on a dark blue background with horizontal lines quilted across it.

Pattern/Technique: Balance Quilt by Skyclad Quilts

Modifications: none

Materials: Kona cotton in the following colorways (Aurifil 50 wt colorways in brackets)

  • Windsor 3/4 yd (2800)

  • Dresden 1/2 yd (2710)

  • Cloud 1/4 yd (2524)

  • Sky 1/4 yd (2775)

  • Cantaloupe 1/4 yd

  • Nectarine 1/4 yd

  • Flame 1/8 yd/remnant (2245) for sun

  • White 1/8 yd/remnant for moon

  • Natural 2 yd for backing

New skills: Adding a quilt label

Lessons: Drew chalk lines using my chaco liner for quilting guides which worked significantly better than a metal quilting arm on the presser foot.

Went from dark to light while quilting so that if I needed to cheat the width of a quilted line a little bit it blended into the closer spaced lines in the lighter colored section.

Important info to include in a quilt label: the name of the quilt, who it’s for, who pieced and/or quilted it, when it was finished. Optional: thoughts / feelings / wishes from when the quilt was made or for the recipient.

What I'd do differently: I only quilted 12 rays coming out of the sun, and while I like the look of this, I think doing 24 would add additional stability to the batting in a heavily used baby quilt.

Care: Machine wash cold, tumble dry low.

Close up of a label on the back of a quilt, which reads: Balance Quilt, Made for Lin, Pieced and Quilted by Lauren Gust, April 4, 2022
The back of the quilt, made from natural cotton and quilted lines in the same color gradient as the front of the quilt
Close up of quilted blue lines on a natural cotton background.
Close up of orange quilted rays coming out of a zigzag stitched circle on a natural cotton background.

Balance Quilt

Pattern/Technique: Balance Quilt by Skyclad Quilts

I also used the following books and articles:

  • Quilters Academy Vol 1 by Harriet Hargrave

  • Heirloom Machine Quilting by Harriet Hargrave

  • Singer Quilting by Machine

Modifications: none

Materials: Kona cotton in the following colorways (Aurifil 50 wt colorways in brackets)

  • Windsor 3/4 yd (2800)

  • Dresden 1/2 yd (2710)

  • Cloud 1/4 yd (2524)

  • Sky 1/4 yd (2775)

  • Cantaloupe 1/4 yd

  • Nectarine 1/4 yd

  • Flame 1/8 yd/remnant (2245) for sun

  • White 1/8 yd/remnant for moon

  • Natural 2 yd for backing

New skills: Raw edge applique, Piecing, Quilting, Basting a quilt, Binding a quilt

Lessons:

Cutting

Quilters Academy Vol 1 has a nice tutorial on how to square up fabric and align the grainline before cutting it (useful to prevent fraying while cutting out strips and pieces).

Piecing

Use starch when pressing to get seams to lie flat, and make quilting easier.

Use a scant 1/4 in seam for piecing, because the width of the thread will add a little extra width to the seam.

Choosing a thread for piecing:

  • Use a mid tone neutral thread for piecing to prevent it from showing through the fabric. I used an ecru for this.

  • Use cotton thread for piecing / quilting so that the fabric doesn't get stressed and break at the seam.

Applique

Used Pellon Wunder Under to fuse the sun and moon to the quilt top. Then zigzag stitched around the sun/moon using the following machine settings: 3.0 stitch width, 1.5 stitch length, -1.5 offset, 70 bobbin tension. This was a helpful resource for stitching over raw edge applique.

Quilting

Quilt from the center of the piece moving outward.

Followed suggested quilting plan from pattern. It’s best to start from 1 edge of the colored panel and keep going in the same direction (vs. starting in the middle and having a stripe of quilting that’s narrower/wider than its neighbors).

In the sun section I quilted in the ditch between the orange panels using ecru thread for stability. I chalked in the rays and started with vertical/horizontal lines, then used the 30 degree angle on the quilting ruler to add diagonals. I ended up quilting 24 rays extending from the sun for max stability.

Test out marking chalk before using it, and don't use tailors chalk/pencils for quilting because the chalk contains wax which can make it much harder to remove from dark fabrics.

This was a helpful resource for burying threads after quilting.

Binding

Used Harriet Hargrave’s technique for attaching binding (from Quilter’s Academy Vol. 1) using a 2 1/4” binding tape.

Washing

BQA recommends washing a quilt before gifting it and using Shout Color Catchers in case of bleeding. While researching how many color catchers to use, I found this helpful thread which suggested this technique for testing for and preventing bleeds:

  • Cut a small square of an inch or two of each. Slosh each one in water, then lay on a pad of paper towels. If nothing bleeds into the paper towel, then a few color catchers in your wash will be enough

  • If anything bleeds, consider:

    1. How much water is in the wash; more water will dilute any dye bleeds.

    2. Removing the quilt immediately from the wash; the more time wet fabric lays against itself the greater risk of dye transfer.

    3. Using synthrapol as detergent, which suspends loose dye particles in the wash water.

What I'd do differently: Mark quilting lines in chalk instead of using an edge guide, to get more accurately placed quilting lines.

Use a different presser foot when sewing the binding to the front. I used a 1/4" guide foot which meant the binding was slightly wider on the back of the quilt vs. the front. What I actually wanted was a slightly generous 1/4" seam*, so using an open-toe applique foot or 1/4" foot without a guide would give me the 1/4" needle markings on the foot for corners, and more flexibility on getting the right seam allowance. (*Quilter's Academy Vol. 1, Hargrave, p. 103)

Learn more techniques for getting a quilt top square.

Care: Machine wash cold, tumble dry low