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Flannel Rag Quilt
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Flannel Rag Quilt, by
Winnie C. |
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When Winnie's
Baby-Soft Flannel quilt was featured in the Stitchers Showcase,
many embroiderers wrote in, wondering exactly how the quilt was
made.
Winnie is kind enough to share her technique and instructions in this Flannel Rag Quilt
project. Thank you, Winnie, for being a special guest project
instructor and sharing your secrets!
Click here to see more of Winnie's fantastic work from the
Stitchers Showcase. And read below for instructions from Winnie
for making a flannel rag quilt! |
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Making rag quilts is something that I
really enjoy doing - from choosing the fabric and finding just the
right designs for each quilt. Each one is different and created for
a special reason, or person. It is fun and a fairly quick project.
And rag quilts are very forgiving - anyone can make one!
This rag quilt is made from quilter's flannel and I used flannelette
for the batting. I find that the flannelette works really well and
gives and adequate weight to the quilt. in Canada, flannelette is a
term used to describe inexpensive flannel with a loose weave and nap
on just one side. If you are unable to find flannelette in the
United States, you can use any type of inexpensive flannel for your
batting.
One thing to note is that the flannel will shift and that is normal.
It is nothing to panic about. I always say that a rag quilt is not
pretty until it is washed and dried. My best advice for creating a
rag quilt is to pin it well while constructing it!
A rag quilt can be of any sized blocks. It is just a matter of how big
you wish the quilt to be.
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The first thing I do
is wash, dry, and iron all the fabric. This is something I strongly recommend. Flannel will shrink and
it is best to have as much shrinkage before the design is
embroidered. Flannelette will shrink far more than the flannel
fabric. |
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I used only three colors of flannel;
one light green, one dark green, and
one having a star print. The star print inspired me to go with a
moon and stars theme. I searched on the Embroidery Library
website to find my all of my designs for this quilt. |
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For this quilt, I cut my embroidery
blocks to 9 1/2 inches square and then trimmed to 9 inches
after the embroidery was done. I made sure that the embroidery is
centered. |
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The main part of the quilt had
25 blocks - 13 dark green and 12 light green with embroidery. I
cut 25 star fabric blocks at 9 inches square for the back of this quilt.
I also cut 25 blocks of flannelette at 9 inches square for the
batting. |
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On
the dark green blocks, I marked an "X" and then marked two other
lines - from top to bottom and then from side to
side. (Normally, I would just mark an X, but decided to extra
stitching to hold the block together well). I mark the blocks
with a dress makers pencil before I make the sandwiches. And on the embroidered blocks, I marked 1 1/2 " in
from each side and top and bottom with an air-erase pen. |
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I stitched my "sandwiches"
together, which consisted of the top fabric, the flannelette, and the
backing fabric. The top and bottom blocks were wrong sides together
with a piece of flannelette in the middle. |
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Then I pinned and stitched along the marked
lines. I used a quilting needle or denim needle in the sewing
machine, and a thread to match my fabric, so it is not really
noticeable. I did not use the walking foot when I did the
stitching on the blocks. I did some stitching close to each
embroidery design to hold the block somewhat in the middle. |
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After I had my blocks stitched, I
laid them out on the bed to decide how I wanted to arrange the
embroidered blocks. |
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When I was happy with my layout, I
copied the order of the designs onto a piece of paper. Then I pinned the blocks
in place by rows.
I started with two blocks and aligned the backs of the quilt blocks
together. I pinned along the common edges of the blocks
through all of the layers.
I repeated this step for all remaining blocks in that row. |
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I attached the walking foot onto my
machine again, and I used a 1/2 inch guide. I sewed the blocks as pinned, about
1/2 inch from the edge of the block,
backstitching at the beginning and every end of every section. I
chain sew as much as possible. |
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Then I started to pin the rows
together. I spread the seams flat on the top and bottom and try
to line up the seams, so that when they are when sewn, they are lined up on the
back. I made sure bottom seams were open as I sewed. This
lessened the bulk of the seams. I again backstitched at each section where the
blocks join. I sewed rows 1 and 2. Then I sewed rows 3 and 4, and
then sewed row 5 on the bottom.
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Now all 25 quilt blocks have been
sewn together. If this size works for your project, you can just
skip to the binding instructions listed
below. |
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I wanted this quilt to be bigger so I
added a border of more quilt blocks. I cut my pieces for the border to be 6
1/2 x 9 inches. (I needed 20 top pieces, 20 bottom pieces, and
20 pieces of flannelette for the middle.) The width of the border
can be as long as you wish, but the length needs to be the same
as the blocks for the main part of the quilt. |
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I embroidered a star design for all four
corners of the quilt, so I cut the squares large and trimmed them to
6 1/2 inches square after the design was embroidered. I also cut four 6
1/2 pieces of star fabric for the back and four 6 /12 pieces of
flannelette for the middle. I marked the strips with an X, pinned,
and sewed. I did not do any extra stitching on these strips, just
an X. |
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I stitched around
the embroidered square and from the corner of the embroidery design out to
the edge. When these were done, I pinned the blocks together in rows
of 5 blocks. A corner block sewn to each end of two rows. (If
your embroidery design is directional, then pin in the right
direction.) I could have used the same star fabric for corner
block instead of embroidering the star design - it is a matter of personal choice. |
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Once the blocks in each row were sewn, I pinned
the rows onto the quilt. I pinned one side and sewed it to the
main part of the quilt. I pinned the
other side and sewed it. I only do one side at a time because
the pins are sharp. Then I pinned the top row (with the star blocks
on either end) and sewed it to the top row. Next, I pinned the bottom row and
sewed that, too. |
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With the quilt completely sewn
together, I started on the binding. The quilt measured about 52 inches square,
so I created 52 inches of binding for each side. |
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Binding
I cut 12 strips of flannel for the binding. I cut 6 of the light
green and 6 of the dark green. Each piece is 2 1/4 inches x
about 38 inches. (I cut my strips the width of the flannel
fabric. The fabric was about 40 inches before being washed and
shrunk to 38 inches.)
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Each side of the quilt required 1
1/2 of these strips. I cut two of the strips in half to 2 1/4 x
19 inches long. I sewed a dark green fabric 19 inch strip to the
38 inch dark green fabric strip, which created one long 57 inch
strip. I repeated this step for all the dark green strips, and
then the light green stitched. I pressed open the seam on all 8
strips.
I ironed a dark green strip and light green strip, wrong sides
together. The two pieces of flannel stuck together after being
pressed. I made sure the seams on each strip were not in the
same place because I did not want the added bulk. I repeated
this step until I had 4 strips at 58 inches long with light
green on one side and dark green on the other. I then pressed
them in half, the length of the strip. |
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I started at the top corner with a
raw end of binding and pinned the entire length of the side. I
made sure the binding was wrapped around all the layers. |
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I sewed the binding on the quilt about
5/8 inches from the outside edge. I backstitched at the beginning
and end of the binding. |
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Then I pinned and
sewed the binding to the end of the first side. After I sewed
the entire side, I clipped off the excess binding, leaving a raw
edge.
I then sewed the other side of the binding the same way.
The raw edges of the binding were covered with a finished edge
when I sewed the top and bottom binding. |
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To create the finished edge on the
top and bottom binding, I
peeled the light green color back from the end of the strip and
cut the light green fabric. I then folded the dark green fabric
over the end.
I started at the top edge corner with the finished end of the
binding.
I pinned a small amount first and then sew out to the end. I did
this because there was a lot of bulk and it was hard to start
with out pinning the first few inches. |
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I sewed to the other corner and when I came to
the end, I left about a one inch overhang. I again peeled the
binding apart and cut the light green flannel underneath. I cut
the light green fabric to about 1inch. Then I folded the the
dark green flannel over the light green flannel to create a
finished corner. |
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I completed the seam
with a backstitch.
I repeated the same steps for the bottom binding. |
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The quilt binding was done and I was
ready to clip! |
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Clipping
I used a Heritage Cutlery Rag Clipping scissors to clip my quilts. They
operate on a spring and I think it is the only way to clip.
There are other scissors available, but I feel that you need
the proper clipping scissors. Be careful not to cut the seams
as you clip. |
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Before I started the major clipping, I
went
over the whole quilt and clipped all the joining seams. |
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I folded the quilt so the first seam
was
hanging slightly over the edge of my table. I was only in contact
with just the raw edge that I was clipping. I took every
precaution not to clip into my quilt - I can not stress this
enough.
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I clipped every 1/4 inch. The more
clipping the fluffier the rag and that is what I like. I clipped
one row, folded the next row, and clipped again. When the quilt is
completely clipped one way, I turned it and clipped all the rows in
the opposite direction. |
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Then I clipped the binding on all
four sides, front and back, until the entire quilt was clipped. |
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I looked over my quilt and clipped any areas that I
missed. Then I took it outside and shook it to remove as many loose
fibers as possible.
Then I put the quilt in the washer. After I finished washing the
quilt, I ran the
washer on the rinse cycle to flush the fibers from the machine.
I dried the quilt in the dryer until it was almost dry, then I took it out
and hang it on the line. |
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While the quilt is
on the line, I clipped any long threads and used a sticky roller to
remove loose fibers (and there will be many). Some flannels can
become a little nubby. If that happens, I use an electric defuzzer on the
fabric.
This quilt is a gift for a friend's daughter-in-law who is having a
baby soon. It is a gift from the heart. |
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Door Hanger
I also created this matching door hanger for the baby's room. It
says "Shush...Baby Sleeping". This simple project can be done at any
size, with any design! |
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I embroidered the design on a 9 1/2 inch
square of fabric. I used my embroidery software to isolate just
the moon from the
Cow and Moon, Welcome design. Then, I used an alphabet to add the statement "Shush...Baby
sleeping". Lastly, I embroidered additional stars, which
were from the
Stars and Swirls (Miniature) design.
After I embroidered all the designs and letters, I trimmed the
block to 7 x 8 1/2 inches. I made an envelope back by using two
pieces of fabric 8 1/2 x 10 inches and folded each in half and
pinned to the front pillow piece (wrong sides together) and
stitched a 1/4 inch seam all around the outside. Because the
pillow is small, I cut the binding strips about 1 1/2 inch wide
and the length needed an attached each piece in the same manner
as for the quilt, sewing in a generous 1/4 inch. I made a small
pillow insert, stuffed it with batting and inserted the pillow.
I used narrow ribbon and buttons to make the hanger.
I carefully used my clippers on the front and back of the pillow
on the binding. I did not wash the pillow when it was completed.
I just misted the binding and rubbed it a bit with my fingers to
give it a rag effect.
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Thanks, Winnie! Your
quilt looks amazing and I am sure that your fellow embroiderers can
not wait to make one for themselves or as a gift!
Click
here for a printable version of these project
instructions.
You'll need to have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on
your computer. If you don't have it, you can download a
free copy by clicking on the icon below.

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Size: 3.50 x 3.60 (88.9 x 91.4 mm)
Stitch count: 9263
Price: $3.99
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Size: 2.50 x 2.60 (63.5 x 66.0 mm)
Stitch count: 5619
Price: $2.99
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Size: 5.82 x 7.97 (147.8 x 202.4 mm)
Stitch count: 37995
Price: $5.99
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Size: 4.85 x 6.64 (123.2 x 168.7 mm)
Stitch count: 29634
Price: $5.49
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Size: 4.85 x 6.08 (123.2 x 154.4 mm)
Stitch count: 33863
Price: $5.99
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Size: 3.06 x 3.83 (77.7 x 97.3 mm)
Stitch count: 18026
Price: $4.99
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Size: 6.56 x 5.24 (166.6 x 133.1 mm)
Stitch count: 27990
Price: $5.99
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Size: 3.81 x 3.75 (96.8 x 95.3 mm)
Stitch count: 16269
Price: $4.99
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Size: 4.80 x 5.72 (121.9 x 145.3 mm)
Stitch count: 15576
Price: $4.99
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Size: 3.23 x 3.86 (82.0 x 98.0 mm)
Stitch count: 9529
Price: $3.99
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Size: 5.43 x 5.50 (137.9 x 139.7 mm)
Stitch count: 35382
Price: $5.99
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Size: 3.80 x 3.85 (96.5 x 97.8 mm)
Stitch count: 21761
Price: $4.99
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Size: 3.36 x 3.85 (85.3 x 97.8 mm)
Stitch count: 12452
Price: $3.49
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Size: 3.41 x 2.70 (86.6 x 68.6 mm)
Stitch count: 14590
Price: $3.99
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Size: 3.84 x 3.85 (97.5 x 97.8 mm)
Stitch count: 12927
Price: $3.99
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Size: 2.51 x 2.50 (63.8 x 63.5 mm)
Stitch count: 7482
Price: $2.99
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Size: 3.30 x 3.80 (83.8 x 96.5 mm)
Stitch count: 12332
Price: $3.99
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Size: 2.40 x 2.80 (61.0 x 71.1 mm)
Stitch count: 7393
Price: $2.99
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