And so
I come to the end of my Farmer’s Wife 1930s blocks with these last six
blocks.....
Block 65 – Mother. This was the second-to-last block I made but
the last block to include inset seams.
If you paper-piece this block ignore pieces F2, G2, H2 and I2 – there is
no need for them.
Farmer's Wife 1930s Block no. 65 - Mother |
Block 70 – Mrs Lloyd. I don’t know why this block got pushed to the
back of the queue, perhaps because I had enough flying geese at the
beginning. But I spent a pleasant
hour patching and paper-piecing Mrs Lloyd.
Farmer's Wife 1930s Block no. 70 - Mrs Lloyd |
Block 81 – Peony. I was thinking of taking the easy way out to
make Peony using Gnome Angel’s simpler alternative. However, this was the last block I had to
make so I decided to go for it. What a mistake!!! There are four 90-degree inset seams, one
center partial seam and over 50 pieces. There would’ve been more pieces but I couldn’t
see why the E3/E4, F3/F4, G3/G4 and H3/H4 pieces had been split (utter madness)
so I joined them together. In the
history of quilting, I can say with utter certainty – I will NEVER, EVER make this block again. My advice to you – take the simpler
alternative.
Farmer's Wife 1930s Block no. 81 - Peony |
Block 96 – Tirzah. I struggled to get the outer middle parts to
match up with the corner units. This had
the effect of me not liking this block very much. But it measures 6½” and it is done.
Farmer's Wife 1930s Block no. 96 - Tirzah |
Block 97 – Tracy. When making this block you really need to pay attention when stitching
the sections together. It is easy to get
them muddled up. Pay attention and this
block goes together fairly easily. But
be warned – it is a lot of work.
Farmer's Wife 1930s Block no. 97 - Tracy |
Block 99 – Widow. The date on this page of the block reminds me
that I paper-pieced this block in September 2015! It is an okay block but very similar to many
others in the book. It is the fabrics
that make it different.
Farmer's Wife 1930s Block no. 99 - Widow |
So
there you have it – all 99 blocks completed. If you want to see all the blocks together head over to my Farmer's Wife 1930s Pinterest Board. I am finishing off the sashing and then it will be off to the quilters. I will post photos here and on social media
when I get it back. Time to raise a
glass and toast in the New Year.
HAPPY NEW YEAR
xxxxx
Happy New Year! Congratulations on completing your blocks. I have the book and have it on my list to tackle, we'll see what happens this year. Looking forward to seeing you quilt completed.
ReplyDeleteHappy New Year to you too Sherry. Thank you. I will certainly be showing off my quilt once it is finished.
DeleteLove your blocks and your colour choices! And congratulations on finishing them all - 99! wow!Thanks for sharing and for your many tips.
ReplyDeleteThank you for leaving such a lovely comment Claudia. I hope 2017 brings you much fun.
DeleteHow do I get the patterns for these Farmers Wife blocks?
ReplyDeleteThan you.
I found it! Thank you for the photos of these beautiful blocks.
ReplyDeleteGlad you found it Lorraine. The book includes a CD for paper-piecing or making the blocks using templates. I really enjoyed the experience. I hope you do too.
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