photographs of your home or the special place you wish to recreate
sharpened pencils and eraser
Sharpie™ fine point permanent marker
tape (scotch tape, masking tape or painters tape)
ruler - drafting rulers are great, they are thin and easier to measure
with and use for pencil lines. Cutting rulers may also be used but their
thickness will not give you a consistent thin line.
clear plastic sheet to trace your photo onto. Options:
clear acetate sheets that come singly or in pads at art supply sources,
write-on overhead projector sheets, or
page protectors (slip your photo inside to keep it in place as you
trace).
freezer paper (sometimes called butcher paper). This has a paper side
and a slightly waxy side. We will be drawing and tracing on the paper side
and using the waxy side to iron onto the fabric. Some quilt stores sell this
in packages as appliqué template paper.
fusible web - I recommend Lite Steam-a-Seam 2, by The Warm Co. This
fusible web comes with a protective sheet on both sides of the web. Other
thin fusible web brands can be used but do not get the heavy fusible. (Note:
this is NOT the same as fusible interfacing.)
The Appliqué Pressing Sheet ™ by Bear Thread Designs is recommended;
however, there are several on the market. Any one you can see through will
work.
rotary cutter, ruler and cutting mat will be used for cutting out your
background pieces
iron and large ironing surface. You can create a large ironing surface
with several layers of batting covered by several layers of muslin. Pin or
tape these to a tabletop or board.
glass head pins. These hold up under the heat of the iron. You can also
use metal pins. Do not use plastic heads.
Hot Iron Cleaner - just as a precaution. If you get fusible on your
iron, it will burn in and discolor your fabric. This product can be found at
quilt and sewing stores. Use with a half yard of folded muslin to
periodically clean your iron's surface.
sewing machine
threads (cotton, embroidery, metallic)
needles (topstitch, Metallica)
walking foot or free motion foot for your machine for quilting
open toe foot or embroidery foot for machine appliqué
tweezers - Optional: these help when handling small appliqué pieces
scissors (medium size, for cutting out freezer paper/fused shapes)
basting needle and safety pins OR
505 Quilt Spray - for holding your three layers together for quilting
Sulky Easy Tear ® Stabilizer (or any light weight stabilizer)
Fabric
background fabrics (sky, ground) 1/2 yd each is plenty. You may want to
wait until you have chosen a final photograph.
border fabric - the quantity and color will depend on the size and colors
of your finished quilt
various other fabrics in colors and textures that represent different
areas of your photograph, such as
foliage
trees
flowers
building
roof
windows
batting - recommended is Warm & Natural low loft batting. It holds its
shape well for a wall hanging quilt. Low loft batting of any type will work.
fabric for backing, binding and sleeve (the amount will depend on the
size of your finished piece
OUTLINE
Lesson One: Getting Started
take pictures of your subject
choose fabrics to recreate the picture
add additional landscaping if desired
consider light source, shadows and shading
Lesson Two: Making the Pattern
enlarge your picture using one of these methods:
overhead projector
copier
scanner
grid method
number pattern pieces
trace numbered pieces
prepare fabric for fusing
assemble house with appliqué pressing sheet
Lesson Three: Sewing the House
prepare the background fabric
machine appliqué
explore additional techniques
adding dimensional leaves
adding thread details
couching thread details
letting the scene escape into the border
Lesson Four - The Final Steps
add borders
mitered
butted
baste the quilt
quilt
add binding
add a sleeve
You may check the Class Supply Glossary in the
Library
for generic descriptions of products that may be sold under various names in
different countries.