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Thursday, December 29, 2011

Tummy Time Mat Tutorial

I have always wanted to make a quilt but I have been too afraid to try - that was until I saw this tutorial.  Seemed pretty easy, so I gave it a try.  The original tutorial used 1/2 a yard of  5 fabrics, but I didn't want to make 6 of the exact same quilt, so I bought  7" pieces of four coordinating fabrics, 1/2 a yard of another coordinating fabric (to use for the quilt and the binding), 2 yards of fabric for the back and the edges, batting (crib sized) and coordinating thread. 
As you can see from the picture, I bought both brown and pink for the back - I bought 2 yards of each (since they were on sale - I only needed 1 of each).  Since this tutorial will make 2 quilts, I made one with pink on the back and the other with brown on the back. 

Making the Top ...

My mom bought me this fancy shmancy rotary cutter for my birthday and I LOVE it.  I don't know how I used scissors for so long - this is so much easier!  I bought the self healing mat at Walmart (for only $14) and the ruler was on clearance at Walmart (for $4).  I use this stuff all the time - well worth the money!! 

Now, back to the tutorial ... I washed my fabric then ironed them.  Then, cut the five pieces of fabric into 6" strips. 

Arrange them how you want them. 

Pin and sew the seams together.  I did this one strip at a time. 

Looks great, doesn't it?

Press your seams toward the darker fabric. 

Cut the top and the bottom even. 

And cut what you have in half. 

You will have two of the exact same pieces - set one aside (see it in the top right corner?).

Cut 4" strips of your backing. Pin and sew. 

I pinned and sewed the two side pieces on then cut them even with the rest of the quilt.  Then, I pinned and sewed the top and bottom pieces. 

The Quilting ...

The other tutorial stops here -  this was my first quilt so I have no idea what to do when I got to this step.  Luckily, I found some amazing batting at the new Hobby Lobby in my area that saved the day! 

Fusible Batting - this just may be the best invention ever!!! 

All you have to do is place the top on and iron it - that is right it will stay put!!

Do the same thing with the bottom.  You can do the top and bottom at the same time if you are feeling brave (I obviously wasn't). 

I don't have a fancy quilting sewing machine so I tried to make my lines perfectly UNstraight (that's right - not straight)  I knew I wasn't going to get them perfect so I decided to make them not perfect on purpose - that was the best decision ever!  I followed the seams and sewed random distances from the seam.   

Now, when Michael saw the quilt he said, "Your lines aren't straight."  I said, "I know they are perfectly UNstraight!"  He looked at me like I was crazy (which isn't entirely out of the ordinary), laughed at me, and told me that I made that up.  I punched him in the face laughed too!  Just kidding - I told him that I thought it was amazing!

You can see the random perfectly UNstraight lines here. 

So, this is where it gets interesting.  The person I gave this quilt to has a seahorse theme in her baby girl's nursery.  I wanted to make it go with her theme, so I decided stitch waves into the quilt.  Waves aren't straight so that fit my perfectly UNstraight stitching ... well, perfectly! 

I drew waves on the quilt with a washable fabric pencil - I used the clear ruler to make my waves straight-ish. 

Can you see the waves?

How about now?

Then, stitch along the lines and you will have nice subtle waves!

LOVE it!!

After I completed the quilt, I wanted to go back and use turquoise thread instead of pink for the waves.  That would have really made the waves pop instead of being subtle.  But you know what they say about hindsight being 20/20.  Maybe next time!

On to the binding ...

Cut of the extra fabric and batting to make a nice rectangle. 

Looks nice! 
By the way, the quilt is wet because I took a wet rag and wiped off the pencil I used to mark the waves. 

I cut 2" pieces of my binding material (I only used 3 of them).  I sewed the ends together to make one really long strip of 2" fabric. 

I folded under, pressed it, folded it under on the other side, pressed it again, then folded it in half and pressed it.  Then, I attached it to my quilt and sewed.  Sounds easy, right? Too easy even ..

Then, I finished, hated the way it turned out and cried.  It looked horrible (I just typed and erased four times, so I am just going to leave it at horrible) - I almost threw it in the trash right there, but I decided to just shut the door and walk away from it.   

The next day (after thinking about it all day at work) I took out all the stitching and Michael's mom found this amazing video on how to do binding. 

The video shows her not pinning the binding on, but I did.  I sewed it on the back first. 

Then folded it over and pinned it down. 

I sewed it down. 

I am so happy with the way it turned out!!

Look at those beautiful corners!!

I could have stopped here, but I decided to add a little something to really make the quilt personalized for her. 

Adding the Embellishment ...

My coworkers baby's nursery theme is seahorses using pink and turquoise.  So, I wanted to add a turquoise seahorse.  I found seahorse clip art and printed it out (you can resize it to the size you want - I enlarged mine). 

Put it behind the fabric and trace it with a washable fabric pencil. 

Cut it out and place it where you want it. 

Notice how the tail isn't cut out all the way?  I shouldn't have cut it out perfectly since I had to cut it out twice. 

Attach the seahorse (or whatever you want to add) to iron on adhesive, cut it out, place it where you want it and iron it on. 

LOVE!! 

I tried to add turquoise bubbles coming up from the seahorse but I tried and failed multiple times.  I had to give it to her at her baby shower, so I gave up.  If I would have added the bubbles before I quilted it then it would have been a lot easier.  But, I love it the way it is!!  I was also gong to attach an eye (from the white dot fabric) but I lost it. 

I folded it up and put and pretty bow on it.  I made her a few bibs with coordinating fabric. 

The mommy to be loved it and I am sure it will get tons of use once the baby arrives!!

So, there you have it a personalized tummy time mat / quilt! 

Don't forget to click over to see the original tutorial at iCandy Handmade - I am in love with the fabrics she used!!

What do you think?

5 comments:

Viktoria said...

I love it! I've never tried quilting before, but it is something I'm interested in. As a high school graduation present, my mom made me a photo quilt.

Kim Ricketts said...

wow!!! amazing tutorial!! I love it and it looked gorgeous in person!!

Kim

colleen said...

That looks beautiful Sarah! I am envious. I have no quilting skills but you have given me hope that even I could accomplish this. I made a baby duvet out of similar fabric and colors earlier this year and I was very happy with it. Used a Marth Stewart tutorial.

Katie said...

Sarah you are amazing and totally inspiring! Keep doing awesome tutorials and you might get me sewing...just maybe.

Unknown said...

Absolutely adorable! I tried a step up from the capes I made last year and made my son's Peter Pan Halloween costume. I used a tutorial I found on Pinterest... It was not perfect, but he didn't notice. :)

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