Saturday, September 20, 2025

learning to wensleydale


once i'd made the first wensleydale block i wasn't sure if i'd gotten it out of my system for the moment or not. i calculated that if i did a block a day for two months i'd have a completed top before thanksgiving, but i wasn't committing to that. the first one took so long i couldn't see being able to spend that much time each day. i was definitely thinking i would not be doing much wensleydale-ing right away.

but the next day i found myself pulling out another template sheet and making my next block. i told myself i wanted to see how long a single block took when i wasn't having to teach myself to fpp in the process.

block two turned out pretty well, but it wasn't a quick make either because i had several home ec/learning moments along the way! 


the first round i forgot to fold back the pieces before i trimmed the seam allowance and chopped off two side triangles before looking at the front to see why i had such large trimmings. oh no! one of the leftover pieces was big enough to reuse, but i had to cut a whole new rectanlge cut into triangles to get the one piece i still needed because i didn't know how to just cut the one odd triangle. that was frustrating.


but i got if fixed and moved on, deciding that in the future i would trim each seam allowance after sewing the piece and then press the piece open.

if you've never done fpp before, you might be confused about the process and what i'm saying. here's the basics:

1. place the first piece down, right side up, on the back of the paper/opposite side of the printed template. you hold it up to a light or use a lightbox to make sure you have the piece in place.

2. lay the next piece right side down on top, flip the paper over, and sew down the line between the two pieces on the template, backstitching at the beginning and end.

3. flip over so the fabric is facing down, fold back the paper along the seam line, and trim a 1/4" seam allowance for that seam. unfold the paper.

4. turn back over so the fabric is facing up; press the piece open. lay the next piece on, right side down, and repeat.

so where i went wrong here was i forgot to move the sewn piece, which i had already pressed open, out of the way when i trimmed the seam allowance; hence the chopping off.


this is what it looks like when you do the seam allowance trimming correctly. i folded the paper back along the seam and measured the seam allowance 1/4" away from that.


i was playing with how to get my directional prints to line up better inside their shapes.  if you look at the grey plaid piece in the middle rectangle (either in the first photo or below) you'll see that after i put two triangles in place and they fan out from the triangle rather than look aligned as a rectangle, i tried to get the other two pieces straighter and succeeded. i was glad to get them straighter, but feel it would have been better to have them all angled consistently.

and this brings up one disadvantage of the fpp method over the alternate template construction method for this quilt: template pieces can be cut how they will appear in the quilt but fpp is more risky and requires a lot more thought and care if you want a certain orientation and outcome in your prints, especially the directional ones.

one idea i tried was marking the seam allowance on the back of the piece before i sewed it in place. this helped a little, but since i was putting the piece roughly in place then flipping everything over, there is often slight shifting or i didn't guess well where the piece should go.


(you get a good view of my radiating vs. straight plaid pieces in this photo above.)

the next idea i hit on for better fabric placement was to trim down the finished shape before moving on to the next round of pieces. in this case, that meant trimming the golden floral piece to the seam allowance size it would eventually be before adding the brown checkered print. the way i was doing it, the outer edges of a piece didn't get trimmed down until the next piece was added and then the seam allowance was cut. 

i hadn't seen this extra trimming step suggested in any of my fpp research, but i decided to try it. i folded the paper back along the seam i was about to sew, measured out 1/4", and trimmed. then i could line up the new piece with the seam allowance and everything would be much straighter. 

it worked great!

but then when i flipped over the piece to trim for the seam allowance on the third corner (above), i forgot to measure out 1/4" for the seam allowance and cut right along the seam instead. this was a big ouch. it required me unpicking not only that corner but i had to replace the golden triangle, first unpicking the other brown corner triangle already sewn on its other side, as well. i wasn't sure i would be able to salvage the block at this point.


getting that golden triangle out was no small project. seam ripping with fpp is the worst because the seam size is so small. i finally resorted to hacking the piece out and then removing the little leftover bits.


i did do one good thing here. i realized i didn't have to cut the whole rectangle again to replace the botched corner. i made a rectangle half the starting size and then cut the piece i needed from that so i didn't have 3 larger leftover pieces, but rather just two. i managed to save myself a little fabric there.


that was smart of me, but my next move wasn't. like i say, i can't make this stuff up. i seriously don't know how i manage to bungle things so badly. can you see what i did when adding the triangle? i flipped it completely the wrong way. i put it on the wrong side of the seam allowance. oh, me oh, my.

somehow i still make quilts.


there we go - the golden triangle is all fixed up and i put the adjacent brown corner back in place over it. then i trimmed it correctly, ready for the final corner piece to be added.


now i could place the corner triangle on, lined up with the seam allowance i pretrimmed.


in case you forgot - this is how it all ended. 

yes, half of the grey plaid is straight(ish) and there is still a small hole in the seam of one brown corner triangle where it's supposed to be seam to the golden part (no idea how/why that is, but i'm dealing with it later). all in all, though, i really like the look of this block and am grateful for the lessons it taught me.

i also decided with this block to wait to trim the outside edges until all blocks are done so i don't dull my blade prematurely by trimming through the paper each time. that will all be done in one go before i join the blocks into a top. whenever i do more blocks and get them all done, that is. obviously, i still don't know how long it takes to do a block because this one took way longer than should be necessary due to all my mistakes.

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