Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christmas. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Quilting Design in Nova Scotia

Art East Quilting Co. is a quilting design company located on beautiful Cape Breton Island in Nova Scotia, Canada.  We're captivated by their adorable designs, including  Highland Coos, featuring hairy Scottish cows.  With dozens of patterns, there's something for everyone to love!

p.s. Please visit our E-Bay shop for great bargains on jewelry, clothing, and collectibles! For blog highlights and free patterns, follow us on Twitter!     

Cattle Call, 40 x 45", a Highland Coo quilt pattern by Art East Quilting Co (also at Amazon

Cat Scratch quilt pattern by Art East Quilting Co. (also at Amazon)

Halloweenies, 65" square,  by Art East Quilting Co 


NOTE: Their "Second Star to the Right" Sew Along begins April 1st! Check out the Art East Quilting Co. for all of their patterns, quilt kits, and more!
 

 NOTE:  We are an Amazon Associate, which means that we earn a small commission for purchases that arise from an Amazon link on this page.  Thank you for your support of Quilt Inspiration!

Monday, December 22, 2025

Nativity Scene with Jesse Tree Symbols

We wish you a blessed Christmas! A highlight of our quilting year was seeing this outstanding Nativity Scene. It is 17 feet long and has removable Jesse Tree symbols used to celebrate the advent. We enjoyed talking to the artist, whose work was featured at the Houston International Quilt Festival.

Nativity Scene with Jesse Tree Symbols by David LaPlaca (West Chicago, Illinois, USA)

The large quilt is comprised of four overlapping panels (6' x 17'6") that depict a colorful Nativity scene.  Included in the tree branches at the left, and extended across the sky like stars, are the 16 Jesse Tree symbols, suggesting stories from the Bible that point to God's faithfulness as people waited for the Messiah to come. Each Jesse Tree ornament and nativity figure is removable and may be added to the background layer during the weeks of Advent.  

David LaPlaca explains: "To involve congregants of all ages in advent celebration, I combined our church's tradition of Jesse Tree symbols and the traditional Nativity scene with heightened colors and patterns. The back panels were hung first with a shepherd or two, and with each following week of Advent, more symbols and characters were added until completed by Christmas week. Children progressed through the sanctuary with the nativity characters on Christmas eve."

Designer, teacher, and weekend quilter, David LaPlaca creates works of art for kids, home, and sacred celebrations. This original design combines Jesse Tree traditional ornaments; Mexican folk art (color palette); and fabric designs by Tula Pink & Kaffe Fassett, along with colorful batiks. Techniques used include hand embellishment, machine applique, embroidery, and quilting; and stitch drawing.


Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Houston International Quilt Festival. For more information and a gallery of his work, please visit David LaPlaca's website.

Friday, December 19, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: Santa's On His Way

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas  quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful work expressed in these quilts! 

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For free quilt patterns and more, please follow us on X/Twitter

Santa's On His Way by Debra Day, quilted by Stephanie Nordlin

Debra Day bought this pretty fabric panel many years ago but did not know what to do with it. When her guild said they were doing a Round Robin, she decided this panel was perfect for the challenge. Each month they were given a different border to put on their quilt. Debra says, "I love how mine turned out!" The finished top was machine quilted (computer guided) by Stephanie Nordlin. 


 Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Arizona Quilters Guild show.

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: A Baltimore Christmas!

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful details expressed in these masterpieces! 

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For free quilt patterns and more, please follow us on X/Twitter.

Christmas Dreamin' by Rhonda Jenner (South Dakota).  

This beautiful quilt was made with hand applique, embroidery, and quilting; machine piecing and quilting. Based on the Baltimore Christmas pattern by Pearl Pereira, Rhonda Jenner changed several things on the design. She removed Santa's pack, the ornaments, and the pipe; and added a quilt for the doll, some drumsticks, an airplane, a football, a ball, and a glove.

Rhonda Jenner says, "Fourteen years ago, three of us chose our fabrics to complete our quilts. One got lost, one finished the year before she passed but never quilted it, and I finished mine last year.  Between life's adventures of illnesses and losses, it is now complete."   - The angels and gingerbread men are among our favorite blocks, shown below:



Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Houston International Quilt Festival.
 

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: A Christmas Village!

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful details expressed in these masterpieces! 

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For free quilt patterns and more, please follow us on X/Twitter

A Christmas Village, made and quilted by Julie Hallquist.  

Fifteen different houses make up the quilt's center, while the border is made from pieced trees in a range of green colors. This holiday quilt was a foundation paper pieced pattern initially published in Quilters Newsletter magazine [pattern Source: First Snow by Tina Curran.] 

We enjoyed seeing the cute details in each of the houses! Julie Hallquist says. "It was a great opportunity to add stamps, crystals, decorative stitching and other decorative items to celebrate the season."  



 Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Tucson Quilters Guild show.

Monday, December 15, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: Lighting the Way

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful details expressed in these masterpieces! 

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For free quilt patterns and more, please follow us on X/Twitter.

Lighting the Way by Joyce Strassburg, quilted by Jessica Jones.  

The Star has been lighting the way for millennia, hence the title of this quilt. Joyce Strassburg says, "The star and church are the focal points of the quilt; however, this pattern also includes the homes of PEOPLE. This is the community that imagines and creates the many artifacts for future generations to learn from and appreciate." 


 Lighting the Way was professionally machine quilted (hand guided) by Jessica Jones. This quilt was based on the "Silent Night" pattern and kit by The Quilt Factory/Debra Grogan.  The quilt won a Third Place award (yellow ribbon) at the 2025 Arizona Quilters Guild show.

Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Arizona Quilters Guild show.  

Friday, December 12, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: Amaryllis Christmas!

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful details expressed in these masterpieces! 

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For free quilt patterns and more, please follow us on X/Twitter.

Amaryllis Christmas by Betsy Wycislak, quilted by Valeria Greenwell.  

When choosing fabrics for a quilt, many experts start with the border. Here's a great example! Betsy Wycislak says that the amaryllis fabric (chosen for the border) inspired her to make the 2023/24 Bonnie Hunter Mystery quilt ("Indigo Way") into a Christmas quilt.  "It's the first Christmas quilt I've made, that I get to keep." Snippets of the amaryllis fabric can be seen in the centers of these blocks:


 Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Tucson (Arizona) Quilters Guild show.

Thursday, December 11, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: Night at the Tree Lot

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful details expressed in these masterpieces! 

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For free quilt patterns and more, please follow us on X/Twitter.

Night at the Tree Lot by Hanne Lohde (California).  

This original design by Hanne Lohde features hand applique, embellishment, embroidery, and dyeing, and machine quilting. Red and white appliqued Scandinavian hearts decorate the border and are echoed in the quilting design.  

Hanne asks, "Have you ever stopped to think about what goes on at a Christmas tree lot after all the people go home at night?" This charming quilt tells the story about what happens when the snowmen come alive, and the gnomes and forest animals all come out to decorate the trees.  Each and every tree is unique!

 

Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt INspiration at the 2025 Houston International Quilt Festival.

Wednesday, December 10, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: True Christmas!

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful details expressed in these masterpieces!

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For more free quilt patterns, please visit us on X/Twitter.

True Christmas by Carol Carpenter, quilted by Kris Neifeld 

Carol Carpenter says, "Christmas brings joy in so many different ways.  The sweet applique and pieced pattern caught my eye and shares my vision of a true Christmas image.  Joy to the World!"

This wonderful quilt is based on the Christmas Morning Delight pattern by Lisa Norton & Lora Zmak at Material Girlfriends.  Many colorful batik fabrics can be seen in various blocks. Kris Neifeld quilted spiky stars within the sawtooth stars in the borders:

Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Tucson Quilters Guild show. 

Tuesday, December 9, 2025

12 Days of Christmas: Gingerbread Stiches

Merry Christmas to all our readers! To celebrate the season, we're posting 12 of our favorite Christmas quilts from recent shows.  We hope you enjoy the beautiful details expressed in these masterpieces!

p.s. Also check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles!
For more free quilt patterns, please visit us on X/Twitter.

Gingerbread Stitches by Martie Warden (Arizona), quilted by Rose Maynes.  

Who doesn't love a gingerbread house or gingerbread cookies? Martie Warden says, "This felted wool applique on flannel BOM is perfect for my son and daughter-in-laws home.  It is the largest felted wool piece I have done so far.  I had so much fun doing all techniques and working with Rose to figure out the long arm design. I hope they enjoy it for years to come."  

  

The houses are decorated with small ornaments, buttons, and embroidery. Some of Martie Warden's beautiful embroidery can be seen on the holly leaves and gingerbread man in the border, below:

 

 

Image credits: Photos were taken by Quilt Inspiration at the 2025 Quilt Arizona show.  This quilt by Martie Warden was based on a published design: Gingerbread Stitches BOM by Calico Patch Design

Friday, December 5, 2025

5 FREE patterns for Santa Claus quilts!

Here comes Santa Claus!  Use these FREE block patterns to make a wall quilt, mug rug, potholder, table topper, pillow and more... the sky's the limit. Download your favorites today!

p.s. Check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles !
For continuous *free* quilt patterns, please follow us on X/Twitter !  

Christmas Cheer - Santa block, 8" square, free pattern templates by National Quilters Circle (CLICK for PDF download)
 

Santa applique pattern by Wendy Gratz at Shiny Happy World (CLICK for tutorial + pattern)

 

Christmas Joy block, free pattern by Carol Swift for Thermoweb (CLICK for description) + (CLICK for PDF download)
 
 
Starry Scrappy Santa, free pattern by Tammy Carlson for Quilters World (CLICK for PDF download
 

Dear Santa calendar quilt by Tilda's World (CLICK for PDF download)

Dear Santa quilt by Tilda's World (CLICK for PDF download)

Up on the Rooftop quilt, free pattern at Fat Quarter Shop (CLICK for description) + (CLICK for PDF download)

Image credits: Individual images are copyrighted by their owners. Please respect their generosity in sharing their free patterns, and the restrictions they have placed on the use of these designs; complete information can be found at the designers' websites provided in the links. The photo montage shown on this page is a derivative work that is the property of Quilt Inspiration. If any links are broken, we'd love to know so we can fix it. Please email us at QuiltInspiration {at} gmail {dot} com.

Monday, December 1, 2025

12 FREE Patterns for Angel Quilts & Ornaments !

Welcome to our Free Pattern Day! Angels are symbols of hope, purity, and transcendence. They hold profound importance across religions and cultures. Here are a dozen FREE patterns for angel quilts and ornaments!

p.s. Check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles !
For continuous *free* quilt patterns, please follow us on X/Twitter !  


Angel paper pieced block, free tutorial & pattern by Julianna Gąsiorowska at Sewing Under Rainbow (CLICK for tutorial)

Angel applique block, free pattern and tutorial by Sandra Healy Designs (CLICK for tutorial & pattern)

Embroidered Angel, free vintage pattern by McCalls Quilts from 1982 (CLICK for .jpg download)

Christmas Angel made by E.K. Inn,  based on a free block pattern by Erin Russek (CLICK for instructions) + (CLICK for template)


 Felt Angel Ornament tutorial at Molly and Mama (CLICK for tutorial)


 Scrap Angel Quilt and Stocking, free patterns at Tilda's World (CLICK for stocking pattern) + (CLICK for quilt pattern)

 
  

Fabric Angel ornament tutorial by Stephanie Cunnyngham for Thermoweb (CLICK for tutorial)
 
   
Autumn Angel, free doll or ornament pattern at Tilda's World (CLICK for PDF download)  

On Point Angel, free pattern by Kaye Collins at Oh Kaye Quilting (CLICK for pattern page)

 Irish Blessing quilt, free pattern by Henry Glass Fabrics (CLICK for PDF download)

Angels Among Us, free quilt pattern by Buggy Barn for Henry Glass Fabrics (CLICK for PDF download)


 Image credits: Individual images are copyrighted by their owners. Please respect their generosity in sharing their free patterns, and the restrictions they have placed on the use of these designs; complete information can be found at the designers' websites provided in the links. The photo montage shown on this page is a derivative work that is the property of Quilt Inspiration. If any links are broken, we'd love to know so we can fix it. Please email us at QuiltInspiration {at} gmail {dot} com.



Friday, November 28, 2025

Make a Fabric Wreath (NO tying... only stitching!)

Make a beautiful fabric wreath using this QUICK method!  No tying is needed, so it's easy on the fingers. Our method uses a 12" foam core, not a wire frame. Simply stitch the strips in long rows, then wrap them around the core. This wreath is a great stash-buster!

p.s. Check out our E-Bay shop for great bargains on designer jewelry and collectibles !
For continuous *free* quilt patterns, please follow us on X/Twitter !  

Because the wreath has fabric all around, it can be admired from both sides of a glass door.

 

EASY PIECED WREATH TUTORIAL
You will need:

-One 12-inch floral styrofoam wreath

-Dark green fabric for backbone strips (approx. 1 fat quarter - FQ)
-Hot pink fabric for bow (we used a 10" x 21" piece from 1 FQ)
-Assorted fabrics for cross-strips: approx. 1-3/4 to 2 yards (7-8 FQ)

Step 1. Backbone strips: Cut the dark green fat quarter into 1.5" wide strips (you will need 9-10 strips that are ~21" long):


Step 2. Cross-strips:  Cut the assorted fabrics into 1.5" wide strips, then cross-cut so the strips are 3.5" long*.  To save time, you can cut a stack of 3-4 fabrics as long as your rotary blade is sharp (*use caution*!)  We first cut the 1.5" wide strips without separating them, then simply rotated the cutting mat and made a second set of cuts every 3.5 inches:


Here are the strips from the six fabrics we used.  We selected dark, medium and light value fabrics to give the wreath some interest. We used two FQ of the dark green, turquoise and purple, and one FQ of the others. We included some spotty white fabrics that looked like snow:


Step 3. Stitch the cross strips to the backbones: Place one dark green backbone strip in the sewing machine and take a few stitches down the middle of the strip to hold it in place (see second photo below).  Start adding cross strips as follows: fold one cross-strip in half lengthwise to make a 3/4" wide strip and pinch it in the middle.  Then layer another cross-strip on top and fold it in half lengthwise. We found it easiest to fold and stack the strips flat on the table, then pinch them together as shown below. (Note:  you can click on any of the pictures to expand them and see the detail).


Center the stacked cross strips on the backbone and take a few stitches down the middle.  Continue folding and adding cross-strips to the backbone strip, one right after another, as shown in the photos below.  You should not need to raise and lower the presser foot as long as you take only a few stitches before you add the next set of strips:



You can use chain piecing if you wish by starting on the next backbone without lifting the needle.  Each backbone will hold about 26 stacked cross strips.  It will take a little time to sew the strips - but not days !  It goes fairly quickly, and soon you will have a tantalizing collection of fluffy strips, at which point you will start to imagine all sorts of decor possibilities in addition to the wreath. Garlands, conical trees, jars filled with fabric, and wall hangings come to mind.


Step 4Make the bow: Before you finish stitching all the strips, attach the bow "strings" and bow to one of the backbone strips, about 6" from the end. First, cut the hot pink fabric into one 8" x 21" strip and one 2" x 21" strip.  Fold the 8" wide strip in fourths, lengthwise, making an accordion fold as shown below (first fold the strip in half lengthwise with right sides together; then fold back the raw edges.) This will become the "strings" for the bow:


Then fold the 2" wide strip to make a flat bow.  We've provided a free bow template in a pdf file (download here).  The bow looks like this:


Attach the bow "strings" and bow to one of the backbone strips, about 6" from the end.  First, center the bow strings on the backbone, then layer the flat bow on top of the strings and stitch down the middle, stitching through all layers. 


When you are done stitching the bow, continue stitching cross pieces onto the backbone.

Step 5.  Assemble the wreath: Start with the strip that has the bow.  Center the bow on the front of the wreath form and pin it in place temporarily with a t-pin:


Then start wrapping the strip around the wreath, pushing the bow and cross-strips to the left as you wrap the strip to the right: 

 
When have finished wrapping this strip, secure the end with a t-pin (you can tuck the t-pin underneath a cross strip so that it does not show).  Also wrap and pin the left end of the strip behind the bow  (once both ends are secured, you can remove the pin from the bow.) Keep pinning and wrapping strips around the wreath, one after another, until the entire form is covered.  Hint: If you wrap slowly, an inch or two at a time, it will be easy to push aside the cross strips so they do not get caught underneath the strip you are wrapping.  When you have gone all the way around the wreath, cut off any extra strips.  We used about 9.5 strips for our finished wreath.  Fluff the wreath with your fingers, straightening out any crumpled strips. 


Having completed this project, here's what we love about this method:

-The wreath looks so professional!
-It uses about the same amount of fabric as other methods.  There is little or no wastage.
-It takes only a few hours, not days.  
-It is perfect not only for scraps and remnants, but also for pre-cuts such as honey buns - and, with minor modifications, jelly roll strips.
-After the holidays the fabric strips can be unpinned and stored in a box until next year.  The wreath form can then be used to make another wreath.
 

~Enjoy your wreath and have a very happy holiday season ! ~


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