Warehouses Closed November 28 & 29
Cornerstone: Tulip Field
Cornerstone: Tulip Field
In the hustle and bustle of camp life, it’s nice to take a moment to stop and smell the flowers. These tulip blocks are the optional cornerstone blocks for the first round. Whether to add cornerstone blocks is completely up to you--choose what works best for your quilt!
NOTE: This is one post in a series of quilt-along posts. Start from the beginning with the first post {here}.
Each block requires three fabrics (A, B, and background) and finishes at 3 inches square.
makes four cornerstone blocks
Fabric A (main part of flower):
- [4] 3 ½” by 2” rectangles
- [2] 2 ½” squares
Fabric B (small piece in the middle of flower):
- [4] 1 ¼” square
Background Fabric:
- [4] 1 ¼” square
- [4] 2” by 1 ¼” rectangles
- [4] 2” square
- [2] 2 ½” square
Assembling the Block
First, we will assemble the half-square triangles.
- Draw a line on the diagonal of the wrong side of (1) 2½” background square.
- Pair with (1) 2½” square of fabric A.
- Sew 1/4" away from each side of the pencil line.
- Cut on the pencil line.
- Press towards the darker fabric and square up to 2".
Next, we will assemble the Easy Corner Triangles (ECTs).
- Draw a pencil line on the diagonal of (1) 2" square of background fabric.
- Match the background fabric to the left edge of (1) 3½” by 2” rectangle of fabric A and sew along the pencil line.
- Trim 1/4" to the left of the pencil line and press toward darker fabric.
Finally, we will assemble the block.
Take a 1¼” square of Fabric B and a 1¼” square of background fabric. Sew together. Press towards fabric B.
Sew a 2” by 1¼” rectangle of background fabric to the side of the two squares with the square of fabric B in the lower right corner. Press towards the rectangle.
Join HST and ECT units as shown below.
Repeat to make a total of four cornerstone blocks.
The Tulip Field block finishes at 3" square (measures 3.5" square unfinished).
Christine Weld
[blog: The Quarter Inch]
[instagram: @christine.weld]
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