The Purl Bee is Purl Soho's craft blog where we publish ideas for you to knit, crochet, sew, stitch and more! You can view our projects below.

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Thursday
Jun092011

Mini Quilt of the Month, June: The Rainbow Quilt

If you have ever been to Purl Soho in New York City you have probably noticed how much we love to arrange things in rainbow order. Our yarns are stacked in their cubbies with oranges next to reds next to pinks next to purples and our solid fabrics are arranged along a giant wall sized rainbow spectrum. So as we were brainstorming about our Mini Quilt series we knew that one of the projects would have to reflect our rainbow obsession.

In case you haven't heard, every month this year we are presenting a mini quilt project. These small projects are the perfect way to learn a new skill and make something beautiful in the process. To see all of our Mini Quilts so far please click right here. This month's offering, the Rainbow Quilt, is more about celebrating and exploring color rather than learning a new technique. It's very simple to put together and would be a perfect first quilting project.

As we were thinking about how to design a rainbow inspired quilt we were drawn to the work of the painter Ellsworth Kelly. His stunning use of color and clean shapes helped inspire our eventual design. (Click here to see an example of Kelly's rainbow reminiscent paintings.)

The resulting quilt is one of our very favorite mini quilt projects to date. The colors quite simply glow against the white background fabric, and its happy colors and simple design make us smile each time we see it! It would look stunning as wall hanging or scaled up as a baby or even adult sized quilt.

Materials

Cutting

Cut a strip 2-inches wide by 25-inches long from each of the colored fabrics.

From the white fabric cut:

  • 9- 1 1/2-inch by 25-inch strips
  • 2- 2 1/2-inch by 24-inch strips
  • 2- 2 1/2-inch by 28 1/2-inch strips
  • You will also need three 2 1/4 x 42-inch strips pieced together for the binding

Piecing

Arrange the colored strips in a pleasing rainbow order. Make sure to keep them in this order as you piece the top.

All seam allowances are 1/4-inch in this project unless otherwise noted.

Sew a long side of the first colored strip to a long side of the thin white strips.

Press these pieces flat with the seam allowance towards the colored fabric.

Piece the second colored strip to the raw edge of the white strip . Again press the seam allowance towards the colored fabric.

Piece one of the thin white strips to the raw edge of the second colored strip in the same manner.

Piece all of the colored strips in this manner, keeping them in the proper order and sewing a thin white strip in between each one. There is no thin white strip before colored piece #1 or after colored piece #10.

Once you have all the rainbow strips sewn together trim the resulting piece to be 24-inches square by cutting roughly a 1/2-inch off of the top and bottom.  Do not trim the sides, the pieces should already be 24-inches wide.

Sew the 2 1/2 x 24-inch white strips to the top and bottom of the piece and press the seam allowance to the colored side.

Sew the 28 1/2-inch strips to the left and right sides of the piece. Press the seam allowances towards the colored fabrics.

The quilt top is done.

Quilting and Finishing

Cut a 32-inch square piece of the white fabric and lay it out smoothly on a flat surface. Using masking tape tape the edges down so the piece is perfectly flat and taut. This is the quilt backing.

Cut a 32-inch square from the batting and lay it smoothly down on top of the backing.

Lay the quilt top right side up on top of the backing and batting. Make sure all three layers are flat and smooth. This is your quilt sandwich.

Using bent arm safety pins baste the three layers together by pinning all across the quilt top with the pins being roughly 4-inches from one another. Remove the tape before you start quilting.

You can quilt your piece in any manner that you like as long as the quilting stitches are no more than 8-inches apart from one another. Below is how we quilted ours:

Using your machine's walking foot quilt "in the ditch" just on barely on the white side of the seams in the pattern shown above going up and down each colored strip in a continuous line.

The back will look like this.

Bind the quilt piecing together the remaining white strips. If you haven't bound a quilt before please visit the binding instructions from our January Mini Quilt of the Month: Courthouse Steps at this link. This quilt (and all quilts!) can be bound in exactly the same manner. Once you get to the story, scroll down near the end to the section called "binding".