Saturday, October 14, 2017

Stars and Flying Geese

Every project starts with selecting your fabrics! Want to see them in a quilt? Check out my Quilts of Valor page!


Individual Flying Geese


You begin with a rectangle and two squares. There size depends on the size of the finished flying geese, mine here are: rectangle 4 1/2" x 2", and two 2" (cut size  4-1/2 x 2 1/2) squares. (In the image below, you can see that I am chain stitching my pieces, the piece before almost abuts to the piece I am sewing.)

First, you draw a line diagonally on each of the squares, on the wrong or backside of the fabric. Place one square on the end of the rectangle with the right or front side together, and sew across the line you drew. 

If you are making more than one (and you usually are), cut out all your geese, draw lines across all your squares, and sew them all, one after the other. It saves time, and makes your job easier.

For 4 Flying Geese at a time

You begin with a square and 4 smaller squares. Start with the center fabric. Determine what size you want your finished flying geese unit and add 1 1/4". For a 4 1/2" finished flying geese unit, you add 4 1/2" + 1 1/4" = 5 3/4" which adds up to square of the center fabric. 
Now the corner or pointy fabric. Determine the finished height of your flying geese unit and add 7/8". The finished height is 2 1/4", so 2 1/4" + 7/8" = 3 1/8" squares. You will need 4 of these to complete your four flying geese units.
Draw a diagonal line on the wrong side of all of four point squares. Lay two of the point squares with right sides together, on the larger center square, as shown. Note, the point squares will overlap slightly in the middle. (please disregard the imperfections of these images. I will make this pattern soon and replace these with actual images, but they will give you some idea of what you should be seeing.)
Layout pieces and sew on both sides of the line
  
Stitch 1/4" away from the marked line, through all the layers, as shown. Repeat on both sides of the marked line. Cut on the line you drew. Open out pointy pieces and press.


Cut along the line you drew
Press pointy pieces out
















Select one, it should resemble a heart shape, with the pointy fabric being the two top sections and the center piece the bottom. Add one of your remaining point squares right sides together, matching the bottom of the heart, on the center fabric. 
Add 'point' square and sew on both sides of the line.


Stitch 1/4" away from the marked line, on both sides. Cut on the line you drew, and iron with the pointy side open. You now have 2 flying geese, repeat on the second set you created and you will have 4.
Cut along the line
Press with points out, creating a bigger point with the rectangle.



Making Stars of Flying Geese


If your geese are 4 1/2" x 2 1/4" finished, your side corners will be 2 1/4" squares finished (or 2 3/4 before sewing together), and the center portion of the finished square will be will be 4 1/2" finished (5" before sewing). Using the images below, construct your star with flying geese.

Making a Hunter's Star Quilt

For this method, you only need two blocks. Half square triangles and full squares, as shown below. Watch how they go together.
Half-Square Triangles
Full Squares
Start with you 'dark' full square, 4 1/2" (finished) square and 4 2 1/4" (finished) half-square triangles. Putting your 'dark' square down first, add to the right of it, aligning with the top of the block, 2 half-square triangles with the dark fabric to the bottom and left. Below this lay the third half-square triangle below the left half-square triangle, also with the dark fabric to the bottom and left. The last half-square triangle goes into the empty space on the right, and this triangle should be flipped, so that the 'dark' fabric is in the upper right.
Now, taking your 'light' full-square, and 4 half-square triangles, laying 2 half-square triangles to the right of the full-square, one below the other, with the 'dark' fabric in the upper right. In the upper right hand corner, lay your 3rd half-square triangle next to the top half-square triangle, with the dark fabric to the upper right. The 4th half-square will lay below this one, with the dark fabric to the lower left. So essentially, you lay a full-square and 4 half-squares together, with one of those half-square triangles flipped.


As always, I suggest that you first create all your half-square triangles, and have them pressed and set next to your machine, before you begin assembling these pieces. Then move on to assembling all the pieces above. These are the only two pieces that you need to assemble for the full quilt. They go together to complete the block, like this: