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Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt (Living Coral)

February 9, 2019 By Kirsty 9 Comments

Coral fabric – do you love it? Or does it make you wince?

I have to admit that after a rocky start the 2019 Pantone Colour of the Year, Living Coral, is growing on me.

I’m not much of a pinky, peachy girl, but as an accent colour I can see that coral can be beautiful.

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

I’m especially fond of a navy and coral fabric combination. I’ve explored that with this pattern here, as well as with this mini quilt below (pattern here).

Deco Diamonds by Bonjour Quilts. A baby quilt, cushion and mini-quilt pattern.

I consulted my stash cupboard last weekend and found some nice coral fabrics hidden away in there. You can see a selection of them below:

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

From top to bottom: 1. Avantgarde Uninhibited in Bask by Katarina Roccella

2. Deity in Orchid from Tula Pink’s Eden line (technically not coral as it’s an orange pattern on pink fabric, but it reads from a distance as coral. It’s also a very useful fabric if you are making a transition [or ombre] from orange to pink).

3. Kona in Coral.

4. Not sure about this one. No selvedge. I think it’s a Timeless Treasures Sketch fabric.

5. Kona in Nectarine.

This small fabric grouping caught my eye:

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

L to R: Fern Bouquet from Dear Stella’s Foxtail Forest, Carolyn Friedlander crosshatch in Creamsicle and Avantgarde Uninhibited in Bask.

I thought this would be a fun combination to use with my new Ribbon Heart mini quilt pattern. So far all my versions of this mini quilt had been made with darker fabrics on a pale background. I was interested to see how it would look with bright fabrics on a dark background.

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

Hey, I think it looks pretty cute!

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

I had some fun matchstick quilting this one. Lots of lines in dove grey thread, but it really didn’t take long as it’s such a small piece.

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

I didn’t want too much contrast in the binding for this one, as I felt it would detract from the pop of the heart.

So I used the background fabric for binding with just a snippet of coral contrast (the pattern has instructions for this).

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

I could also have chosen to use the self-binding method, which I’ve described here, to create a “no-edge” look. But I don’t really enjoy sewing with that method very much. It’s somewhat finicky and by the time I’m at the stage of binding I’m totally over finicky! I much prefer to sew a standard binding, which is what I did.

I’m really happy with how this Ribbon Heart mini turned out, and I enjoyed a bit of experimentation with coral fabrics.

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

If you’d like to see the Ribbon Heart mini quilt made up in different colours, you can see some in this post here.

So what do you think about coral fabric? Yay or nay? Will you be sewing something in Living Coral this year?

I don’t think I’m done with coral just yet 🙂

Have a great weekend and wishing you happy sewing (in coral or otherwise!)

Kirsty

Using coral fabrics, a la Pantone Colour of the Year 2019 Living Coral, to create a cute Ribbon Heart mini quilt

Filed Under: Blog, quilt patterns

Learn English Paper Piecing

February 3, 2019 By Kirsty 6 Comments

First up: there are some affiliate links in this post – they help me pay for my hosting costs. If you do buy anything via one of them, thank you!

English Paper Piecing and I don’t have a very deep relationship, although I wish we did. So when Carolina Moore asked if I’d like to be part of the blog book tour for her new book Learn How to English Paper Piece, I gave a big “yes”. I was happy for the push to revisit this method of hand sewing and enjoyed reading the digital version of the book provided to me.

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

Carolina’s book is for beginners and was perfect for me. I have a couple of small projects under my belt, so I was keen to read up on the techniques and tips suggested in the book.

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

For those not in the know, English Paper Piecing involves wrapping small pieces of fabric around paper templates. The fabric is held in place around the template either with hand basting stitches or with glue. These individual pieces are then sewn together to create a larger patchwork piece, after which the paper templates are removed. (They can usually be reused after that.)

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

Why would you want to English Paper Piece?

English Paper Piecing is great for creating intricate designs that would be too tricky for machine sewing. Any geometric design you can think of, you can pretty much create via English Paper Piecing. (You’ll look at Moroccan tiles in a whole new light once you learn to EPP 🙂 )

You can also easily fussy cut fabric to create symmetry and/or repetition in your work which can be beautiful/whimsical/a lot of fun. (The easiest way to fussy cut is to use a transparent acrylic template.)

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

Behold my fussy cut bees.

And then there’s the mindful benefits that slow sewing can bring. It’s relaxing to sit, unwind and enjoy creating something with your own hands. Not to forget the added benefits of occupying your conscious brain with something so your unconscious brain can frolic and come up with new ideas or percolate solutions to current problems. Wins all around, really. 🙂

How to get started with English Paper Piecing.

Well, buy Carolina’s book! It’s affordable and is a great reference to have at hand when creating your first projects. All the projects are very achievable – so don’t be worried that she’ll have you sewing several hundred shapes. You can start with small items such as coasters and various pouches, and build up to a cushion or quilt.

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

As far as tools – I always believe it’s best to use what you have on hand when you first start. If you find English Paper Piecing agrees with you then you might like to upgrade to a few of these to make the experience even more enjoyable.

Milliner’s needles are great for EPP – most people like to use size 9, but this pack is handy as it lets you find the size that suits you best.

Thin thread will give you more delicate stitches, which is always nice with handwork. Plenty of folks swear by this thread weight, but I actually prefer this one as I like to use a doubled-over length of thread (to avoid starting knots). In most cases, a light silver or dove grey colour thread works well to blend in with multiple colour fabrics.

You can cut your own English Paper Piecing templates, but if you’d like to buy some ready made you can find a wonderful selection in Jodi’s shop, called Tales of Cloth (Australian, but she ships internationally). I’ve tried her papers and an acrylic template – both top notch. And of course, Amazon might have something suitable.

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

My Learn to English Paper Piece project

I was tempted by many of the smaller projects in the book (I like how the projects are all items that I’d actually use or would make thoughtful gifts). But I settled on the zipper pouch because I knew my daughter needed a new pencil case.

I have a ton of yellow scraps from all the yellow quilts I’ve made her, so I had plenty of fabric to choose from. If you don’t have a well developed scrap collection yet, here are some very pretty, colour-coordinated scrap options.

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

I very much enjoyed hand sewing it all together while listening to the lessons of an online course I’d purchased. I find EPP is the perfect “something to occupy my hands” that doesn’t take away my capacity to listen well.

Once I had my pouch panels finished, I quilted the hell out of them because I wanted them to be nice and sturdy. (Having just quilted a large quilt it was so nice to quilt something so small.)

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

The zipper pouch sewing part went very quickly once the hand sewing was complete.

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

My daughter chose the lining (a solid forest green) as she loved the contrast. I would never have thought of that, so it was fun to put those two colours together (although hard to photograph).

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

I’m really happy with my little EPP project and so is my girl!

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

More English Paper Piecing Goodness

This post is part of a book tour – why not check out the other participants’ projects too? You can find them all here:

Friday, January 25th: Carolina from Always Expect Moore

Saturday, January 26th: Linda from Linda B Creative and Havalah from Sisters, What!

Sunday, January 27th: Teresa from Sewn Up, Teresa Down Under and Stephanie from Modern Sewciety

Monday, January 28th: Jen from Faith and Fabric and Alicia from Sew What Alicia

Tuesday, January 29th: Sherry from Powered by Quilting and Marie from Underground Crafter

Wednesday, January 30th: Melody from Two Maker Chicks

Thursday, January 31st: Ali from Home Crafts by Ali and Sarah from Quilted Diary

Friday, February 1st: Bobbie from the Geeky Bobbin

Saturday, February 2nd: Beth from Garland Girl Quilts and Bobbi from Snowy Days Quilting

Sunday, February 3rd: Kirsty from Bonjour Quilts (You’re here!) and Simone from Charmed Life Quilting

Monday, February 4th: Aimee from Things Small and Simple and Mathew from Mister Domestic

Tuesday, February 5th: Kathy from Kathy’s Kwilts and More and Kim from Stitched in Purple

Wednesday, February 6th: Audrey from the Cloth Parcel and Anorina from Samelia’s Mum

Thursday, February 7th: Laura from Slice of Pi Quilts and Lauren from Molly and Mama

Friday, February 8th: Sarah from Saroy and Stephanie from Swoodson Says 

Ready to EPP?

So what do you think – are you up for some EPP? If you’re already a seasoned English Paper Piecer, please do pass on your favourite tips. I’m all ears!

Cheers,

Kirsty

Use English Paper Piecing to sew a beautiful hexagon zipper pouch, as per Carolina Moore's Learn to English Paper Piece book.

Filed Under: EPP

Heartfelt Quilt Pattern

January 28, 2019 By Kirsty 2 Comments

I have a new quilt pattern out today!

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

This PDF quilt pattern is called Heartfelt and it includes instructions for crib, lap, twin and queen sized quilts.

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

The crib size finishes at approximately 40″ x 58″.

The lap size finishes at approximately 60″ x 87″ (a very generous lap quilt – for those who like them big).

The twin size finishes at approximately 67″ x 90″.

The queen size finishes at approximately 95″ x 94″.

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

Heart quilts like Heartfelt aren’t just for Valentines Day. They make great baby gifts and wedding quilt gifts.

This pattern can be made to be on the sweet side – as you see here in Kona solids (Snow for the background and Cornflower, Astral, Chartreuse, Medium Pink and Bubble Gum for the hearts).

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

But it can also be less sweet and a little more sophisticated with a more limited palate, such as the two examples below.

The cover version shown is the lap size quilt. It was quilted with straight lines using my walking foot.

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

I also made a scrappy binding from the fabric left over from the hearts.

I usually prefer to hand stitch my bindings, but the kids go back to school tomorrow and I really wanted this done quickly.

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

The Heartfelt quilt is suitable for confident beginners. It’s not a hard pattern at all – the stripes are sewn in batches, after which the hearts are assembled.

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

I really love it when seams nest, so the pattern has all the pressing instructions to make sure that happens. Patterns just sew up so much quicker when the seams nest (mainly because it’s easier to get away with not pinning).

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

If you’d like to make your own Heartfelt quilt then come on over to the Pattern Shop and buy yourself a copy!

Have a wonderful week and happy sewing!

Cheers,

Kirsty

Heartfelt quilt pattern by Bonjour Quilts. The perfect quilt for baby, or a wedding quilt.

Filed Under: quilt patterns

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt

January 28, 2019 By Kirsty 5 Comments

Ah, mini quilts – aren’t they fun? You can sew them up in an afternoon, entirely from your stash. They can be used as wall decorations, front door decorations, table toppers or runners. And of course, they make great last minute handmade gifts.

This mini quilt pattern, which I’m calling the Ribbon Heart mini, could be a sweet handmade addition to a baby nursery or a Valentine gift for a crafty friend.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

The Ribbon Heart mini quilt finishes at 16.5″ x 12.5″.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

The instructions and diagrams are detailed and show you exactly how to make sure your directional pattern fabrics all face the same way across the pattern.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

I like it when my stripes are all aligned. It’s just a little detail that makes me happy!

Hopefully these instructions will be useful for other patterns too. It can be hard to visualise how patterns should be oriented in blocks to make sure they all match when sewn together.

I liked the idea of a small contrasting piece of fabric in the binding, so the pattern has instructions for that too.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

I have another version almost finished. This will be a striped blue and green Ribbon Heart, with some IKEA hippos on the back. Perfect for a baby nursery.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

I had two lovely testers make some versions of the pattern as well.

First up, Kimberly (from Autumn Hollow Patchwork) made a very Valentine version in pink and red stripes.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

Look at those stripes all lined up the same way – soooooo satisfying. (Should I be worried about how much I want stripes to face the same way? 🙂

Amy (from Stitchy Mitten) also made a couple of test mini quilts, with very groovy quilting.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

I quilted my versions with wavy lines using my walking foot.

Probably should have done some matchstick quilting on this one though… given all the matchsticks.

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

So that’s the Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt!

If you’d like to make your own version, and be deeply fulfilled by stripes that face the right way, then you can find the pattern listed here in my shop.

Thank you and happy sewing!

Kirsty

Ribbon Heart Mini Quilt by Bonjour Quilts - perfect for Valentine Day or a nursery decoration

Filed Under: Blog, quilt patterns

Finish Your Quilt UFOs!

January 14, 2019 By Kirsty 21 Comments

It’s the start of a new year, the perfect time to get your sewing room/supplies in order and finish off any quilt UFOs you have hanging around.

What does UFO stand for in quilting?

If you’re unfamiliar with the term, UFO in the quilting world stands for Unfinished Object. It applies to any project at any stage of progress that has not yet been completed.

UFO tends to refer to a project that has been put on the back burner for a while without progress, as opposed to a project that’s incomplete but is currently being worked on (that’s known as a WIP – work in progress).

We all have quilt UFOs. Some of us have MANY of them 🙂

If your UFOs become overwhelming, motivation-depleting or guilt-inducing then it might be time to actively work toward reducing them.

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

What to do with your quilt UFOs?

There are several options when it comes to handling your quilt UFOs.

You might like to spend a little bit of time reflecting on the project before you decide what to do with it. Was the quilt for a particular person or an event? Is the quilt still relevant to that person or occasion, or has it been overtaken by the time that’s passed? Is the UFO of a colour palette or style that you no longer appreciate?

There’s no rule that says YOU have to be the person to complete the project. If the quilt no longer speaks to you, you could gift it to a quilty friend who does love it and could complete and keep it. Or you can seek out organisations that need fabric/quilt tops for charity projects. (Just make sure that what you donate is useful for them. If they only take completed quilt tops, get it to that stage before giving it away.)

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

If you do complete a quilt UFO, you can give it to family, friends, charity or sell it on a handmade craft site such as Etsy.

Does the final outcome of the UFO have to be as first intended? If you were planning to make a twin sized quilt but found the process tedious, could you make a baby quilt instead and be finished with a lot less work? Or do you have an unfinished baby quilt that the baby has now outgrown? Could you extend the UFO with more blocks or borders to create a larger size that can be gifted to the now preschooler? Those two orphaned appliqué blocks don’t have to become a quilt – just make a pair of pot holders and be done with it!

Find some UFO Mojo.

The hardest part of finishing up quilt UFOs is finding the motivation to do so. That’s why the start of the year is a great time to commit to UFO busting… you can steal some of that Happy New Year magic and put it to good use.

Take stock of all your quilty UFOs and look at them honestly. Do you really want to finish this project? What else could you do with it to make sure it doesn’t go to waste? What’s the minimum effort required to get it to a useful state?

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

Once you’ve come up with a plan for each UFO, you can crack on with doing it. Give away what you need to give away. Prioritise which UFOs you’ll finish and remember – you’re aiming for FINISHED not PERFECT. Momentum is so important here – results will encourage more finishes; you want to take advantage of that. Try to keep the ball rolling!

Try to imagine how good it will feel to have those projects completed. They’ll be out in the world (or your living room) and they’ll be used and enjoyed. Much better than languishing in the back of a cupboard!

Once they’re gone, make sure they don’t come back!

When you have your quilt UFOs under control, be careful not to let yourself fall back into the same position.

Try and have WIPs, not UFOs. Even if you have several projects at the incomplete stage, making time to work on all of them will ensure nothing falls back into UFO status.  I like to have a few things on the go at any one time so that if I hit a bottleneck with one, I have something else to work on in the meantime.

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

My simple way of making sure my WIPs don’t become UFOs is to keep them in plain view. I find if I put it in a cupboard for any reason at all, it’s a case of “out of sight, out of mind” and it won’t receive any attention. So I keep my projects out, taking up valuable table space, which provides further motivation to get them done!

The first quilt UFO I tackled this year was this sunny yellow project.

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

I think I started this quilt in 2011. It would’ve been for my daughter (who still loves yellow) and was about 5 years old at the time. (She’ll be a teenager in a month…eeek).

Problems can occur when WIPs become old UFOs, which is why I thoroughly recommend you don’t let UFOs hang around too long.

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

It’s much quicker to do them early.

Firstly, the reasoning behind this quilt is long gone. I can’t remember a thing about it. The yellow squares are all odd sizes – why did I do that? Did I have a handful of scraps in that size? Or were the sashing strips all cut before I’d done proper calculations? The individual patchwork blocks finish at 6 1/2″…again, I’m not sure why. You can see the weird sizes needed to create this quilt below.

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

The quilt is now too small for my lanky pre-teen daughter. I wouldn’t mind making it bigger with some white borders, but what white fabric did I use? Was it my preferred Kona Snow or was I using something else back then? And of course, even if it is Kona Snow, over time fabric changes colour and manufacturers can change their colours so they may no longer match.

The biggest reason why I’ll try not to let quilt UFOs get the better of me in the future is this:

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

In many of the rows I found seam separations, no doubt due to excessive handling over the 8 years this project went from cupboard to cupboard to moving box. I had to repair many seams before I could sew the rows together. So much extra work I could have avoided if I’d finished this project in a timely fashion. Even if I’d just reached the quilt top stage I would’ve saved myself a lot of sewing the same seam twice.

So if you can, finish those quilt UFOs before they degrade and you have to do the same work again.

If you like to set goals for these sorts of things, why not join the 2019 Finish-a-long that’s underway? There are several hosts across the globe and you can link up your potential finishes and read more about it all here.

Happy sewing and all the best with clearing your quilt UFO backlog in 2019!

Kirsty

Scrappy yellow quilt made with squares

Filed Under: Blog

My Top 5 Quilting Posts of the Year – 2018

December 28, 2018 By Kirsty 4 Comments

Can you believe 2018 is almost over? It’s a little disconcerting, right? Sometimes it helps to look back on the year and see that despite the rapid passing of time, plenty of things were made. I spent a bit of time reviewing my quilting projects and blog posts for the year – there were definitely some quilts I’d forgotten about.

Top 5 quilting posts for 2018 at Bonjour Quilts

I also had some fun delving into the statistics behind my blog to see which posts were favourites with you, my readers, this year. My rating criteria for choosing the top5 posts included the number of visitors a post received and how much engagement (comments and shares) it provoked, weighted with how early in the year it was posted. It’s a nuanced blend that rivals the Colonel’s 11 secret herbs and spices.

Ready to go for a wander back through the archives and see Bonjour Quilts’ top 5 posts for 2018? Here we go!

Quarter square triangle trimming tips

Top Quilting Post Number 5.

My 5th most popular post this year was for a scrappy fish block. This tutorial shows you how to make the fish block with three simple component blocks. It also shows you how to cut your fabric to make sure directional print fabrics all go the same direction across the block.

Sew a scrap quilt from these fun fish quilt blocks at Bonjour Quilts

Top Quilting Post Number 4.

Top Post Number 4 was this one, which announced a new addition to the Colour Explosion family.

I have an older post which is a tutorial for a crib sized baby quilt called Colour Explosion. I had numerous requests to create a pattern for larger sizes, so I complied and created a pattern that has twin and queen sizes (as well as the original crib size).

Color Explosion Quilt, queen size pattern, by Bonjour Quilts

Now when baby upgrades to their big boy or big girl bed, they can upgrade their quilt to a twin size as well.

Top Quilting Post Number 3.

Another tutorial post. This time, I lay out all I know about sewing the Quarter Square Triangle block. I love the design opportunities this block provides – the standard QST as well as the the Split QST and Hourglass block. This post shows how to sew the blocks and also has a couple of handy Quarter Square Triangle charts for ready reference.

Learn to sew Quarter Square Triangles, Hourglass and Split Quarter Square Triangle blocks. Includes free downloadable Quarter Square Triangle Chart for starting squares, trimming sizes and center point location.

Top Quilting Post Number 2.

Getting close to the end now… and the runner up is this post, which was all about the business side of Bonjour Quilts.

The costs a quilt pattern designer needs to cover for a profitable business

In this post I detail what it costs me to run Bonjour Quilts and to create patterns. The post also goes into some of the considerations when distributing patterns through a wholesale distributor. Judging from the many comments on the post, both online business owners and those who had no idea about the behind-the-scenes of a quilting blog found the post interesting.

I really enjoyed the discussion this post generated, both in the comments and via private emails that many of you sent me. Thank you for all your input and encouragement.

Top Quilting Post Number 1.

*Drumroll*….the Top post on Bonjour Quilts for 2018 was this one here, called Gleaned Log Cabin Quilt.

Gleaned fabric, log cabin quilt by Bonjour Quilts

The post outlines the problems I had when turning a charm pack and jelly roll into a cohesive quilt top. There’s a second part to the post too, which shows the final design I came up with.

I was surprised this was number 1 ! But it was the clear winner with the number of visitors. I think it was popular because we’ve all struggled with colour and layout at some stage when creating a quilt. Hopefully my hints were helpful for someone out there!

Other posts that almost made it into the top 5 which you might enjoy include my Adori quilt block tutorial:

Adori Quilt Block Pattern Tutorial by Kirsty at Bonjour Quilts

And this tutorial for a scrappy cross quilt block.

Feeling Cross Scrappy Quilt Block by Bonjour Quilts

So there you have it, a walk back through the year that was 2018.

It’s interesting to research what got done over the year (always more than I remember) and reflect on the wins, losses and luke warms.

I’ll be linking this post up with Meadow Mist Designs Best of 2018 link up – if you have a blog why not join the party?

This link up is also a great place to find new (and active, so many blogs are dormant these days) blogs to read in in 2019.

Whether you’re sad to see the end of 2018 or can’t wait for it to get out the front door, I wish you all the very best for a happy, sewing-full 2019.

Cheers,

Kirsty x

 

 

Filed Under: Blog

Christmas Embroidery Designs and Other Embellishments

December 14, 2018 By Kirsty 11 Comments

In my last post I introduced you to my latest quilt pattern – a mini quilt called Candy Christmas.

Candy Christmas, a holiday mini quilt by Kirsty at Bonjour Quilts

I thought I’d share with you some variations on creating the appliqué Christmas tree as well as some embellishment ideas.

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Fabric Selection

Firstly, there’s a lot that can be done with this pattern just with fabric choices alone. Both my versions of Candy Christmas use a fabric with a ditsy-type print for the Christmas tree. The small scale patterns are a bit of a “cheater print” for Christmas decorations.

Candy Christmas, an easy holiday themed mini quilt to sew by Bonjour Quilts

Just about any small scale print fabric would look great. You can see various colours of the Alison Glass Sun Print fabric I used above here*.

Other great options include these Libs Elliot stars*, or some instant garlands (stars or super cute jar lanterns*).

Cute fabric choice for a Christmas tree applique mini quilt

And pretty much every one of these adorable Swedish fabrics* would look fabulous.

Sweet finch fabric that would work well in the Candy Christmas mini quilt

Don’t forget your background fabrics, too. Solids work really well when you want your colours to shine, but pattern can also be used to great effect. Stars, bubbles, dots, ombré and stripes can all add interest to the background.

These new Lizzy House Constellations fabrics* have lovely, saturated colours that play well together.

My new favourite for a background might just be this Birch collection called Wink*.

starry fabrics perfect for a Candy Christmas mini quilt background

starry fabrics perfect for a Candy Christmas mini quilt background

So I hope that gives you some ideas with regards to fabric choices.

Patchwork Your Tree

Another fun way to create your tree is to hit your scrap bag. You can sew a patchwork piece any way you like that can then be used to cut your tree.

In this version I used some larger strips pieced together to form my “fabric”.

Patchwork Christmas Tree for a Candy Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Then I cut out my tree with the template (from the pattern).

Patchwork Christmas Tree for a Candy Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Another option is to use up all your smaller scraps by frankensteining them together:

Patchwork Christmas Tree for a Candy Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

When you cut out your tree, just try not to let any of the tree points fall on a seam.

Patchwork Christmas Tree for a Candy Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Christmas Embroidery Designs

There’s lots of scope for embellishing with Christmas embroidery designs or other trims you might fancy.

I knew I wanted to do some embroidery, so I marked out a rough plan on the back of my appliqué template. I could easily adjust my garland and ornament spacing before I started on my actual mini quilt.

Embroidery embellishment and other decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

When it came to choosing thread colours, I went with tones that matched my background fabrics. I think it helped tie the whole thing together.

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

I also recommend completing your embellishment after quilting the top to the batting, but before you put on your backing. That way you don’t have to worry about being overly neat on the back of your piece, as that will all be enclosed in the quilt sandwich. As I embellished after the mini quilt was complete, I had to pop knots through into the backing, etc, to try and minimise the mess on the back. It wasn’t much fun, so benefit from my hindsight!

For those who might be worried about affixing your backing after you’ve embroidered, don’t worry. You can quilt a line outside each edge of the tree to hold your backing in place – this is plenty for a mini quilt. If you’d like to put a line of quilting on the tree but don’t want to sew over embroidery, just mark a line before you embroider so you know where to leave a clear path for later quilting.

Right. Back to the stitching. Firstly, if you’re looking for a straight forward, photo laden book on embroidery stitches I’m a fan of the book below (which you can find on Amazon here*).

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

I started with the tree garlands, which I marked with an air-erasable pen on my tree. However, I found my line wasn’t sticking around long enough for me to get my garland sewn before it faded away (it’s very humid here at the moment).

To counter that problem I cut my appliqué template along my drawn garland lines and pinned the sections to my tree as I sewed. I was able to use the cut edges as a guide for my stitching lines. This also worked really well for night time sewing, when I find it harder to see the air and water erasable pens against dark fabrics (old eyes!)

Embroidery embellishment and other decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

So back to the garlands. I started with a single line of chain stitch but felt it wasn’t hefty enough, so I did a second.

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

And then I thought it was a little plain for a garland, so I went back and whip stitched the two lines together with another colour thread. (If I’d had a metallic thread* I would have used that here, I think it would’ve looked fantastic).

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

I also scattered some gold and navy stars across the tree.

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Other Embellishment Ideas

The sky’s the limit! What do you have lying around in your drawers? Ribbons, pom-poms, lace, doilies, beads and sequins – any sort of trim is fair game. You could machine sew garlands if your machine has fancy-pants stitches.

(Just remember to sew hardware down very securely if little hands are likely to be handling your mini quilt. Large beads, etc, can be a choking hazard.)

Embroidery embellishment and other decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Alright, I think that’s more than long enough for a blog post. Thank you for reading and I hope this has sparked some Christmas embroidery design ideas of your own.

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

If you’d like to make your own Candy Christmas, you can find the pattern in my shop.

Happy embellishing and happy holidays!

Embroidery embellishment and other decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

*affiliate links

Filed Under: Blog, Christmas, embroidery

Candy Christmas Mini Quilt

December 14, 2018 By Kirsty 1 Comment

I have a new Christmas mini quilt pattern out, just in time for the holidays. It’s called Candy Christmas.

Candy Christmas, an easy holiday themed mini quilt to sew by Bonjour Quilts

The pattern involves some easy appliqué over a pieced background.

I think this Alison Glass fabric is perfect for a Christmas tree – the ornaments are already built in!

Candy Christmas, an easy holiday themed mini quilt to sew by Bonjour Quilts

Once sewn, there are many ways you could embellish your tree – embroidery, ric rac, beads, sequins, pom-pom trim and ribbon. The only limit is what you can dig up in your “miscellaneous” drawer.

After creating my mini quilt top, I chose matchstick quilting for my background. Well, it’s pretty lazy matchstick work – they’re not very close together. It’s a great choice for mini quilts as it adds a lot of body/structure to the piece.

And finally, the binding for my Candy Christmas mini quilt was the same fabric as my outermost background layer, as I liked the framing effect it made.

My sewing machine has a bunch of fancy stitches which would make for fun appliqué options. I went with an uneven edges satin stitch. It’s very forgiving and adds a kind of snowflake-y feel, in my opinion.

If you’d like to make your own Candy Christmas mini quilt, you can find the pattern listed in my shop here.

If you’d like some ideas on how to use a patchwork tree and how I embellished another version of this mini quilt, come and read my ideas over here.

Embroidery decoration ideas for a Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Patchwork Christmas Tree for a Candy Christmas mini quilt by Bonjour Quilts

Happy sewing, and happy holidays!

Filed Under: Blog

Self Binding Quilt Tutorial

December 1, 2018 By Kirsty 14 Comments

Not every quilt needs a frame – sometimes those edges just want to be left alone in peace! That’s where a self binding finishing method comes in handy.

What do you mean “self binding”?

It’s possible to finish your quilt without a binding. I’m going to show you how I used a “self binding” method to bind my Christmas mini quilt to give a more modern look. The method (in my opinion) is best suited to small items such as mini quilts, table toppers or baby quilts. I wouldn’t be prepared for the work required to implement this method with a large quilt. (But if you’re that way inclined, go for it!)

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

 

I’ve seen this method referred to as self binding, no binding and the pillowcase method. You’ll go through basting and backing, just in a different configuration.

Baste your quilt top

First up, you need to baste your quilt top to your batting. Because I’ve just got a small mini quilt, I used poly batting and some basting spray.  You’ll want to add a few lines of quilting here to make sure your two layers are well secured. Stitching in the ditch along a couple of lines would be perfect.

I actually decided to go to town and do most of my quilting at this stage. Why? Because I’m lazy! I knew that quilting when the backing is on will require thread burying, which isn’t my idea of a fun night in.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Using my walking foot I straight line quilted, using the seams as rough guides. I quilted it fairly densely as I like my mini quilts to have a fair bit of structure.

Once your batting and quilt top are secured (however you decide to go) trim off the excess batting and square it up.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Attach your backing

You’ll now need a backing piece the same size as your quilt top/batting piece. Place the top and backing right sides together.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Pin all around the edges, but remember to leave an open section to turn the work right side out after sewing. You can learn from my mistake here – locate your gap along one side so that only one fabric is involved.  I left my turning gap along the top of the quilt and it spanned several different coloured fabrics, which makes it harder to match the thread when hand sewing it closed.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

I’ve pinned my edges above. You’ll see I’ve put two pins in the one spot – that’s my little code to remind me where my turning gap is, so I remember not to sew the whole perimeter closed.

I used my walking foot and a 1/2″ seam as the seams are quite bulky with all the layers. If this were a larger quilt I would also zig zag the raw edges or use the “serger” stitch on my machine just to help it stand up to washing better.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Once I’ve sewn the backing and top together around the edges I like to take the time to press back my turning gap seams. I find it easier to get them straight from the back side, rather than when the piece is right side out.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

I also like to trim my corners to make sure there’s less bulk (but be careful not to clip your stitching).

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Close the turning gap

Once you’ve pressed your turning gap seams you can turn the piece right side out.

Give the quilt another press. Focus on setting the seams around the edges and making sure your turning gap edges are still aligned and straight. I’ve pinned the turning gap closed below.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Now it’s time to whip stitch the turning gap closed with some hand sewing. I like to start with a nice long thread, which I double up. I put both cut ends through the eye of the needle and keep the thread loop at the other end. When you take your first stitch, pop the needle through the loop before pulling the stitch tight. This will make the loop close into a sturdy starting knot that will never come undone. It’s my favourite way to tie on a thread.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Quilt, quilt, quilt!

Once your turning gap is closed you’re ready to quilt the piece so the backing is better fixed to the top. If you have a larger project, you may like to put some basting pins in to make sure you don’t get any bunching or tucks in your backing. And remember that you’ll have to bury your ends at the beginning/end of your seam lines. Your start/end points can’t be later secured by the binding. (This is why I did so much quilting earlier.)

Because this is just a mini quilt I felt that two lines, about a third in from each edge, would work a treat. They’re a bit hard to see below.

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

And again, because it’s a wall decoration and won’t be washed, I just did a few backstitches at the start and end of each line. No thread burying for me!

Self Binding quilt tutorial by Bonjour Quilts

Another good press, and there you have it.

If this was a larger quilt, I would have also done a perimeter of “top stitching” around the edge. This would add some extra strength and to help keep the edge seams where they should be.

So there you have it – one way of creating a no binding finish, or a self binding quilt.

If you like this pattern and would like to make a Christmas mini quilt of your own, you can find the pattern in my shop here.

Candy Christmas, an easy holiday themed mini quilt to sew by Bonjour Quilts

Have you tried the self binding method before? Do you have any tips for young players? I’d love to hear them below.

Filed Under: Christmas, tutorial

Behind-the-Scenes of a Quilt Pattern Business

October 27, 2018 By Kirsty 166 Comments

What it costs to run a quilt blog business

There’s been a few articles here and there in the craft sphere about free quilt patterns that I’ve been mulling over. I have my own opinions, but I was curious how my readers felt about the issue. So I decided to ask them! Here’s an excerpt from my most recent newsletter:

I’ve read a few articles about free content on blogs (free downloadable patterns, in particular) and how it is hurting the quilting industry. What say you?

As you know, I have both – a pattern shop and some patterns that are free to download. The latter help me get my name out there (via Pinterest and Facebook sharing) and get people signed up to my email list (where I can nurture a relationship with them). It also offers a risk-free way (for customers) to check out my patterns before buying.

But on the other hand, is it conditioning people to expect patterns for free? Is it encouraging a lack of respect for intellectual property ?

If a business site offers free content, do you accept they have to make money some other way (adverts, sponsored posts, affiliate links)? Or does it kind of offend you?

I spend a lot of timing thinking about these things, but I’m not sure if the average quilter does too? Are you interested in how a quilt blog stays afloat, what costs are involved? I understand if you don’t – there are many things I buy that I don’t feel compelled to know the ‘how” of its creation/business model!

Let me know your thoughts (just reply to this email). I’m keen to hear what consumers think of this issue. The quilting industry needs to serve its customers, but without killing off small businesses.

I received 94 replies and the majority understood that a business has to make money. They were very supportive and advised me to keep doing what I was doing (thank you!).

There were also a few replies that showed not everyone understands what goes into running a craft blog/pattern store, especially the costs incurred by owners. So I thought I’d outline some of the details behind the running of Bonjour Quilts, in an effort to show why pattern designers need to make money somewhere in order to survive. And let’s be honest – it’s better that they thrive, not “just survive”, because just surviving gets tiring very quickly and encourages business abandonment.

So let’s have a look at what it costs me to run my online business. And then I’ll show you how easy it is to support your favourite quilt blogs/quilt pattern designers.

Costs to Run a Quilt Blog – Annual Overheads

Although my blog started on a free blogging platform (blogspot), I now have a website (created for me by Teresa at A Fearless Venture) with a custom pattern shop that uses Sendowl. I worked hard to recoup those set-up costs last year so I’m only listing recurring annual costs here (in $US). But do keep in mind I’ve put several thousand dollars into my website and pattern shop over the past few years.

Website domain (Hover*) – $15

Website hosting (Lightning Base*) – $240

Site backup (VaultPress) – $165

Illustration software (Gliffy) – $95

Photoshop – $120

Email marketing software (ConvertKit*) – $1345

G Suite email address – $60

SendOwl* – $180

Tailwind* – $120

Craft Industry Alliance* – $60

There is no line item for the cost of my time here. I’ll get to that later.

Add it all up and I have at the very minimum costs of $2400. With an average pattern price of $10, I need to sell 240 patterns every year to break even on my overheads. 

But Bonjour Quilts doesn’t exist just to be a website – it has to produce patterns. So let’s have a look at those costs too.

PDF Quilt Pattern Production Costs.

Firstly, I can’t vouch for others’ costs, only my own. I know that there are cheaper ways (beware ye the risks!) of doing things, but this is what works for me. It’s important to me to produce a quality pattern that I have sewn myself and that has been technically edited by an industry professional. Do mistakes still occur? Sometimes. But I’m doing my best and learning all the time.

So – here’s an estimate of what it costs me to produce a pattern (all amounts are $US).

Technical editing – $100 – 150 (depending on pattern difficulty/length)

Graphic design – $200 – 300 depending on whether the template has already been set up (first pattern is most expensive).

Sample materials – $200

Please note that this doesn’t take into account the time it takes me to design the quilt, sew the sample, photograph the sample and edit the photographs. It also doesn’t take long-arming into account, as I probably send out only 30% of my quilts.

So the costs that come out of my pocket to create a quilt pattern are $500 – $650 (remembering that this doesn’t cover any of my time). Taking a $10 pattern price again for ease, you can see a pattern has to sell at least 50 – 65 copies to break even.

PDF vs Paper Patterns

Several replies to my newsletter question asked why PDF patterns weren’t cheaper than paper copies. After all, isn’t the main cost of a pattern the paper it’s printed on? I hope the annual overhead and pattern production costs I’ve outlined above show that this isn’t the case. A pattern, whether it’s paper or PDF, needs to cover production and overhead costs, as well as the intellectual work of the author. The couple of dollars it takes to print the pattern are a small portion of this cost.

There’s also another factor that needs to be considered in pattern pricing – selling wholesale.

Wholesale Pattern Sales

I’m a little on the fence with wholesale pattern selling. If you’re a quilt pattern designer having success in this area I’d love to hear from you!

Selling wholesale directly is quite simple. A quilt shop contacts you and purchases the patterns at half price. They then sell the patterns in their shop at the recommended retail price. This is why it’s important for a pattern designer to sell their patterns, both paper and PDF, at the same price. No quilt shop will want to carry your patterns if they know you’re offering the PDF version at a cheaper price (and rightly so!). The quilt shops would then have a whole bunch of patterns they can’t sell, or have to sell at close to cost price. So this is one reason why PDF and paper need to be priced the same – so it remains attractive to quilt shops to carry your patterns.

Selling wholesale through a distributor is another option. The distributor takes another cut of the pattern price, but the upside is they’ve a huge number of quilt shops on their books and can expose them to your patterns. The downside is they’ve a huge number of pattern designers on their books and your patterns won’t receive any special sales treatment. Distributors offer a service and have their own costs – it’s up to each quilt pattern designer to decide if that works for their business.

Here’s an indicative outline of the cost breakdown when selling wholesale through a distributor.

Paper pattern sells at $10 on designer’s website (pattern designer receives $10 per sale).

Paper Pattern sells at $5 wholesale to a quilt shop (pattern designer receives $5 per sale, quilt shop gets $5).

Paper pattern sells at $5 wholesale through a distributor (pattern designer receives $3.5 per sale, quilt shop gets $5, distributor gets $1.5)

The important thing to remember is that the quilt pattern designer PAYS FOR THE PATTERN PRINTING AND “PRINTER TO DISTRIBUTOR” POSTAGE.

Printing costs depend on how long your pattern is (more pages = more $) and how many you order. (Larger print runs are cheaper $ per pattern, but if your pattern doesn’t sell well then you’re stuck with a lot of money tied up in stock you can’t sell). Pattern printing costs can therefore vary greatly, but mine run in the $1.50 – $2 range per pattern. As you can see, there’s not much money left over from the $3.5 that goes to the designer in a wholesale distribution model.

When a distributor places a bulk order, the cost to send those patterns to the distributor is around $10-$20. It’s actually possible (if you have a paper hungry pattern or the distributor order isn’t very big) to LOSE MONEY when you sell paper patterns! This is why it’s really important to minimise the number of pages in a pattern. This is naturally at odds with a designer’s desire to give you as much instruction as possible. It’s quite conflicting!

So to recap – pattern costs are those directly related to producing the pattern and the overheads of the business.

To sell paper patterns, the designer has to be able to cover the printing and the pattern/overhead costs with the profits within a wholesale distributor model. Patterns sold for less than $10 make this very, very difficult.

To ensure quilt shops continue to stock paper patterns, the PDF patterns have to remain at the same price as paper. This ensures quilt shops aren’t undercut and helps offset the very narrow profit margins for the designer in the wholesale distributor model.

I hope this helps to show why designers can’t offer the patterns any cheaper than we currently do.

Additional Costs

There are other costs that aren’t captured above. One of these are fees. Paypal, Stripe (credit card payment provider) and bank transfers bleed small amounts of money away from each sale amount. 3% here, 2% there, bank exchange rates for those that don’t live in the US. They all add up to eat into profit margins. Once I change my shop over to Shopify, they will start taking a cut of my sales too. I’m not mad about it – it’s a cost of doing business.

What else? Quilting tools, fabric, rotary cutter blades, long arm quilting, thread, sewing machine repairs and servicing, electricity. Taxes – can’t forget those. Or the accountant. If you have a booth at Market, that’s a big expense (especially if travelling from Australia) Oh, and bar codes. If you sell paper patterns, you have to pay for bar codes. You get the drift – businesses have lots of costs.

Education is another expense that is really important for small business owners. Unless you’ve come across from a comparable employment category, you’ll be learning how to run a small business as you go. It’s important to me to take courses through the year to try and improve how I do things. I’m a member of an online business community and I’ve also taken several “one off” online courses to target particular topics – Sticky Search Engine Optimisation ($149), Affiliate Marketing for Bloggers Master Cse* ($297), Pinterest Traffic Avalanche* ($197). It’s a continuous process of learning and making myself a better business owner, and it’s a process I really enjoy, actually!

Here’s the big one – the additional cost that is really important. As you saw above, none of the costs listed so far cover my work, or the hours of time that I spend in the business.

I Need to Pay Myself a Wage 

The average wage in Australia is AUD$85,000 (this is US$60,000). I’d need to sell 6,000 patterns (at $10) a year to make a US$60,000 wage.

The median wage in the US is $45,000. (Given the cost of living in Australia is higher, the two are roughly comparable.) I’d need to sell 4,500 patterns a year to earn that wage.

And I’d have to sell them directly myself, as PDFs, not as paper patterns through a distributor. That’s a tall order!

(Funnily enough, I have 13,000 people on my email list. If everyone on my list bought just one $10 pattern every 2 years, I’d be supported!)

This is why those in the quilting industry have to work hard at developing multiple sources of income – books, courses, workshops, fabric design, offering advertising, using affiliate links, accepting sponsorship deals to try and earn a living wage. They really have to hustle!

You can probably guess I’m not making a living wage from Bonjour Quilts. I am in the black (not in the red), but it will be a while before I can build up the income streams and newsletter list that can support me in that manner. I’ve another job, one that pays me a wage and my superannuation (401K for US readers) so I’m able to contribute to my family while building Bonjour on the sidelines. It’s a lot of work, but I enjoy it.

How You Can Support Your Favourite Quilt Pattern Designer

So you’ve seen the bad news – how about some good news? The good news is that it’s really, really easy to support your favourite quilt pattern designers. You can support them with money, or with actions, or with both.

Support with Money

+Hands down the best thing you can do is purchase a PDF pattern directly from the quilt pattern designer. That puts the most money into their pocket. And the great thing is that it’s an environmentally friendly way to support someone. There’s no trees being chopped down or ink being used. If you don’t get around to making the pattern you can be happy you’ve supported someone with none of the guilt that unused physical products generate.

+If you can’t buy a pattern (PDF or paper) from the designer, the next best thing is to buy their pattern from a quilt store. The quilt pattern designer, quilt store and the distributor’s families will thank you for the support.

+If your favourite designer has a book, a special ruler or designs fabric, purchasing directly from them (rather than through a middle man or Amazon) will pass on the most profit to them.

+If you can, purchase through the affiliate links on your favourite designer’s website. (Only things you were planning to buy anyway – I don’t like the idea of people buying things they don’t really need just to help someone with a commission.) That said, the commissions via affiliate links are very small. But they can add up over time and contribute a small bump of income to a blogger, at absolutely no cost to you the buyer. Amazon is going to pay someone a commission, so it might as well be your favourite designer, right?

Support with Action

I have many newsletter readers who have never purchased a pattern from me. The majority of non-purchasers are people on fixed incomes who say they would like to support me with a purchase, but unfortunately can’t. Luckily, there’s plenty of other things they can do to help.

Even if these readers can’t afford my patterns, they can help to get my work in front of others who can. There are millions of quilters out there, and some of them would love to purchase from me – if only they knew my patterns existed! This is where you can help your favourite quilt pattern designer. Get their name out in front of new readers so they’ve a chance to connect with new customers.

+Pin their photographs to Pinterest. Pinterest is a fantastic traffic generator for blogs and such a great place for people to find new things.

+Post their blog posts and new pattern listings to your Facebook feed, or share it in quilting Facebook Groups (if it’s within the rules). A recommendation is a powerful thing.

+Like their posts on Facebook and Instagram – this encourages both programs to show the photos to other similar users.

+If you’ve quilting friends who you think would enjoy a quilt designer’s newsletter, forward the email on to them with a recommendation. It would be great if you could help recruit new readers for them.

+If you see someone online in a quilting forum or a Facebook Group (or in real life at a guild or quilting circle) trying to source a free copy of a paid pattern, please speak up and defend that quilt pattern designer’s copyright. The more people that speak up against pattern theft, the closer we’ll come to stamping it out.

Back to the Free Patterns…

There is a place for freebies. They attract new people to quilting. I believe being able to download a free beginners pattern and give quilting a try opens the craft up to more people. And once we have them hooked, we have a quilter for life! Quilters, for the most part, who’ll go on to improve their skills and buy patterns.

Freebies are also a useful marketing tool. I have a few simple patterns that I use to get people onto my newsletter list. (So it’s really not a freebie – it’s a swap; an email address for a pattern.) On my list they can get to know me and my designs better and decide if they’d like to purchase a pattern. They may also decide they don’t like my style of quilting and unsubscribe. No biggie. This type of try-before-you-buy marketing is not new – think of test driving cars or trying the cheese samples in the deli.

Some other points to ponder on free:

The mass dropping of free patterns by companies when a fabric line debuts to encourage fabric sales. Even if a designer is paid a fee to produce the pattern by the fabric company, is it likely to replace the revenue that the pattern would generate over the entirely of its life? (Anecdotally it would seem quilt shops don’t like these free patterns either – they’d rather sell a pattern to a shopper.)

Are all free patterns technically edited and of good quality?

How much time is needed to support those free patterns? I’ve had people email and ask me to resize my free patterns for them – without paying me for that work. Of course, I politely decline, but why do people expect that I would want to do this work for them for free? No doubt because they think if I’ve worked for free before (free pattern), I’d be happy to work for free again.

In conclusion…

Lots to read and lots to consider. If you’ve made it this far, you’re a legend and obviously care about quilting and the industry. Thank you for your support.

You can read more thoughts on this matter in these places:

A Craft Industry Alliance article on the ethics of free content in the craft industry

Steph Skardal has written about being a Quilt Entrepreneur

Jen Shaffer outlines how she costs her quilt designs

Just surviving isn’t enough – why one artist went back to a day job 

I’d love to hear your comments on the issue. Please let me know your thoughts below.

And if you’d like to support this quilter, please join my newsletter or check out my pattern shop.

Thank you – and happy creating!

Kirsty

*affiliate links!

What it costs to run a quilt blog business

Filed Under: Blog, blogging

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Unless stated otherwise, all content (text and photographs) belongs to Bonjour Quilts, so please do not use without permission. The use of a single photograph and a link back to the site is fine, for educational or informational purposes, but please don’t republish more than this in any form (digital or paper). Do not take my photographs and offer them for download (free or paid) on your website.