I joined this challenge on Instagram last year and it encouraged me to work on abandoned projects. This year I am using it as a way to make progress on Tula Pink's Hex on the Beach project. I bought the fabrics from Sew Hot and collected them at the 2018 Festival of Quilts in August.
I had only sewn a few hexagons together and they are in a large messy block. Since starting the 100 day project, I have cut more hexagons and papers and started top left, having divided the pattern into blocks of 10 to 12 hexagons.
I have called this block A and my current thinking is to try and sew one complete block each day and stitch one hexagon a day to block A when time permits.
I have cut the plain hexagons using a Sizzix die, again a little haphazard so I have some of all of the plain colours cut. I cut the papers from freezer paper in a smaller size and use a Sewline glue pen to glue baste the edges down, having first ironed the papers to the fabric. The spotted fabric takes a little longer to prep and involves an acrylic template that I designed for my own use which has a circle of the correct size in the entre of the template to enable a fairly accurate centering of the dot in the middle of the hexagon.
I then found an old Tupperware box which is the perfect depth to store my prepped hexagons.
Last week we had a three day trip to London to apply for visas for China. I am so relieved that our passports arrived back yesterday as we are having a few days in France after Easter for which we need our passports. I digress! I packed ten blocks into a paper sweetie bag each and popped them into this pouch by Sarah Ashford along with the necessary tools to sew whilst travelling. Ten blocks was a bit ambitious to say the least. I completed the last of three blocks on my return home on Tuesday.
Every evening I take out the following days block from my Tupperware box and pin it on my June Tailor cut and press board so I can pick up the pieces in the correct order.
Then I renumber the paper bag and refill it with another block. Noting down any hexagons that I need to cut.
Each morning I start sewing my block together which takes about two hours
Then I take out any papers where the hexagon is completely surrounded by other hexagons and put the papers in the Tupperware ready to reuse.
1. Start another block
2. Sew some blocks together and release more papers to reuse
3. Sew some hexagons onto block A.
I am torn. Tonight is Saturday Night Craftalong and I think I will do an extra block and if there is time, sew some blocks together. During the week if time permits, I will add to block A whilst not abandoning all of my other projects in progress.
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