Re: Come play with me



I like the colors on your Cedar of Lebanon. Bold and so nicely contrasting
: )

Butterfly

"KI Graham" <kigraham@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1uExf.322754$ki.265893@xxxxxxxxxxx
> Instructions and diagrams:
> http://members.shaw.ca/kigraham/basic/yankepuz.html
> Plus, for lots of triangles all the same: grid piecing:
> http://members.shaw.ca/kigraham/basic/grid.html
>
> When you've mastered that, try the shaded four-patch units: they really
> are magic!
> Cedars of Lebanon is an easy block built around this nifty unit:
> http://members.shaw.ca/kigraham/partners/Psalms/psalmcedar.htm
>
> --
> Kim Graham
> http://members.shaw.ca/kigraham
> Nanaimo, BC, Canada
> THE WORD IN PATCHWORK
>
> "Maria O" <marolsh@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
> news:1137109307.298846.136460@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> Here's a neat trick for lots of Half Square Triangles. Cut a square
>> double the size you want your HST to be, plus 1 inch. For example, for
>> HSTs of three and a half inches, cut an eight-inch square of your two
>> fabrics. Place the two fabrics right sides together, then draw diagonal
>> lines from corner to corner, top left to bottom right and top right to
>> bottom left. Sew 1/4 inch on either side of the lines in both
>> directions. Cut the large square into four smaller ones by cutting it
>> down the center, top to bottom and side to side. Now cut them apart on
>> the drawn diagonal lines. Presto! eight HSTs at one time. Big fun!
>>
>> Maria in NE PA
>>
>
>


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