Size: small
Started: February 27, 2025
Completed: February 28, 2025
Techniques: machine piecing
Fabric: vinyl and quilting cotton
It's time for the last round for the Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR) hosted by Gail @ Quilting Gail. I hope you have enjoyed sewing along with us.
Are you ready for round 5 for the Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR)? Next week will be the last round.
Round 5 was chosen by Brenda @ Songbird Designs -- half log block.
We're at the halfway point of the Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR). If you haven't been able to keep up, or didn't have time to start, you can start sewing whenever you want.
The theme for Project Quilting 16.3 -- hosted by Kim @ Persimon Dreams and Trish @ Quilt Chicken -- was Common blocks.
Common blocks are the core foundation of our craft – these are the block designs that no one “invented,” instead they’re the legacy we’ve inherited from quilters through the ages.
Here is my 36-inch baby quilt using Kona Nightfall, Snow, Lemon, and Cardinal.
Are you sewing along for the Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR) hosted by Gail @ Quilting Gail? If not, there's still lots of time to join in.
Are you ready for round 2 for the Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR)?
You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!
Click here to enterIt's time for Project Quilting Season 16 -- hosted by Kim @ Persimon Dreams and Trish @ Quilt Chicken.
Project Quilting is six themed challenges over 12 weeks. The theme is announced at 12:00 noon on Sunday, and you have until 12:00 noon the following Sunday to link up a project that you made during the week.Did you get your centre block made? If not, there's still time. Today is the reveal for the first theme for the Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR) hosted by Gail @ Quilting Gail.
It's the first day of the 2025 Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR) hosted by Gail @ Quilting Gail.
It's time for Quilting Gail's annual Stay at Home Round Robin (SAHRR). Gail began SAHRR in 2020. Starting in 2021, she invited several friends to join. 2025 marks the sixth year of SAHRR.
Gail explains:
This is a common activity in many quilt guilds. A round robin (in quilting terms) is where each person makes a centre block. This block is put in a bag or container, maybe with extra fabric, perhaps with a notebook, and the bag is passed onto another quilter in the group. They are given instructions as to what kind of border (or round) they are to add on to the quilt. Sometimes the next person will make a border for each side, or one side or two sides of the block. It’s then passed on to another quilter and it continues on … when the quilt centre and all the borders are completed, it is returned to the original maker of the centre block.