Friday, March 24, 2017

Harley Quilt for Dad


This month is flying by!!!!  I can't keep up. I know they say time goes by faster as you get older, but this year seems a lot faster than most. 

As promised...  Here is another one of my projects I did last year. 

I decided to try a T-shirt quilt!  I always say that I'm scared to start new things when kit comes to quilting but now that I did it I'm glad....  and it wasn't as hard as I thought it would be.  

I asked my Dad to go through all of his old Harley shirts and pick some out for me...  I didn't even tell him how many.  To my surprise, he brought me a bag a while later and I was impressed with his selections.  He had shirts that I remember him wearing when I was young (maybe 30 years ago). He also had shirts from locations that were important to him. I know that each shirt was special to him and I found out some of them were even worth quite a bit of money. Some were worn thin some were faded and some even had holes from where they hit his belt buckle.  I had a few challenges to work on.  

Black on the inside - faded grey on the outside.
Just a few little holes.

I didn't know how I would lay them out so I started by cutting the fronts from the backs and get measurements. I made a list of every shirt and got dimensions for the smallest I could make the block to the largest I could make it. My dad is a tiny guy and some of his old shirts looked extra small. This made it hard for a few of them to make sure I got the entire graphic in the block.  

Extremely faded and loved.

I included the backs too - they helped tell the story.
Faded and full of holes.

Next I busted out my graph paper!!!  One of my musts when I do a layout.  I had to pay attention to color and the picture when I started trying to figure it out....  it took quite a few drafts but I finally got all the shirts to fit with only a few places that needed filler.  

Final draft....

Next I backed them all with Pellon P44F fusible interfacing which I liked because it wasn't too bulky. In order to get the most of my fusible, I cut each piece an inch bigger than my block size and placed it centered over the graphic on the front of the shirt then I put a pin on each edge. I turned the shirt over then lined the fusible up between the pins and ironed.  Then I could trim to the size I wanted with minimal waste.  The shirts that had holes got a patch from an extra piece of the shirt. It looked fine to me!


Center the image and pin the sides - then flip the shirt over.
Line fusible up between pins and iron down.

Next I started sewing!!!  I backed with a grey Kona cotton and used a warm and cozy batting. Had my amazing long arm quilter add some flames and BAM!  Just like that it was done and it came together almost perfectly and I had one super happy dad come Christmas!

It turned out so nice I almost want one for myself!


I saw some of the other bloggers doing this so I will too just in case it is proper etiquette. 
Linking up with crazy mom quilts ---  Thanks for coming!!

PS.....  Does anyone know how to make the huge space at the top go away???  I hate it!!!




2 comments:

  1. Perfect layout---all the work you put into making the most of each shirt was really worth it. I'm sure your dad loves his quilt. My dad is a motorcyclist too, and I'm sure there are a ton of memories of good friends and good times wrapped up in there.

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  2. A T-shirt is on my list of things to get started. We rode a Gold Wing, and we have tons of shirts too. Matching ones, so there are 2 of each! Yikes! Thanks for the information on your construction technique.

    As for the space at the top of your post? Try putting your cursor at the top/left most space and "delete". Not sure, but I have Blogger too and it sometimes works for me.

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