This is a quick, cheap and easy project with huge eye-candy payoff. This project
is highly customizable - use a colorful abstract pattern fabric and any
size canvas. This would make an amazing piece on a larger scale or done in a
grouping of three or five. I plan on making another one for my son's room with a
larger canvas and this urban landscape
fabric.
What you'll
need:
Store bought canvas {the one I used is
8x10}
Large-scale printed quilting or home dec weight
fabric*
Staple gun and staples
Cotton or polyester batting*
Backing fabric {I used a large scrap}*
Coordinating thread {I used a variegated bright
Gutterman}
Sewing machine
Scissors
*to determine fabric requirements, take the canvas
size and add 8" to each number. For example, an 8x10 canvas will require about
a 16x18 piece of fabri
Let's get
started!
|
I
used batting scraps and fused them together with Heat Press. Awesome stuff and
easy to use. If you don't have this, it's totally okay to butt your batting
pieces up against each other and zig-zag them
together. |
|
Make a quilt sandwich by laying your fabric face down,
laying down the batting and then topping it off with your backing piece. No one
will see the backing, so use whatever you have on hand for
this. |
|
Use safety pins or a large basting stitch to hold the
sandwich {sammich} together. You don't need a lot of them - I think I used 7 or
8. |
|
I
used a Gutterman verigated thread. For this project, use a thread color that
contrasts a little or is the darkest color in the fabric. The idea is for the
quilting to stand out a bit but not
overpower. |
|
Start with needle down and start sewing, pivoting the
fabric as needed to navigate around curves or corners. {Needle down, presser
foot up, turn sammich, presser foot down} I used my regular foot for this, but
you can use a walking foot or a free-motion quilting foot if you want. Start in
the middle of your fabric and just start working your way out, following the
outlines of your shapes. I did mine a little messy and amoeba-like to kind of go
along with the abstract vibe of the fabric. |
|
This fabric kind of allowed me to do some figure-8 kind
of wandering. I literally just followed the outline of the circles.
|
|
This is the back - you can see where I went over some
of my lines a few times. It creates depth to have heavy quilting, so really -
there's no wrong way to do this. Do as much or as little quilting as you
want. |
|
Trim sammich to about 2"all around your
canvas. |
|
Starting on one of the long sides, fold the raw edge
under about 1/2"..... |
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.....and pull taught over the edge of the
frame. |
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Staple in place. Turn piece to the other long
side.... |
|
...and do the same. Simple upholstery techniques at
play here. |
|
Then do the same with the short
edges. |
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Remove a little bit of the corner to reduce bulk. {This
cut piece was about 1 1/2" square.} |
|
Pull the de-bulked sammich corner to the middle of the
canvas corner and hold..... |
|
.....while you pull the top flap over it, making sure
to keep the edges folded under. Hold in
place...... |
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...while you pull the other flap over.
|
|
Staple all layers in place. Repeat with other
corners. |
|
This is the back - it ain't pretty, but it
works. |
Et voila! Tres chic, non?
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