A few people wanted me to do a sew/craft-along, so here it is. This is for making 5x7 cards with patchwork squares/rectangles, but I've also made 4x5.5 ones, and you can choose whatever pieceworking you like (squares, triangles, crazy-patch, whatever). Also, for this sew-along I used already-made blank cards, but in the past I've also used card stock and cut & folded it to fit envelopes.
Ingredients: Fabric scraps, thread, HeatNBond Ultra, card stock or blank cards. Also sewing machine, iron with ironing board, rotary cutter, and mat.
First, gather your scraps together, and choose some that you like the look of together. I cut mine into 2.5" strips to begin with.
Sew some of the strips together at the short end, and press.
Sew two long strips together, and then another 2 long strips. Press.
Start cutting the sewn strips into 2.5" and 4.5" lengths.
Juggle the pieces around until they look nice to you - you may have to cut a few other 2.5" squares to fill in, if you like a more random-like pattern. Make sure that you're making the patchwork wide enough for the cards that you'll be making. I have 4 squares across, but on smaller cards 3 squares may be sufficient.
Strip-piece them, and then keep sewing them together until you have a block of patchwork of sufficient size to make 3 or 4 cards (mine made 3). Make sure you steam iron in between steps for a nicer finish.
What it should look like at this stage:
and on the back:
Now set your iron to NOT steam (dry), and down to a silk/nylon setting (on my iron, that's number 2)
Cut a strip of HeatnBond Ultrahold to slightly LESS than the width of your patchwork. You'll be trimming the patchwork to fit the card, and it's better not to go all the way to the edge with the N&B if you don't want a sticky mess on your ironing board or iron (trust me on this).
Iron the H&B onto the back of the patchwork, as the instructions say. It doesn't take very long to do this step.
Wait about 15-20 minutes, and peel off the paper backing of the HeatnBond. Admire its shininess.
Cut the patchwork so that it is just a little smaller than the front of the cards.
Iron (dry iron, silk/nylon setting) taking care to get all the edges.
Finished cards!
Thanks for looking!
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