Needles and a Pen » Knitting, Sewing, and Nursing School

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  • Welcome to my blog!

    Hi! I'm Traci. I'm a Registered Nurse who loves quilting, knitting, cross stitch, and the great outdoors. In my pre-scrubs life, I owned Real Photography, and you can still see my old wedding and portrait photography site here .

    I've created a map that shows links to our camping/hiking/general family fun review posts that you can find here. It's pretty much the coolest thing on this site. Thanks, Google!

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central park quilt

I finished sewing the binding on this monstrosity over a week ago, but it took me forever to get pictures because (1) it’s really hard to get decent pictures of a quilt this big and (2) I’m disappointed in the quilting.  I couldn’t figure out why some sections of the quilt seem to pull in a strange way (especially since I followed the rules on this one and actually prewashed all the fabric) and so I asked my expert friends at my last guild meeting and they said it looks like it happened when it was being quilted.  Because of the size, I had this quilted by a long-armer (before I took my class) and I’m so disappointed that it’s not better.  I plan on using this heavily at photoshoots, and I’m really hoping that the flaws won’t show up with a family or bride + groom sitting on it or snuggled under it.  If they do I’ll probably just cry.

But enough of the negativity.  There’s a lot to love about this one, too.  The size.  It’s big.  The colors–a fabric mix largely from the Central Park line, but with a smattering of others, too.  The pattern.  It’s from the Fresh Quilting book, and is the best stash-buster quilt pattern ever.  It takes a bunch of fat quarters, but it leaves you a large enough scrap that you don’t feel panicky about using your fat quarter up entirely.  It’s fast and fun to make, and shows off the fabric really well because each piece is so large.  I added a row to make the quilt even bigger (I might have actually added both a row and a column–I can’t remember).  I loved it enough that I hand sewed the binding to the back.

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It was so insanely windy that this is the best shot I could get of the back.  It’s a vertical strip of patterns on the off-center left of the white backing.

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Jennifer - Traci, you and I have similar taste in fabric! I’ve used that Central Park to make three quilts and love it. I’ve also used those metro living circles and love them too. I think your quilt looks great and I just love the back. Nice work!

Mary - It is a very pretty quilt. I don’t think the quilting looks bad at all, but I certainly would have expected a little more oomph from a professional quilter. I have taken one quilt to be quilted and it blew away all my expectations. I think if you’re paying someone to quilt it, that’s the reaction you deserve. It will definitely not be noticeable in pics, I think.

Melissa - I agree with Mary — any puckers and tucks are not going to be noticeable in the pictures you take. It’s a fun and bright and cheery quilt, and every baby and bride will be happy to snuggle with it for a photo shoot. Well done!

Greenstylemom - I just love this quilt. The colors, the prints, the big blocks. Great job!

felicity - What a beautiful quilt! I think when you’re intimate with a quilt, you can see each and every flaw but others can see only the beauty. I sure do.

Sandra in WA - Ya know….. you could knit up a “Central Park Hoodie” to go with this. Check the patterns on Ravelry!

Audrey - This turned out beautifully! I really love how happy it is, and it will be great for photoshoots. I have a layer cake of this line, and you are making me want to whip it out!