Stitched in Color

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Wild Oranges: Cutting

Cool wind, rustling leaves, drizzly days interspersed with bright sunshine - autumn is in full swing in The Netherlands.

This time of year is one of the best for beginning new projects. There is a sense of gathering in and gathering together to face the challenges that lay ahead. Maybe the time is ripe for a new creative challenge - to tackle applique for the first time? You might be surprised how doable it is! The orange peel block is certainly a beginner-friendly shape.

To find out how to join the Wild Oranges sew-along, click over to the master sew-along post. It’s a digital pattern, so you can grab it in a flash and sew right along.

Week 1: Cutting

In the last few weeks we’ve talked about choosing fabrics for the Wild Oranges quilt pattern. I shared general fabric tips and also demonstrated how I selected fabrics for my second go at Wild Oranges. Now your fabrics should be organized on the Fabric Key so that you can see at a glance which fabric you’ve currently chosen for each roll.

Isn’t that nifty!

Ok, let’s get cutting. This week I suggest that you cut all the background squares and orange peel slices for your entire quilt. First read over the short cutting directions on page 7 of the pattern, then reference the cutting list for details of what’s needed from each fabric. If you’re making the Kismet Wild Oranges quilt, there is a dedicated Cut Sheet on page 10 that makes it absolutely clear what you need to cut!

Cutting for Wild Oranges is really straightforward. One important tip: cut the background squares first from any given fabric! You can cut orange peel blocks from thinner strips of leftover fabric, but the squares aren’t so flexible. For speed, I like to cut multiple layers of fabrics at once.

Are you feeling uncertain about some of your fabric choices? I was on the fence about a couple of mine, so I get that. Here’s what I did:

  1. First cut the fabrics that you feel confident about. Hopefully, that’s most of them.

  2. Next follow the quilt map to arrange background squares for part of quadrant 1 (or for the baby quilt). Lay orange peel slices on top of background squares, just to create a preview. Leave out any fabrics you haven’t cut yet. How is it looking so far?

  3. Lastly, cut 1-2 shapes in your uncertain fabrics and add those to the preview. In this way test out a few options before you commit by cutting it all.

I changed my mind about my choice for fabric D4. My original choice was a favorite Anna Maria Horner floral (it’s the busy floral orange peel slice at center in the photo above). In the context of this preview I could see that the floral wasn’t right for this particular quilt. I decided to swap that fabric for a solid in order to calm things down and bring more attention to the orange peel shapes themselves.

Here I am auditioning two possible replacement solids in my (partial) quadrant 1 preview. That really helps me to choose! I opted for the teal fabric, by the way, because I found the dark green to be too dark in value.

Week 1 Sew-Along Goal: Cut all Squares + Peels

A pretty stack of cut fabrics is quite irresistible! Can you hardly wait for next week?


Share to win!

This week share a photo of your fabrics with hashtag #WildOrangesQuilt.

If you’re already cutting, maybe you’ll be able to share an irresistible stack of cut shapes!

Your photo enters you into a giveaway for my Seafarers pattern! This medallion style sampler quilt is sewn via machine paper piecing. A combination of fanciful shapes and balanced repetition makes the Seafarers pattern ripe for exploration. Includes 5 paper piecing blocks, including the 18” Compass block below. Use them In other projects too!

Winner will be announced next week and giveaway is open worldwide.

good luck, friends!

See this gallery in the original post