Here is my new little dolly quilt: Baby Bow Ties (I see the camera focussed on Mr. Starbuck)
It measures 17 inches square and I used this pretty fabric on the back.
It was made with the little bow ties I received from the bow tie angel in the civil war swap. I only had to make a few of my own.
At the recent quilt show I was penalized points because I used 4 separate pieces of binding and made "straight corners" (it's not here to photograph). Since when is the mitered binding THE ONLY binding that is considered good?. I was also criticized for not using more and smaller stitches on my Jubilee binding. what? seriously? seriously?
So on this new quilt I worked very hard to make good corners. They are straight and square and secure. I think on an old fashioned quilt it actually looks more right to me; more appropriate somehow.
The other thing the judges criticized was when the print on the binding was not fussy cut (this was on someone else's quilt). Wow. I don't think I've ever really considered it before. I do pay attention when using a stripe on the bias for that barber poll look we all love, but on small prints?
The one below, not so much. Sometimes the print was not printed straight, so how to cut it I wonder?
How do you handle and approach your bindings? I'd love to hear about it. Let me also say this is the first time I had heard these comments. I also don't want it to discourage anyone from entering quilting into shows. I like to share my quilts, which is why I have this free sharing blog.
I'm working out my quilting plan for the Alice Payne quilt. I definitely want to start quilting by January 1st.
The Constant Quilter hosted a scrap give away and I won! Thank you, Wendy, for the wonderful package of scraps and also for your wonderful blog posts.
I'm keeping Paris and all of France in my thoughts this week.