• Every now and then something different happens! We are happy to announce Jenny Haynes has joined our website to take everyone along her journey into modern quilts.

    A Swedish exile having spent the previous 18…

  • First, let me thank the wonderful people at Sew Easy for being so kind as to provide this product for me to test, on behalf of the United Kingdom Quilters Website. I must confess I was excited to review this…

    • The stencils look quite nice and useful. However, your point about the thread was interesting. From the photo, which is a little blurry, it looks like the thread supplied is by a Japanese company called Yokota – it will be written on the back of the label as 横田 and you will also see a USA cotton mark on it. They make a fine thread and a medium one – the fine one has a burgundy and gold label and the medium one has the blue and gold label, which is the one in the kit. This thread is NOT supposed to be split and should actually be used doubled for traditional sashiko (i.e. one thread but you bring the ends together and each stitch has both strands in it).

      To use medium sashiko thread, you really need fabric with a much lower thread count than the cotton supplied, which looks like a patchwork cotton. If the weave is too tight/high thread count, it will be very difficult to get the thread through the fabric. If they had supplied fine sashiko thread, you would have been able to get it through the finer fabric without any problems or needing to split it. They haven’t matched the thread to the fabric properly.

      The needles in the kit are not sashiko needles. There is a difference between embroidery crewels and sashiko needles – the crewels can bend quite easily and sashiko needles are hard tempered so they don’t bend and super sharp. The stitching action for sashiko (which you can see demonstrated in the video link on my homepage http://www.susanbriscoe.com, which shows the two x one hour sashiko lessons I did on Sewing Quarter last year) involves pleating the fabric onto the tip of the needle and then easing out the gathered fabric, which helps regulate the stitch length and keeps the twinned strand of thread under control.

      The marker is fine for sashiko but really you only need a white or yellow marker for the dark fabric, so they are including a lot more colours than you actually need in the kit – selling you more than you really need.

      My verdict – nice stencils, kit seems to need better instructions, £39.99 is a lot for what you are getting. You can buy a 40m skein of medium sashiko thread for £2.50 or less, a packet of Olympus or Clover sashiko needles for around £2 and £5 respectively, and half a metre of fabric for sashiko from £6 – £8. So even on the high side, that’s around £15 for materials. A Clover White Marking Pen costs around £8 (this is the roller ball one that irons off or washes out) and other markers are a similar price. That adds up to the stencil and instructions being worth around £17, which seems high.

      • Okay. Sorry I am naive on the thread issue, or the thread verses cotton. Thank you for pointing it out to me. Like I said very new to this so still very much to learn.

  • I had seen these scissors advertised in magazines and then was asked to review them. I have a collection of scissors, small ones, big ones, batting scissors, applique scissors and more, I’m sure that I am not the…

  • I’m very privileged to have main responsibility for the the UKQU Pinterest account and I love it. It means I get to browse around the new products our members are listing and get to see lots of helpful r…

  • As the royal wedding becomes a distant memory, we are reminded of that beautiful day with these new stunning designs by Edyta Sitar.
    If you are a lover of blues and creams, then this is certainly going to be a…

    • These are beautiful fabrics, love your pretty table runner, it shows off the fabrics really well!

  • Have you ever seen a wholecloth quilt? A surprising number of “quilters” today don’t know what this is, and even fewer have made one.
    The UK has a wonderful tradition of quilts which contain no patchwork at all,…

    • Thank you for bringing these wholecloth quilts to life.I hadn’t realised the traditions behind them, but they always take my breath away. I mainly hand stitch and quilt, so perhaps I need to put one of these on the ‘to do’ list. Thanks again

      • Pleased to hear that you share my enjoyment of these beautiful quilts. I do hope that you decide to make a wholecloth yourself.

    • Never seen on ‘in the flesh’, but they are amazing.

      • Fantastic, aren’t they? If you are coming to the Festival of Quilts in August, then come to the British Quilt Study Group exhibition to see some wholecloth quilts – I am doing a Quilt Academy workshop on the Friday, too, for anyone who would like a really close-up look.

        • I woud love to but living in Spain – it is a bit difficult. Perhps next year……

    • I enjoyed this article so much and hope to make a wholecloth quilt myself some day. Thanks/

      • Thank you Pauline! I hope you do manage to make a wholecloth yourself. I have almost finished my first – not a bed sized quilt yet, but I have so enjoyed it.

    • I started a wholecloth quilt quite a few years ago, this is a ‘work in progress’. I just love reading anything connected with wholecloths and their history

      • Lovely to hear of more people who enjoy these beautiful quilts. Do post a photo of your wholecloth in the Facebook group!

    • Loved reading this blog giving the history to these fabulous quilts. Very informative, thank you Carolyn.

      • I’m pleased you found it interesting, Carol. We have a wonderful heritage of distinctive British quilts here in the UK, which deserves to be more widely known.

    • Was able to see whole cloth quilts at the NEC, they were a wonder and something I’d like to do in the future

      • Was it the red, white and blue wholecloth quilts on the BQSG stand? They were fabulous, weren’t they? Yes, do try making a wholecloth yourself – it’s such a lovely thing to do (but perhaps start on something smaller than a quilt though!)

  • My Mum’s 70th birthday was coming up and she had planned a weeks stay in a beautiful house overlooking the Menai Bridge in north Wales. My Brother and his family, our close friends and my own family all together a…

  • I have always been attracted by blue fabrics, and the Makower ‘Something Blue’ Range designed by Edyta Star has not failed to satisfy this attraction.   The summer is always a popular choice for weddings, e…

  • With our UKQU Baby Feature coming soon (watch for further announcements) and our Bloggerati busily preparing for it we can’t resist showing you this lovely new range from Makower UK.

    Its full of b…

  • We all love fabric .. it’s what being a Quilter is all about, so when a stack of fabric arrives on my desk what is a girl meant to do except spend a while stroking the lovely new patterns.
    Makower UK are launching…

  • Joy Morgan wrote a new post, May's Gift 8 years ago

    I hadn’t heard of Fidget Quilts until last year. I was intrigued and wanted to find out more. A Google search quickly educated me about them.
    They are small lap sized quilts (about 20″) with items such as zips, but…

  • Miranda Rowlands Quilt “Celebration: Nigeria meets Australia in a burst of Colour” winner of  the first ever Quilt Africa Fabrics Challenge.

    Since it was introduced to the shores of Africa in 1846 by the Dutch,…

    • I so enjoy these challenges Miriam, I hope you get lots of exciting photos pf African quilts from around the world.

  • This unit is sometimes called Diamond in a Square as it essentially a square, turned on point (hence ‘diamond’) inside another square. It is found in a wide variety of blocks, usually in the corners or the cen…

  •  
    Have you ever started sewing together your quilt only to get cracking and then run out of thread on the bobbin?  Then you have to unthread the machine to load another bobbin, rethread the machine and off you g…

    • Nina replied
      8 years ago

      I may have asked for pre-wound bobbins for Christmas and birthdays… You can get them in packs of 25+!

      • What a good idea. Will have to have a look and see if I can get them on line. Thanks for the info Ruth


  • The team over at the Electric Quilt Company have given the UKQU Website an incredible prize to anyone who pu…

  • Liz Trenow, the author of the Forgotten Seamstress, has kindly given an interview to UKQU which you can find in our Quilt News Section. There’s a link to Lynne Edward’s pattern interpreting Maria’s Quilt too. Be great to see everyone’s efforts in the future over at UK Quilters United FB Group and maybe we can group them all into our social…[Read more]

  • Hi there, I want to talk about UFO’S or PHD’S! (UnFinished Object or Project Half Done)

    Do you have any?

    Do you have many?
    Are you a serial starter?
    Well I seem to have lots, and I’m going to ‘come out’ to…

    • Hmmm,do I PHDs( projects half done)? Oh yes,but about 5 or 6 are actually long term projects that I return to when I have finished other,smaller projects.I get bored by making dozens of the same thing,so having other stuff to go back to suits me fine. I have seen plenty of ‘finish-alongs’ where you pledge to get X finished in the next month.If you do then great,if not then never mind.Whilst I have yet to sign up for one it must concentrate the mind and lots of folk have said they feel just like you do,and which then motivates them to finish more projects.

      • Thanks Karin for taking the time to leave me a comment.
        I do have something which I work on every now and again. It’s some FPP blocks which will one day be a quilt. I now have 70 of those. Hopefully most of the above will be finished. I do have some tops ready for layering and quilting, hope to show them another time.

    • Oh yes, I have ufo’s! I vow not to start anything new until some of them are finished, then I get attracted by some fascinating pattern which I have to try, and I am not a young person, time is not on my side! So I have a list pinned up in my sewing room of what is needed to finish them which I hope will concentrate my efforts. I have three other obstacles to finishing the UFO’S:
      a cat who
      a family who keep coming up with reasons to provide a quilt or sewing lessons
      a garden which needs to be looked after

      I am trying to be more disciplined. So why was I attempting to draw out a paper pieced pattern for a sweet pea after tea yesterday!

      • Exactly, it’s the ‘must have/do’ patterns that appear without warning. I used to vow ‘I’ve started, so I’ll finish’ but life’s too short. Some of the above will be finished, and other’s……………who knows. thank you for taking the time to comment. x

      • I added two new patterns into my plans this week!Thank goodness I can be flexible

    • Ive a serious problem with UFO’s, I feel like I’m drowning in them. There are so many lovely projects I want to do & I can’t stop myself from starting my next new project. I need therapy !

    • I forget to mention, to encourage me to complete UFO’s I enter our local agricultural show each year which has a handicraft section. I search through my UFO’s which don’t need too much work and enter them, I think the deadline makes me focus.
      The bonus of winning a certificate or rosette is such a good feeling.

  • While reading the many posts on facebook; I came across Boro, Japanese style patchwork. It intrigued me, as I find myself draw more and more into the world of Japanese textiles. Yet I know very little about them.…

    • Haha, I have been doing this sort of ‘darning’ and mending of my OH and childrens’, and grandchildrens’, jeans for the past 30 years or so and never knew it had a name! Thank you again for another eye opener!!!!!

      • You are most welcome. I will be learning the correct stitches so hopefully it will look more japanse by the time I finish it.

    • Denise I love Boro and all it means and stands for. My first attempt was last month and I really enjoyed doing it. Look forward to reading more,

  • Hi, Good to see you back.  I hope you are enjoying my post’s.  In the last one I said I would take you through the creation of the Dragon, which by the way, still does not have a property show name yet, but I am sur…

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Victoria Peat

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@victoriapeat

Active 8 years, 2 months ago