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A cheater quilt is one in which the quilt top is pre-printed with a patchwork design, allowing you to skip the piecing. Instead,
simply layer front, batting and back; then quilt and bind. It's super fast and easy, and your quilting stitches can follow along in
the lines of the motif. As a fun twist on the traditional baby quilt, we did a soft piped edge rather than traditional quilt binding.
Once completed, you have to look pretty closely to be able to tell you "cheated." It makes a great baby shower gift or go up in
size and send a new college student off to the dorms with a personalized quilt.
One of the most important parts of any cheater quilt is to carefully fussy cut the top fabric so the printed patchwork design is
straight and perfectly balanced side to side. It's worth buying a little extra fabric so you can fussy cut exactly as you'd like. And,
take the time to measure once, twice, three times both horizontally and vertically to insure the most beautiful results.
Our cheater quilt is made of fabrics from the Storybook collection by Kate and Birdie for Moda Fabrics. We used Patchwork for
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the top, Castles for the back, and Birdies for the piping all in Aqua. This collection is from 2014, but we found a nice selection
available from our friends at Fabric Depot. They still have prints in several of the colorways.
One of our favorite things about the Storybook pattern was the dashed lines framing each of the patchwork squares. When
everything was assembled and we stitched carefully along these lines, it almost looked like the quilting had been hand-done
thanks to that pre-printed stitch pattern.
Cheater patchwork panels are quite popular and come in designs from fanciful to elegant. We like Pam Kitty Garden by
Lakehouse from Fabric Depot, as well as Edith's Patchwork from the Downton Abbey collection for Andover from Fat Quarter
Shop, and we discovered a surprisingly large selection of cheater quilt fabric from all the independent designers at
Spoonflower.
Our patchwork fabric resulted in a finished quilt size of approximately 39" x 40", including the piping.
1 yards of 44"+ wide "patchwork print" fabric for the quilt top
1 yards of 44"+ wide coordinating fabric for the quilt back
yard of 44-45" wide coordinating fabric for the piping
1 yards of 45"+ wide low loft batting
NOTE: If you don't have access to batting on a roll, you could use a crib size cut (45" x 60") .
5 yards of " diameter cotton cording
All purpose thread to match fabric
See-through ruler
Fabric pencil
Iron and ironing board
Scissors or rotary cutter and mat
Straight pins
Seam gauge
Large safety pins for basting
Getting Started
1. From the fabric for the quilt top, fussy cut ONE approximate 41" x 41" square, following the patchwork lines of your chosen motif.
2. From the fabric for the quilt back, cut ONE 41" x 41" square (or whatever size you actually cut the quilt top).
3. From the fabric for the piping, cut FIVE 2" strips on the bias.
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NOTE: If you are new to working with bias strips, check out our handy tutorial on bias binding .
4. From the batting cut ONE 43" x 43" square from front and back fabric.
NOTE: This measurement is approximate; you want the fabric to float on the batting with about 2" of batting extending beyond the fabric on all
sides. As above, adjust as needed to fit your cut. The excess batting will be trimmed flush prior to finishing.
Piping
1. Find the five 2" bias strips.
2. To join the strips, take two strips and place them right sides together at right angels to each other.
3. Draw a line corner to corner
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Trim the seam allowance back to approximately " and press open.
Repeat this until you have one bias strip approximately 170" long.
Place the bias strip right side down on a large flat surface.
Lay a 170" length of cotton piping cord in the center.
Wrap the fabric over the cord, keeping the cord centered and matching the raw edges of the fabric. The fabric should be right side out when
wrapped around the cord.
4. Once pinned, you can clip the curve for the smoothest result. This is called "easing" - the little cuts give the otherwise rigid line the flexibility to
curve.
5. Your length of piping should be enough to go all the way around and to leave several inches free at the end when you get back to your starting
point.
6. With a seam ripper, peel back the fabric on the tail end of the piping to expose the cording underneath.
7. Trim this end of cording tail so it exactly meets the cut end at the head of the cording.
8. Fold under the end of the loose fabric to create a clean edge, adjusting and wrapping this folded end under and around the loose piping tail so it
overlaps about ".
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9. Using your Zipper foot , and with the needle moved to the left if possible, baste the piping in place.
NOTE: If you are new to piping and these steps went by really fast, we have a great tutorial you can review:
Piping.
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3. Staying as close to the edge of the piping as possible, stitch around the entire quilt. Remember to lock your seam on either side of the 8" 10"opening. We continued to use a Zipper foot with the needle in the left position.
4. Trim back the excess fabric from the corners. You can also clip the curves if needed.
5. Turn the quilt right side out through the opening. Push out the corners with your finger or a blunt tool, such as a chopstick or long knitting needle,
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6. Fold in the raw edges of the opening so they are flush with the sewn seam and lay right up against the piping.
7. Place the quilt flat with the quilt top facing up. Remove the safety pins, then replace them again, this time pinning through all three layers.
8. Determine where you want to place your lines of quilting; it will depend on your patchwork motif. Ours had a lovely faux hand-stitch motif between
each square. We used this as our guide, stitching along these lines both horizontally and vertically across the quilt. Your quilting should start and
stop approximately " - " from the piping. We used our Walking foot for this process.
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Contributors
Project Design: Alicia Thommas and Liz Johnson
Sample Creation and Instructional Outline: Debbie Guild
Bed Linens
This project and patterns (if any) may be downloaded for personal use only. No electronic or printed reproduction permitted
without the prior written consent of Sew4Home LLC.
Copyright 2009-2015 Sew4Home LLC. All Rights Reserved.
Source URL: http://www.sew4home.com/projects/bed-linens/baby-cheater-quilt
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