
Design a quilt that will use 2½" strips. The "Jelly Rolls" that are being sold in quilt stores right now are 2½" strips of many fabrics. Strip them, slice them, dice them, piece them, appliqué them! Templates for this quilt must fit on the 2½" strip, though you may choose to strip piece (made fabric stripes) some patches.
- Barb Vlack
Click on any quilt to see a larger version. Click on your browser's Back button to return to this screen.
Photos: |
1-32 |
Quilt 1 |
Quilt 2 |
Quilt 3 |
Quilt 4 |
Barb Vlack |
Barb Vlack |
Ann Czompo |
Ann Czompo |
St. Charles, Illinois USA Designed for clubEQ challenge, February, 2008: Design for a Jelly Roll! All patches for this quilt can be cut from the popular 2 1/2" strips being sold as "Jelly Rolls." Red jelly beans are my favorite. I found that using
the Random Recolor tool on this quilt gave me some delightful variations! |
St. Charles, Illinois USA Designed for clubEQ challenge, February, 2008: Design for a Jelly Roll! All patches for this quilt can be cut from the popular 2 1/2" strips being sold as "Jelly Rolls." Playing with colors led to this fun design. |
Jelly Rolls EQ Challenge, February 2008. Used blocks: Plaid Fabric and Framed Nine-Patch from the Library. Ann Czompo |
Jelly Roll EQ Challenge, February 2008. Ann Czompo |
Quilt 5 |
Quilt 6 |
Quilt 7 |
Quilt 8 |
Barbara Boyd |
Barbara Gilstad |
Brenda Stultz |
Brenda Stultz |
Barbara Boyd I am looking for a project to use a strip set of Chelsea Boutique fabrics by Blackbird Designs. I have never sent a quilt design before - and this isn't very creative. I confess that I hope to many great ideas from the rest of you!! |
I couldn't help myself... I just HAD to
use fabric for the effect I wanted. |
Fairmount, IL |
Fairmount, IL |
Quilt 9 |
Quilt 10 |
Quilt 11 |
Quilt 12 |
Carien Verbiest |
Carien Verbiest |
Carol Munro |
Carol Munro |
Rotterdam |
Rotterdam |
Aberdeenshire |
Aberdeenshire |
| Quilt 13 |
Quilt 14 |
Quilt 15 |
Quilt 16 |
Carol Baldry |
Charlotte Kleiner |
Charlotte Kleiner |
Cheryl B |
Blocks made at work meeting are assembled
with sashing. Horizontal sashing is one piece all the way across. Even
the sash border is 2 1/2 " strips. This is totally scrappy although
I didn't try that to save file size. |
Winnipeg, MB Canada Same block as the first quilt, but one colour way and a different setting with quilting motifs following the vertical path of the blocks. |
Winnipeg, MB Canada The block used in this quilt was inspired by the block
"Rainbow Steps" from the EQ Block Library - 2 Contemporary
Pieced - Strip Quilts. Using the Symmetry tool gave me a lot of interesting
patterns. It was hard to choose just two. |
I used 2 inch sqares to develop the design in EQ but would use 2.5 inch jelly roll strips to piece the colors. |
Quilt 17 |
Quilt 18 |
Quilt 19 |
Quilt 20 |
Chris Jones |
Chris Jones |
Carole Kuhman |
Carole Kuhman |
|
Waterbury CT |
Kent, Washington Stare at the quilt, then blink or look at it from a different angle, and it 3D effect will change. |
Kent, Washington |
Quilt 21 |
Quilt 22 |
Quilt 23 |
Quilt 24 |
| © Daphne Stewart |
© Daphne Stewart |
Denise Smart |
Donna Harney |
| This is the Stripy Drunkard's Path block in colors from a '30's jelly roll. I would sew these blocks this way: (1) sew two sets of jelly roll strips; (2) cut squares from each strip set; (3) align squares with strips of one set going north/south and the other going east/west, with the darkest color of one on the south side and the dark color of the other one on the east side; (4) use templates from a standard Drunkard's Path block and cut units for two blocks at once. I think I would stay stitch within the seam allowance of the curves -- especially on the piece-of-pie shape -- before sewing. The strips would not line up exactly as the drawn block but not to worry. Real quilts hardly ever come out EXACTLY the same as the plan. Sunnyside, Washington |
This small quilt is sized entirely for 2½" strips. The colors are from the picture of a jelly roll set of Bali fabrics in 'Keepsake Quilting'. (The background blocks are from pale fabrics; in real life I'd probably use one tone-on-tone fabric for these, not pieced blocks.) I also like the look of this block and layout in dark-to-pale tints and tones of two colors. This block could be paper-pieced but you'd need to section and number it yourself before printing. EQ thinks that plan is too silly to save. (EQ may have something there ...) Sunnyside, Washington |
Plano Texas This takes 42 edge to edge full width 2.5" strips. This layout assumes there are two strips of each color. Step 1. Sort the 42 strips by groups of three into 14 strip sets. I made two each of seven strip sets. You MUST offset or stair step in EACH strip by 2.25 inches when sewing the strips together to fit 6 wedges from each strip. Step 2. Cut each strip set into six 45 degree wedges. You will have three wedges with the long edge on strip #1 and three wedges with the long edge on strip #3. Step 3. Arrange the wedges until you find a pleasing
combination (there are many variations, try using the Serendipity tool)
and sew together. There will be four 45 degree wedges unused. |
East Hampton, NY Rail Fence pattern done in medium tone prints. |
Quilt 25 |
Quilt 26 |
Quilt 27 |
Quilt 28 |
Donna Harney |
D. Katherine Willis |
Jackie Russell |
Jackie Russell |
East Hampton, NY Every fabric in this basic nine patch quilt contains stars. |
Houston, Texas, USA One custom-drawn block was set on point, and some of the blocks were rotated before coloring. |
Missouri |
Missouri |
Quilt 29 |
Quilt 30 |
Quilt 31 |
Quilt 32 |
| Janet Bangs |
Janet Bangs |
Blueberry Buckle |
Jane Turgeon |
Guildford, England There may very well be a block like this already in EQ6, but for this challenge I decided it was probably simpler to just draw something from scratch. I drew this as a block in 4 quarters, but in hindsight, I think it would have been better to draw each quarter separately, then you could play around with the symmetry tool to get different layouts. Still, you are all quite capable of doing that yourself aren't you?! |
Guildford, England |
Goldsboro, NC. The block began as an EQ library block. I opened it in Patch Draw and went to town, attempting to adjust the pattern to a jellyrole fabric selection. I love the outcome and will begin stitchig it as soon as I finish my current project! |
View with outlines unchecked. 2" finished strips. Northeastern Ontario |
Photos: |
1-32 |