Quick and Easy Sixty Slice Quilt

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

4 Responses

  1. eddys says:

    As I was watching you cut the fabric in two, I started wondering if you use the Golden Ratio principle or the Fibonacci sequence for the proportions ? Our eyes are naturally drawn to designs with the Golden Ratio. It is not that we should have to be bound by such rules. I just like knowing them so I can use, bend or break them knowingly.

    The quilt is beautiful. The grey framed the colorful fabric so nicely.

  2. Leah Day says:

    That's a great question! I do try to fit roughly within certain standard quilt ratios, but when I want to break the rules, I totally break them.

    For this quilt, I knew I wanted to cut the angle and I knew I wanted to surround each block with sashing, but I wasn't sure of the size and angle. So I made a test block and shot a picture, then played with it in a computer program until it looked right.

    I think most of the design process is natural and if you go for what looks and feels right without over-thinking it, you will often naturally fall within the golden ratio. Does that make sense?

  3. JulieA says:

    Love this quilt! Have a whole bunch of batiks (24+ – I over buy fabric yardage by
    a half yard or more generally) with yardage big enough to do this, so think I will be playing with them in this design! And hope the chigger bites are better

  4. eddys says:

    Thanks! Yes, I agree we naturally lean towards pleasing designs; i.e. the golden ratio and others. I come from the painting world (not professionally, but just for fun and personal enrichment) and I am also a rather analytical person, so knowing rules or guidelines helps me speed up the design process without being bound by them. We use physical tools. For me, guidelines are also tools.

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