The Gate City Quilt Guild, which I recently joined, makes little house quilts for the local Habitat for Humanity. Each family then gets a little quilt as part of the ceremony in which they take over their new house. Of course I wanted to make one, so here we go!
The quilts are approximately 12″ x 12″, so I began by cutting two 13″ squares of fabric, one for the front and one for the back. I recently read in Sue Bleiweiss’s latest book that she uses a wool-blend felt for the batting in her art quilts, so I gave that a try. I cut the felt 12″ x 12″.
I turned the edges of the front fabric to the back, turned under the edges of the backing fabric, and edge stitched the 3 layers together. The felt “batting” was easy to work with and avoided the puffiness that can distort a quilt when using regular batting.
I used Heat n Bond Lite to fuse the door, windows, and roof to the house, then fused the house to the quilt top.
I added stitching to the grass and tree for texture, and to make rays from the sun to show sunshine falling on the house. I collect fun buttons, so I had a round one for the door knob and some little flowers for the yard.
The buttons were shank-type, so I had to make little holes in the quilt to push the shank through so they would lie flat. The felt batting was extremely stable, which helped a lot with this process. Here’s the back, showing the button shanks held in place with little pins.
Although I like my quilt, I must say that there are some very talented quilters in the group and some of the houses were more realistic than mine! I look forward to learning a lot from these ladies.
Quilt Stats:
Name: Happy Habitat House
Size: 12″ x 12″
Designed and made by me
I hope the family who receives the quilt will enjoy it, though of course it is unlikely to look like their real house!
Love this! I usually nip of the button shanks and use E6000. But the pins are cute on the back.
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Good idea to just remove the shanks. I may try that 🙂
Fun! I like the idea of attaching the shanked buttons with the tiny gold pins on the back. Since it’s wool felt batting, I’m assuming there’s little chance of fraying/weakening of the piece from the holes made? I’d probably add a dab of fray check just in case, though.
Yes, fray check is our friend 😀
It’s a very happy-looking house. Thanks for explaining how you did the edging and why those tiny safety pins were used.
I wish I had thought to take pictures of the others!
Oh my goodness this to too awesome!!! Both the quilt and the concept! How sweet for a family to have a house quilt for their Habitat for Humanity house! Warm fuzzies received from this post 🙂
You are good people 🙂
Thanks Looks like the new guild is a good one 🙂