Flying Horse Farm Quilts

Please note if you live in Central North Carolina: One of the guilds I belong to is having a quilt show soon!2024 card.JPEG

One of my other quilt groups makes quilts for Flying Horse Farm, a camp for children with serious illnesses. Here are my contributions for this spring.

This quilt was inspired by Maryline Collioud-Robert’s Carnival Quilt, in which she mixed many striped fabrics with her scraps. I didn’t use her pattern, just her idea of including lots of striped fabric. However, here’s the link to her pattern if you’re interested.

Quilt Stats

Name: Strips with Stripes

Finished size: 60″ x 72″

Designed by: me, with inspiration from Maryline Collioud-Robert

Made by: me

Quilted by: Linda Nichols

 

Here is the second Flying Horse Farm quilt:

This quilt is inspired by the Bento Box pattern I had years ago and made several quilts from. The pattern has been re-issued and I bought it, but I do not like the new instructions at all! Therefore I completely re-designed the construction process and made this my way.

And here’s a peek at the back of the quilt–more scraps used!

Quilt Stats

Name: Bento Box Revised

Finished size: 60″ x 72″

Designed by: me, with inspiration from the original Bento Box pattern

Made by: me

Quilted by: Linda Nichols

These were both fun, easy (as revised by me) quilts. I used the scrappy one at the top as leaders-and-enders and it came together quickly.

 

Finally, here is a scrap quilt called “Blue Sky and Sunshine”–my husband says the name is corny but I like it 😀

Quilt Stats

Name: Blue Sky and Sunshine

Finished size: 61″ x 73″

Designed by: me, using up orphan blocks

Made by: me

Quilted by: Linda Nichols

 

Happy quilting!

13 thoughts on “Flying Horse Farm Quilts

  1. These are all such quality ‘scrap’ charity quilts, Zippy. Your heart is huge.
    I especially like your “Strips with Stripes” Featuring your signature love of striped fabrics and binding. 🙂

  2. Oh gosh! Looks at all these beauties! You are SO generous. I’m always impressed by what you give away. As for pattern instructions, I know exactly what you mean! Quilt pattern-writing was part of my professional career, so I KNOW a well-written pattern from a poorly-written one. These days I’m seeing more and more that are very poorly written… difficult to understand. I find myself reading them aloud, so as to understand what in the world they’re trying to instruct! If only writers would consistently identify pieces by dimensions – or at least use the same term each time – instructions would be much easier to understand. And a well-drawn graphic also goes a long way toward understanding. Oh well. What can one do but complain after the fact. If only they’d ask me! Right? Ha! Happy Mother’s Day!

  3. Thank you for always reading and taking time to comment 😀

    Another blogging friend commented that too many people are selling patterns for quilts that don’t really even require a pattern, and that’s true, too.

    But nobody asked either of us. Ha!

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