Thanks Rob I met you once, in Hamilton. You were filming One evening you came to the retreat center during our free sew, and visited. You went from quilter to quilter, sat at our tables and asked about our projects and our feelings about quilting. You were so easy and supportive to talk to we were all impressed and “lifted” it made you a real favorite Thanks
I am definitely going to make this,I know this was awhile ago but I hope to find this fabric somewhere, in Canada lol. Thanks for showing us this fabulous quilt
Oh my!! I was gonna sew my hexi’s together and struggle sewing ‘em together but I thought I’d get a quick refresher. Thank goodness I did as I now will do the obvious and sew ‘em in rows. Thanks!!
Thank you for making both videos on this project. All the tips and instructions help tremendously and I look very forward to making my own. Love your show!
I have always avoided anything that looked like a hexagon. Watching you has changed my mind. The rows make perfect sense and I I think I can do that! Thanks! AND this is a great time to start on a Christmas season quilt.
Thanks Rob for a great follow up, I have had my eye on a fabric for awhile not knowing what to do with it now thanks to you and Donna Jorden I can see the quilt I am going to create.
Just a tip you might want to throw out there: Make sure you alternate the direction you see your strips! Otherwise, the entire quilt will end up more like a parallelogram than a rectangle. I found this out the hard way on a strip quilt and now I label every strip with an arrow on a sticky note reminding me which direction I need to sew that row. 🤗
I just found you Rob and I’m so excited. Thank you for your energy and great explanations. I’ve really enjoyed watching your videos. I can’t believe how easy stack and whack is. I just made my first hexagon and it’s crazy how pretty and easy it was. This is a pattern that has so much variety I won’t get bored. I usually have a couple projects going on to keep it interesting. Thank you…..and you have to appreciate your caffeine addiction, lol.
I cut a stack and whack quilt, and found that the fabric was NOT identical all across the length. So I had to re-pin, and trim and cut another strip in order to get good results. Was it cheaply produced fabric? Don't know, but I was able to make it work okay. These are such beautiful quilts, I find myself looking for fabric to make more of them!
Rob, I hope you’re still reading these occasionally. I bought this exact fabric to make this exact quilt. To my dismay, the repeats are almost exactly 23”. I’ve measured from the exact same place as you did. So…it really doesn’t matter that I get 6 strips, as long as I get 6 exact layers, correct? I could cut 4 1/2” or 5” strips, which would give me less hexagons, but they would be bigger, so it would essentially give the same area, just bigger hexagon elements, Yes? And…why is yours 24’ repeat and mine 23”? Has the fabric design changed a little since you made these videos? BTW, I’m hooked on your videos. Lots of fun going on!
You don’t really need to cut through 12 layers at all. Cut your fabric along the centre fold and handle each half as a bundle of six layers. You may need to identify a few elements of the repeat because you wont have printing on the opposite selvedge, but personally I don’t think that’s too difficult, and avoids buying a 60mm cutter, or busting your shoulder muscles, or worse of all, have a miss-cut and waste fabric!
For the life of me I can not get the same result as Rob. Using a Tri-Recs ruler with top point flattened off. I'm matching up flattened off ends to form center of block. Adding the 3rd triangle to the first 2 does not result in half of a hexagon. It has a gentle rise in the center even though the outside is even. Do you have a hint at what is wrong? Is it really possible to get the correct result from a ruler that isn't actually 60 degrees, but is commonly called "Sixty Degree Ruler?" Pls. help me thank you.
It might be a good idea to keep your seam getting stuck in the machine table just to cover the step with any kind of wide tape and the fabric would just slide over it. 😊
Question please, I'm a confirmed quilter that washes my fabric. However, I'm concerned about doing that for this quilt and loosing yardage. Advise please.
Rob, I tried since your first poinsettia video to get this particular fabric from Michael Miller online. I looked in America and Australia in different shops with no luck. I'm based in Thailand and no quilt stores around here, just fabric markets - but no Michael Miller flowers :( I found other poinsettia flowers but they are very small. Can someone swap with me :D or at least point me to an online store where this fabric is still available? Love and admiration from Thailand
Has anyone used this pattern with a different fabric? I've seen it done with poinsettia fabric twice but I'm curious to see it used with other types of patterns. I'm thinking a very large, vibrant print would be great.
If you check out the Jordan Fabrics video, she goes into more detail about picking fabric that would work well for this. th-cam.com/video/4peGur2cJaM/w-d-xo.html
Check out Missouri Star quilt company video tutorial . Jenny uses 6 quilt panels of a peacock and gets a fabulous effect. Any large print will give you a fan effect.
Love this quilt. Great videos. Thanks for all the tips and tricks. I got the fabric. I need to carve out some time to get started. Stunning fabric and quilt. One question: I love the background quilt, too. What fabric and pattern is that?
Thanks Marge, The Sunny delight fabrics just started to ship to the local quilt shops, I suggest you call around and see if you can find it in your backyard, if not I bet you can find it with an online retailer.
I use a Panasonic, 360 cordless iron, and have been very happy with it. I hope you can find one at home so you do not have to pay the outrageous International shipping charges. I will be showing some for sale in a video in a few weeks, Rusty Moon, if you can not find one locally, please contact Rusty Moon in Missouri and see if they will ship you one.
It depends on how many inches are between your repeat. Watch his original video where he explains it more. For a 60 degree ruler, you need 6 repeats of the exact design. So you'll buy 6x however many inches between the repeat if the design. Therefore, look for 6 of the full print on the selvage. I hope that helps.
When I did this pattern I got 6 repeats with 4 yards of fabric. My repeats were about every 24 inches (which I *think* is pretty standard.) I originally watched a tutorial of this pattern from Donna Jordan/Jordan Fabrics and she just said buy 4 yards, which I did and it worked out perfect. Edit to add: I believe Donna's came out to 58" x 72" when 2 borders were added. So more throw size.
Thanks Rob I met you once, in Hamilton. You were filming One evening you came to the retreat center during our free sew, and visited. You went from quilter to quilter, sat at our tables and asked about our projects and our feelings about quilting. You were so easy and supportive to talk to we were all impressed and “lifted” it made you a real favorite Thanks
I am definitely going to make this,I know this was awhile ago but I hope to find this fabric somewhere, in Canada lol. Thanks for showing us this fabulous quilt
Oh my!! I was gonna sew my hexi’s together and struggle sewing ‘em together but I thought I’d get a quick refresher. Thank goodness I did as I now will do the obvious and sew ‘em in rows. Thanks!!
Thank you for making both videos on this project. All the tips and instructions help tremendously and I look very forward to making my own. Love your show!
I have always avoided anything that looked like a hexagon. Watching you has changed my mind. The rows make perfect sense and I I think I can do that! Thanks! AND this is a great time to start on a Christmas season quilt.
Love this episode !
Thanks Rob for a great follow up, I have had my eye on a fabric for awhile not knowing what to do with it now thanks to you and Donna Jorden I can see the quilt I am going to create.
You are such a WONDERFUL TEACHER YOUNG MAN
Just a tip you might want to throw out there: Make sure you alternate the direction you see your strips! Otherwise, the entire quilt will end up more like a parallelogram than a rectangle. I found this out the hard way on a strip quilt and now I label every strip with an arrow on a sticky note reminding me which direction I need to sew that row.
🤗
Love! Love! It!
AHHHHHHHHH 😁 thank you so much for this !
I just found you Rob and I’m so excited. Thank you for your energy and great explanations. I’ve really enjoyed watching your videos. I can’t believe how easy stack and whack is. I just made my first hexagon and it’s crazy how pretty and easy it was. This is a pattern that has so much variety I won’t get bored. I usually have a couple projects going on to keep it interesting. Thank you…..and you have to appreciate your caffeine addiction, lol.
thank you for the additional instruction of this quilt
Such fabulous quilt blocks! So very pretty! Thank you for posting and sharing your talent!
I cut a stack and whack quilt, and found that the fabric was NOT identical all across the length. So I had to re-pin, and trim and cut another strip in order to get good results. Was it cheaply produced fabric? Don't know, but I was able to make it work okay. These are such beautiful quilts, I find myself looking for fabric to make more of them!
Hi Rob, thank you for your fun and informative video 😊
Have a great day.
Rob, I hope you’re still reading these occasionally. I bought this exact fabric to make this exact quilt. To my dismay, the repeats are almost exactly 23”. I’ve measured from the exact same place as you did. So…it really doesn’t matter that I get 6 strips, as long as I get 6 exact layers, correct? I could cut 4 1/2” or 5” strips, which would give me less hexagons, but they would be bigger, so it would essentially give the same area, just bigger hexagon elements, Yes? And…why is yours 24’ repeat and mine 23”? Has the fabric design changed a little since you made these videos? BTW, I’m hooked on your videos. Lots of fun going on!
what a beautiful quilt.. thanks Rob!!
Hi Rob! Great quilt!
You don’t really need to cut through 12 layers at all. Cut your fabric along the centre fold and handle each half as a bundle of six layers. You may need to identify a few elements of the repeat because you wont have printing on the opposite selvedge, but personally I don’t think that’s too difficult, and avoids buying a 60mm cutter, or busting your shoulder muscles, or worse of all, have a miss-cut and waste fabric!
love love love this, thank you
Thank you for going over the construction!!
Hi Rob, I enjoyed the quilt top I made last year. I did made the “rows” diagonal. And it worked! BTW, loving the CA surfer look.
Thanks for more info on this gorgeous guilt!
For the life of me I can not get the same result as Rob. Using a Tri-Recs ruler with top point flattened off. I'm matching up flattened off ends to form center of block. Adding the 3rd triangle to the first 2 does not result in half of a hexagon. It has a gentle rise in the center even though the outside is even. Do you have a hint at what is wrong? Is it really possible to get the correct result from a ruler that isn't actually 60 degrees, but is commonly called "Sixty Degree Ruler?" Pls. help me thank you.
It might be a good idea to keep your seam getting stuck in the machine table just to cover the step with any kind of wide tape and the fabric would just slide over it. 😊
Great camera work; I can actually see the stitching! 😉
awesome videos!
That little wooden man by the guitar is a good dancer.
Couldn’t you cut the half triangles out of a solid that matches the background, so that the color or print isn’t distracting to the eye?
Question please, I'm a confirmed quilter that washes my fabric. However, I'm concerned about doing that for this quilt and loosing yardage. Advise please.
It catching on the stitch plate could probably be solved by having some tape to create a "ramp"
I love this quilt. You break it down to where I think I could actually manage this one. It is beautiful. Thanks!
Rob, I tried since your first poinsettia video to get this particular fabric from Michael Miller online. I looked in America and Australia in different shops with no luck. I'm based in Thailand and no quilt stores around here, just fabric markets - but no Michael Miller flowers :( I found other poinsettia flowers but they are very small. Can someone swap with me :D or at least point me to an online store where this fabric is still available? Love and admiration from Thailand
I bought a bolt (15 yds) of this exact fabric from Amazon very reasonably..
Shabby Fabrics has it available online, but I do not know if they ship international.
@@taunamcbee8626 Thank you, I was able to get it through Etsy from England some months before. Shipping was reasonably, no additional customs. :)
Awesome video like always. P.S. - love your new ‘face’.
Has anyone used this pattern with a different fabric? I've seen it done with poinsettia fabric twice but I'm curious to see it used with other types of patterns. I'm thinking a very large, vibrant print would be great.
If you check out the Jordan Fabrics video, she goes into more detail about picking fabric that would work well for this. th-cam.com/video/4peGur2cJaM/w-d-xo.html
Check out Missouri Star quilt company video tutorial . Jenny uses 6 quilt panels of a peacock and gets a fabulous effect. Any large print will give you a fan effect.
Some of the TH-camrs iron the seams open, does it matter which you do as long as you are consistent?
How is 4 inches the required length?
4 inches is the length if following our free pattern, any size will work, as long as you have 6 identically matched 60 degree triangles.
Hi rob I can’t seem to make a account I would so dearly love to but the fabric
At first glance I would never have dreamed it so easy to make the kaleidoscope effect. This is absolutely going on my wishlist to make.
Can I pay for help cutting the material for the kit I purchased
trying to get the pattern download but unable to do so
Can you cut stripes 6 inches instead of 4inches?
Love this quilt. Great videos. Thanks for all the tips and tricks. I got the fabric. I need to carve out some time to get started. Stunning fabric and quilt. One question: I love the background quilt, too. What fabric and pattern is that?
Do you have a current UTube video that talks about buying sewing/quilting machines and essential machine feet and tools. Thanks so much.
Can the fabric be cut with a 60 degree ruler WITH the tip, as opposed to a blunt tip?
Yes, you'll just have to cut your strips wider
thank you!
where can i buy the yellow/gray sunny delight fabrics?
Thanks Marge, The Sunny delight fabrics just started to ship to the local quilt shops, I suggest you call around and see if you can find it in your backyard, if not I bet you can find it with an online retailer.
Hey love your videos. Just wanted to ask about your cordless iron. Where do i buy this? All the way from Sydney Australia
I use a Panasonic, 360 cordless iron, and have been very happy with it. I hope you can find one at home so you do not have to pay the outrageous International shipping charges. I will be showing some for sale in a video in a few weeks, Rusty Moon, if you can not find one locally, please contact Rusty Moon in Missouri and see if they will ship you one.
@@makingitfunwithmichaelmill8161thankyou you
My granddaughter and I LOVE this quilt pattern! I want to make a queen size quilt. How much fabric do I need to buy? Thank you for this awesome video!
It depends on how many inches are between your repeat. Watch his original video where he explains it more. For a 60 degree ruler, you need 6 repeats of the exact design. So you'll buy 6x however many inches between the repeat if the design. Therefore, look for 6 of the full print on the selvage. I hope that helps.
When I did this pattern I got 6 repeats with 4 yards of fabric. My repeats were about every 24 inches (which I *think* is pretty standard.) I originally watched a tutorial of this pattern from Donna Jordan/Jordan Fabrics and she just said buy 4 yards, which I did and it worked out perfect.
Edit to add: I believe Donna's came out to 58" x 72" when 2 borders were added. So more throw size.