How to Sew a Hexagon Log Cabin - Candle Mat, Mug Rug, Coaster, Quilt Block, Quilt, and More

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hey guys it's robin our asylum crafts and welcome to my studio today we are going to make hexagon log cabins now i've made mine to be used as some type of a a mug rug or i could use it as a hot pad or to put a vase with flowers on it or you could put a plate or a bowl or something on it i really love the way these look i made them in two different ways today i'm going to show you how to make this one i made this one as a bullseye so that all of the rounds are the same i did put a little accent strip in it but i practiced on this one this was the first one i tried i really loved using just all the same type of fabric so there are polka dots everywhere and this center even still has a little bit of a feel of a polka dot and i carried that through to the backing this one i just used some fun strips from my scrap bin to work on these are very versatile you can make them as large or as small as you want depending on how wide your fabric strips are and how many rings and times you go around and around your hexagon we do start off with a hexagon course it's a hexagon log cabin so that kind of makes sense to get the hexagon shape you've got to start with a hexagon you can make these pretty small and just use them as a coaster or you can make them really large and turn them into a big baby quilt you can make it all the way to 36 42 inches whatever size you want and anything in between so let's get started the first place to start with your project no matter if you're just going to make a little coaster or if you're going to go all the way up to a table topper you need to start with your center hexagon and that's going to allow us to build it off like a log cabin and work our way all the way around until it gets to the size we want i chose to use a two inch hexagon for my project which means that these sides each measure two inches so when i printed it off for me i didn't really care exactly how big it went so if my little center point was not exactly if it was two and a quarter inches or one and three quarters it didn't matter to me but if you're trying to build it up to a certain size that may be important to you but even if this one is just a little bit off big or small based on your beginning size that you think you want to start with you can always stop and trim up your hexagon project at any point i like this size as a candle matte [Music] the sides themselves measure just a little over five and a half inches and the total from side to side here is just about nine and three quarters i think one of those big chunky candles would look really nice in the center of that i'll put a link down below for you guys to find places to print out your hexagons so if you want to input the size you want you can find the different sizes and go from there what i did is i printed it out and then i took my rotary cutter that is meant for cutting paper this rotary blade in here is one that i've already used cutting fabric and it got a little dull so when i put a new one in there i switch it down to the paper one this allows me to cut paper or batting or anything like that so that my one for my fabric stays nice and sharp i took my little rotary ruler here and i just cut right along the edges a little bit beyond just to be able to pop this shape out and the reason i wanted that is i wanted this to trace out a shape if i'm just going to use a random design and say i'm just doing all polka dots i can just set this on top of it trace around the fabric and then cut it out as you can see this one has like a firework or starburst in the center and the way i did that is i did a little fussy cutting i took my scrap of fabric and i put my little window opening here over it and that allowed me to move it around so if i wanted to get this starburst in it i can look and see and i can okay there's fabric all the way around then i could just trace around that but if i wanted to get something a little different maybe i wanted this one then i can see like maybe i didn't want all of those extras oh that one's a really nice one where can i get that one in but that's going to have a lot of bit there and then if i wanted it in the center as you can see there's no fabric there so you can turn it around and move it and help decide what you want to see in the center of your hexagon log cabin so if you're using a novelty or maybe a solid or semi-solid you can use the window effect to look for it to see how it's going to look or you can just set your template down trace around it and cut it out with scissors or your rotary cutter for the one that we're going to work on today i did use the window technique because i thought it would be fun to have all of those little balls down in the center and to have them just as close as i could to the center to highlight them the other thing we're going to need is fabric to go around it i'm doing mine totally scrappy i went into my scrap bins and i pulled out different fabrics that i like these are just novelty ones things that either would pop and give it a little bit of bright color or things that would contrast fabrics that i like it didn't really matter i just pulled out things that would work this one i stuck with polka dots everything in here came out of my polka dot bin except for this guy of course in the center i even have polka dots on the back the things that we're taking into consideration is we're going to be going by the length of our hexagon here so when we first start we're going to have a piece of fabric that's going to be a little bit longer than two inches and then as we get going around each piece of fabric as you see gets longer and longer what i wanted i wanted just a little bit of an accent in here so while each of these are an inch and a half this one right here is only an inch so that gave it that nice little breaking of a pop of a color there and then i wanted my border to be the same size and i wanted a black and white polka dot just to kind of give it a good frame but everything else in here i did have a couple that matched up i did use the same one twice didn't catch it right away i'd already stitched it down but i don't mind that through the same it's scrappy anyways lots of color and lots of fun polka dots so that's something to keep in mind but i thought on this one that i've got some longer strips that i would go ahead and make each round go around be like this black border and i want to see if i can get them all to be the same fabric so my first round instead of having a variety it will be all one color one fabric just like this you could say i want to do this in a blue and white theme so whatever your center is then maybe you'll do a blue and then a white and then a blue you can alternate the widths as we're doing this it's not going to matter as long as each round has the same unless you want a wonky one if you use different widths of fabric all the way around it's going to get a little wonky so if you're looking for more of a wonky project and you want your hexagon lock cabin to be a little bit off kilter and stuff you can always even it out at the end but we're going to make ours nice and straight today the other thing i wanted to take into consideration so i got my accent strips that i cut these one inches and i did want to have one that was not crazy busy so this one's kind of blue so i have this darker blue then i have that blue and then i thought i would finish it with a blue so you can keep that in mind so that you don't use a lot of your longer strips in the shorter section and make sure that you're going to be able to have enough fabric to go all the way around if you're going totally scrappy just grab whatever you have cut them so that they're all the same width and then just go for it so i cut mine all at an inch and a half because i thought that after my practice one that the inch and a half was just enough for me to see the colors and also to still build it out nicely if you have leftover jelly roll strips it's perfect for this to use two and a half inch strips you're going to see more of the fabric and your project is going to get bigger faster so if you're making it for maybe a large octagon table or if you want to put it on like a circular rectangle table or something like that or just a wall hanging use the wider strips it'll build it out faster and then you can get a larger piece quicker if we used all one inch strips it would take us a very long time to build it out to be maybe 24 or 36 inches you can even make this large enough and make it for a baby play mat enough cheddar chatter let's get crafting i'm going to set these aside so i don't accidentally use them before we get going the other thing you're going to need is you want to have some batting and some backing prepared i don't know how big this is going to be so i'm not going to cut that at all yet so i do have a chunk of scrap batting that i have and then i'm going to use this light bulb fabric for the back but i'm going to hold off on cutting anything like this until i'm all done we want to start with our smaller scraps first so i'm using the same color all the way around but if you want to do it scrappy you want to find a small piece and you want it to be about a quarter of an inch on each side of an overlap so you want to figure your piece needs to be a half an inch to an inch larger i'd say if you're a little bit concerned on your sewing skills and you get it just right i'd go an inch larger so right now this piece right here that i'm going for is two inches so i need to have a piece that's at least three inches long since i have this blue green thing i think i'll go ahead and put this bright yellow around it just go ahead and cut myself a piece that's about three inches long a little bit longer just to make sure that i have plenty of room we're going to lay these right sides together and you want to make sure as i mentioned that you are overlapping on each side at least a quarter of an inch go ahead and stitch our quarter inch seam then we're going to bring it up and we want to make sure we have enough overlapping because we're going to be trimming it here so we just want to make sure we have enough at least a quarter of an inch to go over so that we have that room to trim off the excess since i'm working with these are leftovers they're still scraps even they're larger pieces if you're just using little pieces of scraps then it's really easy just to grab your smaller piece and as we get going more and more you can also piece them together to get long enough strips so i'm going to take this to the sewing machine and i'm going to sew it from the back just so that i can make sure i can see my original hexagon here so i'm going to start stitching right here you can backstitch if you want i usually don't and i'm going to sew over there and then i'm going to go ahead and stop and let me show you how to sew the first one and then the rest of them are just all the same after that you can put pins in or you can put clips on it to hold it the fabric just seems to want to stay together so they're right sides together i'm doing a quarter inch seam and i'm keeping my stitch length at 2.0 it's a nice tight stitch that i use for when i'm sewing quilting pieces together that way it holds everything together nicely if you want you can start on the outside here and work your way in it's not going to matter if you stitch past it we just want to make sure that we're stitching at least this full length here but if we stitch extra we're going to trim it off so it'll be okay and i've gone back to using just a piece of scrap fabric and what that does is it allows me to keep it going so now i don't have to have that long length of thread that i have here in the beginning that either has to be trimmed off this ends up being wasted some people like to sew two and a half inch squares they do the bonnie hunter style of leader and enders i just like to have a few of these scraps they're doubled over pieces of scrap fabric that i took out of the trash now when i get ready to come back and sew my next one it's going to be all set and i can just put it right in there it also stops this little piece for the most part sometimes it can still happen but for the most part it stops it from getting sucked down into the hole because you've already had some forward motion and momentum going onto this scrap fabric what i was taught is this called a spider fabric because as you get working on it here's one that i threw away already you have all of these like little spider legs on it that's just something that i'd heard on a blog post somewhere but it's just a piece of scrap fabric a little starter and stopper now the next thing we do is i give it a nice little press from this side that's going to set our seam just make sure your stitches settle down into the fabric so they're not kind of sticking up like that it's just one of those little quilting tips you can go ahead and do it from either side i do it from the piece that i just added on because i'm going to go ahead and press it away from my center hexagon so i'm going to press it towards my seam is going towards the piece i just added give that a nice little press if you're really into steam you can go ahead and give it a nice steam we're going to trim it i make sure i have my rotary cutter that doesn't say paper when i trim this i want to line my ruler up with the edge right here of this is my original hexagon so i'm going to line it up there so it's nice and even and straight all the way through and i'm just going to trim off that little extra piece there then i will spin this around and i'm going to line it up on the little bit of the hexy that i can see right there and trim this off now the first bit you're going to see looks really weird you just have this little topper there but that's how it starts now our next piece so i'm going to use the same fabric you can go ahead and grab a different fabric if you want to have something different you can go ahead and put it down like this as i mentioned i'm going to do the same so what i want to do is i want to have it longer than this piece now we can go ahead and measure that and this part from here to here measures three and a quarter so i want to make sure that the next piece i put on is going to be longer than that so since this measures three and a quarter i want to go ahead and do my next one i like to like i said i like to go a little extra i do four and a quarter but what you can also do is you can just lay your strip down and i find it easier if you put your strip right side up and then lay your piece of hexagon or the fabric you're working on so that you can see we are going clockwise so i'm going to put my next piece here make sure i have at least a quarter of an inch sticking out that way at least a quarter of an inch sticking out this way then again i'm going to take it to the sewing machine and i'm going to at least stitch from here to there but i'll most likely just stitch the whole length of it as i'm stitching here is that first little one that i put in it's attached so i'll just go ahead and trim that off i took one of my other ones and i put it in my machine as i was feeding it through here and then i just snipped it off there just put a little towel down so i put my wool mat on it the steam goes all the way through and i don't want the heat or the steam to hit my cutting board i normally don't do it for very long like this but for just one little seam it's going to be okay again i'm going to press it from the top set the seam and then i'm just going to press it out towards the outer edge to where that piece was now i can see that it's going to be fine here and it's going to be fine there everything is covered you can start trimming at anyone i just tend to trim this one first because i can see more of the hexagon fabric then this one in the very beginning you only have this little section here to line up you can still do it pretty well just line up on there okay so there's round two and i'm going to keep adding them until i get all the way to this round we're going to count this as our hexy and then this will be round one so when we do round two i'll come back and show you how we start that after i put on my last little strip when i go to trim these now i have to line my ruler up with that beginning of the round that i just did so i'm no longer using the hexagon i'm using whatever is on the outside the outer most ring and i'm using that to line my ruler up to go ahead and trim my little bits off see i didn't even though i went more than a quarter of an inch i'm not wasting that much fabric it's just the small little snippets and that is what my first round looks like now i know my beginning is right here because that is where my little smallest piece is but so i want to put my next piece up here and you can also see that there are two seams going on that one edge and if we look at all of these other edges there's only one seam there one seam there and one seam there so that way it allows me to know that not only is my smallest piece up here if you were doing it in this fashion you would know that okay my blue polka dot was the first one i put down so that i know when i go and put my first piece down for my next round i want it to be right there it's just going to keep everything going and nicely counterclockwise and it keeps everything so that it's we're going to say square even though it's a hexagon but we want to make sure nothing is getting all twisted and off kilter so as you see on this one i did a little bit of a small round just to break it up for this one i think i'm going to go i'm going to make this one a little bit bigger than my polka dot one so i'm going to go do another round before i start on my narrow strip i do have some of my yellow bugs left over so i'm just going to go ahead and save these for a future scrap project i know that my outer pieces and my accent strip is blue so i might not want to put a blue one right on this round because my accent is going to be blue so i think i will go ahead now it's a dark blue so i could use this light blue but i think for this one i'm going to go ahead and go with the green just because i like the green against the yellow again i need to have a piece that measures at least a quarter inch more on each end so a total of a half inch more than this piece and i can just eyeball it i'm like okay i got enough going over on that side and this one i'll just cut that straight and take it to my machine as you get going once you know that you if you have your piece cut like this then it's easy if you want to just stitch it from the front still because then we're going to stitch all the way across but you also have to be careful because you don't want to have this get caught underneath your machine as you're stitching so i still continue to go ahead and stitch it this way it also allows me to keep an eye on these seams to make sure they're laying nice and flat i'm going to put this on and i'm going to stitch the whole round just like i did with the last one and then we'll do the narrow strip so i ended up pulling more fabric scraps out than i needed i really like the look of the size of this version so this is where i'm going to stop here my main hexi there we go one two three four rounds is good for me you can go ahead and do as many rounds as you want it's going to be different for everyone depending on the width of your fabric strips now you don't have to have that little accent strip either so that's just something i like to have on there i was thinking this would look really great in a some type of a bullseye definitely the contrast of a black and white would be really cool if you had the just not straight solids which would be fine but if you had the different small little prints on it and maybe you could do your accent strip and i always think of red but you can always put an accent strip of any color in there you can have if you want to have whatever matches your living room or your kitchen or whatnot the options are really depends on what you want to have and which kind of scraps you have so they're unlimited so i'm going to put these into my scrap pile again put them back in that little scrap bin and now let's keep going with this since i'm cutting mine from yardage i'm just gonna go ahead and set mine down here i'm just gonna rough cut it out and then i will cut it for real and i can fold this all up back nice and neat and put it back on my shelves i'm going to put a link down below in the description box on how i fold my fabric so that it stays on the shelves nice and neat like this my yardage now as you see i didn't put any binding on this i definitely didn't want to have to deal with all the extra corners which is just you would put the binding on to do these corners the same way you would do for your regular quilt they just have a little different angle to it you just kind of work your way around but i like this where you lay them all together stitch around and flip it through the hole and then stitch around again so that's what we're going to do with this i gave this a nice little press i'm just going to go ahead and lay my ruler right along the edge of my hexagon here my log cabin and trim these corners off if you have a rotating mat that is helpful or you could just spin it like i did or spin your entire mat if you see like your outer edge if it's a little uneven you'll be trimming it up here so if it has a little bit of a piece that's sticking out you get it trimmed nicely if you have really flat pins you can go ahead and pin it you could cut your batting and your backing at the same time i want to make sure that i'm getting everything and getting it right so i'm just going to do one at a time and of course yes i'm creating more scraps but since i do love to work with scraps i don't mind i like to have that little extra try to figure out how i'm going to use those pieces come up with another project this works in another one of these log cabins the hexy lock cabins regular lock cabin string blocks there's all kinds of things you can make with those now the other side of my mat is a little bit worn and more used so i'm going to go ahead and use that part for my batting for this one to give it a little bit more protection if you're going to put something like a candle on it i wanted to have a couple layers of batting in here just to give it a little bit more sturdiness if you want to put some maybe a plant on it for display it just gives you that little extra if you're going to use it as more of a hot plate hot matte type thing you want to use that insulbrite that will help protect against it or you can just use extra layers of batting i've been looking online and they say just using more layers of batting if you use two layers of batting it's pretty much going to give you enough if you're trying to put an extremely hot thing on it straight out of the oven you want to have a nice amount of protection so you could always use the insulbrite or something else i'm just going to go with two layers of my cotton batting i'm going to use my i'm just going to trim this off to get it out of my way you can trace around this and do it with a pen or a pencil or some type of marking tool if you prefer i'm just gonna keep spinning my mat around the batting tends to stick to the mat more than the fabric does which makes it a little bit harder to pick up the piece and spin it it just gets easier to spin the entire mat if you're working on a smaller mat it would be a lot easier in the past i've used this one cutting mat specific cutting mat to do all this i'm going to put a link down below for that video also on how i cleaned it i usually cut all my batting and things like that on that one specific mat that way it doesn't it doesn't put the extra bits of fibers and stuff into this mat but this backside is already not the greatest for cutting fabric anyway now if you wanted you could put down one piece of batting and go ahead and quilt it but i did all of the quilting on this one i did really simple i did just some outline stitches around there you can kind of just see simple things like that it's not a big project so i went and kept the quilting simple so what i'm going to do is i have my two pieces of batting keep everything lined up on the bottom and then i have my backing right side up i'm going to take my top piece and i'm going to put that right side down um mine came out a little bit different so i did have to keep spinning it until i found it to where it lined up nicely all of my pieces didn't come out exactly square and perfect so it gave it just a little bit of a wonkiness to it and it's just not like it's crooked or anything it's just like each side is a different length again i'm okay with that i really like the way it turns out so i'm fine with that i'm not going to worry about it i'm going to put some clips what i'm going to do is put my clips all the way around so i'm going to go ahead and stitch you can do either a quarter inch in from the edge or 3 8 inch since i have all these layers that have to be held together i'll probably do the 3 8 inch it's just easier to make sure i catch all the layers [Music] the most important are going to be your main cotton fabrics your your front of your project and the back so i'm going to leave a little opening a couple inches right here i'm going to back stitch and we'll stitch all the way around leave my opening and backstitch there you go put some pins in there to remind yourself but i'm going to start right here so that when i get back around i'll know that i need to go ahead and stop so i stitched all the way around you could see right here i left a little opening so i didn't stitch again back stitch here back stitch there 3 8 all the way around you can do a quarter inch half inch whatever works for you now i want to take and trim these corners off it's going to release some of the bulk from those corners so that i can get a much of a sharp point as i can get that you leave a little bit of space in between you don't want to cut right up to your threads you want to leave just a little bit maybe an eighth of an inch from there to the edge i said that just trims off that extra bit of bulk there if you've been here for a while you've seen me do that with many of our projects that have any type of a corner trim off that thread if you want to put a very large seam you can go ahead and trim your edges down to a quarter of an inch but you want to leave the spot where you left your opening don't trim this section here because it'll make it easier to tuck it in if you have that extra bit of fabric so what we're going to do is we're going to go in between our front of our project and the back so that we're going in between the two pieces of cotton we want to make sure we're not going in between any of our battings because what we see right here is what we're going to see on the outside make sure we see our backing and then the front of our project so i'm just put my fingers in you can use hemostats or something but it's not too hard and you're just going to gently pull it through it might look like i'm going all difficult here i'm just giving it a little bit of a pull and a tug that way my two turning tools of choice is a crochet hook that has a bit of a rounded tip on it and then my point turner here what i like to do since this is a really sturdy metal hook i can get in there and i can just i can put my hand in if i want i just put this in and i pop out my corners the best i can just to get them started work your way all the way around got to make sure you get each of those corners popped out then after i get it like that i go through with this i'm just afraid that i'm gonna get a little too rough with it and i'm gonna break it so i save this for the part i just make sure the corners are popped out nicely see how like this one has that bit there so i'll just gently pop that out some people do it with their scissors because they're not too pointed some people use pens or chopsticks or those little tools that come when you buy a bag of fiberfill a little turning tool then i'll take it over and i'll give it a good press from the front i want to press it out and then i want to also take this little section here and i'm going to tuck it in so that this area goes as level as possible if you need to you can trim out some of this excess batting just because it's going to be in that seam it's going to be folded over and give you a little bit of grief i wouldn't trim off too much and be careful you don't cut into any of your cotton fabric just a little so it's not all folded over now it's all going to be folded over here anyways but this just makes it a little easier to get this nice and crisp when there's so much going on here with the extra batting and stuff like that i like to use pins to close this i'll just make sure everything stays lined up line it all up at the top just give it a little pin then i'm going to take it over to the sewing machine now i'm going to top stitch an eighth of an inch from the edge and that's going to close up this hole and it's going to hold everything together nicely and it's just going to give it that nice clean finished edge the top stitching just adds that nice little touch it gives it that nice little finished look to it besides just closing up this hole and i'm going to do an eighth of an inch because we had a quarter inch to a 3 8 inch seam allowance and if i go too far in i'm not going to close up that hole some people like to close it up with a ladder stitch and then you can go ahead and do it in any way you like i like to just go ahead with the eighth of a stitch to close eighth of an inch stitch just to close it all up now if you wanted you can stop right there so i got it all stitched around now if you wanted you can stop right there you can see the top stitching all the way around it closed up that hole it shows a little on the back this just gives it that nice edge and when you go ahead and put this in the washer it keeps it from doing anything weird along the edges sometimes it can get a little rolled and the batting and stuff can get all stuck up or something like that now if you're just going to use this as something simple you're going to put it down you're going to put a plan on it you're going to put a little table mat on it you can just leave it like that but if you're going to use it for something like a hot pad and you want to have it something that's going to get washed a lot it's a good idea to put a little extra quilting in it now it depends on the batting you're using i'm using 100 cotton batting and the batting package tells me that i need to go ahead and quilt in every 10 inches so that means every 10 inches there should be a quilting line in either direction now my project itself is hitting at just about 11 inches by about 10 inches so what i've done is actually enough now i do like to do a little extra stitching i like to sew the center down so that when it washes nothing will get bunched up in here i like to just go right along here where the two meet or you can do an eighth of an inch around the square like that depending on what you're doing now since i'm going to keep the white thread in i think i'm going to go ahead and go an eighth of an inch around on this yellow bug fabric that way it doesn't pop on the blue fabric you won't notice it as much in the yellow if i wanted to switch over to a dark blue then i could go ahead and stitch it there it's how i stitched this one and you can see where i just kind of went all along there and i followed the center hexagon i was thinking you can also use the fancy stitches on your sewing machine and you can do maybe a feather stitch or the buttonhole stitch and if you want to do it on each of the rounds you can do that i just want to caution you that if you're doing it in different colors like this different fabrics pay attention to where you're going because what i wanted to do is as i started here and i was going to stitch all along the inside of the black and white polka dots but as i was going i came to this intersection and i didn't think anything about it and i turned that corner and i started stitching along here so then i caught on to what i did and i went back over to here and i just stitched along there and let it meet back in there it's not a big deal it just means that it has this little quirky little quilting on it like that if i didn't tell you about it you might not have noticed and if you did you might have thought that i was just doing some bit of an offset hexagon because you can still see that the shape is there so you can do whatever you want and anything at all so i'm going to go ahead and just do that little eighth of an inch around top stitching basically around that one now you're going to be going through a lot of layers when you do your top stitching here and when you do your little quilting around the center like that then you might want to think about lengthening your stitch length because we did a lot of it at the 2.0 so for these i went for a 2.6 especially if you have your insole bright and stuff in there it can get a little thick if you're going to be using this as a hot pad i highly recommend using a cotton fabric the polyester has a tendency the polyester can melt so if you put a hot pan on it and you have it in there you might end up melting it at all so you want to go ahead and stick with your insulbrite and your cotton batting or possibly a wool so there we go two hexagon log cabins if you wanted to turn these into a quilt i have seen some quilts with them what they do is you would first of course just stop at whatever size you want and you wouldn't use the batting or the backing or anything some of them you could put them together like this but you would have to do y seams and it would give you that nice scrappy look and i think this would look really cool if you had the bull's eyes and stuff then i've seen other ones where they put them together this way and they have to figure out the measurements for this triangle so you might be able to purchase a pattern if you want to look for one some type of a hexagon log cabin if i find a pattern i saw one but i couldn't find the link anymore it was no longer good online so if i can find one maybe on etsy or something i'll go ahead and link to it down below but you could always just figure out the math because it's basically this size right here plus a quarter inch all the way around so you might be able to figure that out sketch it out on paper or something like that or you can just make these individually like this and just have some fun i think these would be really nice in any type of room doom and holiday colors give them as a gift if you're giving someone some flowers in a vase maybe go ahead and add one of these little mats match the flowers or match their room decor so that they can use them again later you can use some type of maybe you want to put a holiday on the back you could put christmas or halloween or thanksgiving and then when you flip it over you can have it scrappy like this i do like the bullseye effect but i really do like just a crazy polka dots also so if you have any questions leave them down below in the comments please our code word for this video will be polka dot thank you for hanging out with me and i'll see you guys next time bye you
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Channel: RsIslandCrafts - Robin
Views: 53,428
Rating: 4.9129996 out of 5
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Id: J0Zpb46Prko
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Length: 37min 12sec (2232 seconds)
Published: Fri Apr 16 2021
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