Tridazzle Quilt!! Quick class from 10" squares!!

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hi it is monday morning at the fabric patch i'm brianna matskis and we are doing our tridezo class today my daughter and i have owned and operated a busy quilt shop in washington state for over 20 years we have a retreat center an active youtube channel and a large pattern line featuring our creations my two sons work on machines one daughter-in-law is our videographer and the other is a long-arm quilter we are a family that love each other we laugh together and every once in a while we get some work done we have a crew that are saints for their efforts at keeping us on track thanks for joining us on our wild ride all right so we're going to do our tri-dazzle block it's pretty fun pretty easy if you are a beginning sewer you have a little one who wants to learn to sew this one's pretty good as long as you can sew a straight line maybe draw a straight line if you can't i've got a fun tool for you and we're gonna just sew some straight lines and make a try nozzle block um all you'll need is you'll need a friction pen or a fabric appropriate marking utensil you'll need some 10 inch squares you can also do any size of square maybe you've got some 12 inch squares laying around from an old project or it's the most effective way to use what's in your stash is to cut a 12 inch square and have no waste whatever you choose will work well it just will just depend on how big or small your quilt is so today we're going to do 10 inch squares i've started with a layer cake of cafe fabric so i'm going to end up with 42 tried at the blocks when i'm done so let's get right into it let me show you how to make a block okay so now that we have our squares all ready to go um we're they're gonna take two squares and put them right sides together now again this is where some quilters get lost it's like oh my gosh what squares we're gonna put together i am someone i call myself a planned random kind of a quilter which means i am very bad at oh these look really good oh but what if i put this one with this one and then i'm on this wormhole of i've wasted an hour trying to figure out what two squares need to go together for a try dazzle again it's four different triangles that go together so it doesn't matter um where you go as long for my rule my planned random is it can't be the same two blocks so if you feel like oh my gosh i can't do it it's too stressful have someone if there's a little person in your house or a husband with you or a friend next door say hey pick two squares put them together whatever you choose i'm gonna sew together and i'm just gonna trudge through it but what i do is i put a pile half my block to my left half my blocks to my right and i pull one and pull the other if they match i'll dig again if they don't match that's what's happening so what you're gonna do is you're gonna choose the two you're gonna put them right sides together and take your two right sides together so you can decide and do all of your twos together make sure you don't have to cut any more blocks make sure you have what you need and then when you're putting them right sides together you want to make sure that it's pretty square sometimes i mean it's all machine cut so they're supposed to be accurate sometimes they're not when you're cutting sometimes they're not there's human error so just make sure that they're very close to the same size if one's a lot smaller toss that guy re-cut a square and then make sure that your edges all line up really well and then we're going to go ahead and mark our line all right when we mark our line there's two ways we can do it the first way i've marked this one already is just by taking our ruler and we're going to draw from one corner to the other corner in one solid line and again i use a friction marker um it is heat away so when you're done with your line you hit your eye onto it and it will totally disappear so you can draw your line down the center and then we'll sew on a quarter of an inch on either side of that line or what's really nice if you find you have a hard time just being following a line this is called a quick quarter two ruler it's only number two because there was an eight inch this is the 12 inch we at the fabric patch only sell the 12 inch because it is the most versatile size if you have a smaller block awesome you've got extra ruler to spare if you've got one of these bigger ones we're going to have to shift a little bit but that's not a big deal what you're going to do is you're going to take your marker it's more like a felt-tip pen actually and you're going to line the opening of your ruler right there at the point of your block and you're going to draw in those lines what i'm drawing the center line here is your cut line it is a dashed line throughout your blonde then what you're going to do is you're going to run a mark on either side of your ruler scoot it down a little bit keep on drawing your ruler then when you're done you're going to remove your move your little ruler and then you're going to have is you're going to have your cut line and you're gonna have your sew line and you're gonna sew on this line and this line making two half square triangles which is the first part of making your tridazzle block once you have everybody marked however you choose whether it's just the solid line and you're going to guide yourself on either side or i've used the quick quarter ruler and you're just going to sew on the line i recommend it a 10 inch square or larger just pin it keeps your two layers nice together so that you don't have any shifting when you're sewing and again i don't like to sew over my pins so i pin along my sew line so that my pins are out of my way of my presser foot and my needle and we're just going to pin those in place you can do as many or as little as you want i'm sure this is excessive but i have history of putting too many pins in all right the first one we're going to sew is the squares that have my quick quarter ruler lines on them so again i've got my cut line in the middle and my cell lines on either side and what i'm going to do i'm going to use just a basic presser foot if you have a quarter inch foot on your machine go ahead and use it but for those of you that may have not invested in a quarter inch foot yet this foot works just the same find the center of your foot in my case it's that little red dash is the center and it's also aligned with my needle and i'm going to follow that line and i'm just gonna make sure that those stitches land right on that line we're gonna sew to the end and then we're gonna flip it around and sew down the other sill line all right now that we've had we've sewn that together we're then going to continue sewing the rest of our blocks and then we're going to cut these in half the next one i'm going to show you is i've again just drawn the line right down the center from point to point and i'm going to sew on a quarter of an inch on either side of that line i've drawn so i'm going to show you that i've changed my foot to my quarter inch foot so i've got a fun little guide right here that i'm going to keep on that line or if your quarter of an inch foot looks different you might just be guiding the very edge of your foot on that line i'm also going to show you some chain stitching which is where you can sew all of your blocks together at once or four or five at a time all right so when you're chain stitching you're going to sew all the way off the edge of your fabric you're going to put your needle down by rotating or some of your machines might have a button a needle down button so with your needle down you're they're going to bring your next squares right sides together you've drawn your line and you're going to just pick your press foot up up just so slightly so that you can put the fabric underneath your guide and then continue sewing once you get to the end of your blocks whether that's four blocks five blocks all of them whatever you decide again i rotate my needle down press her foot up i twist all of my blocks to the other side and i'm going to sew back the other direction sewing a quarter of an inch on the other side of the line all right and you can do the chain stitching on both ways whether you're whether you are using the quick quarter square ruler or just drawing your line and then the next thing you have to do is just clip these apart and we'll get to cutting these blocks apart all right so we have some of our blocks together we can remove our pins if you've chosen to pin and then we're going to cut them apart so again we've sewn on either side of this dash line you can use your scissors or a rotary cutter whatever you are most comfortable with and we're just going to cut our blocks apart right on that dotted line that we've created with our quick quarter ruler or in if you have chosen to just draw your line from corner to corner we're just gonna cut on that solid line and then what you're left with are two half square triangles and then we're going to go to the iron and give them a quick press okay so after we have made our done some sewing cut our blocks in half we've got all of these half square triangles i find it is very important to press at this stage because the next step is to do some nestling and to create our triangle block and to do that we've got to make a point in the very middle so i find that pressing as we go is important so when i'm pressing i always tend to press to the dark in this case my blocks are all pretty much the same colors so i can kind of do whatever if you find that these together are you know making your eye twitch and it's way too crazy for you maybe you've chosen to do some of these awesome case prints with some solid white or solid black or a different color then you'd have to decide which one is dark and which one is light and again sometimes it doesn't matter um again what we really want to be careful of if we take a dark fabric and press it to a white it creates this funny shadow that is forever and always going to be there but the important thing for pressing is we always like to set our seam so go ahead and just press along with your hot iron on your seam and you're going to open it up and you're just going to rock your iron over to make sure that that whole seam is opened all the way up as far as it can go so that when we are putting our two squares together we know that there's not gonna be a funny lip in there so um as we're pressing we're gonna do this to all of them and choose what it's your choice what is the dark and what is the light you might find as we start creating our next step you might want to press it the other direction because of how your blocks are laying so i'll get these all pressed and then we'll be right back do all right we've got our stack of beautifully pressed half square triangle blocks now we're going to put them together so we're going to take two blocks again this is one of those plan random strategies however it works for you you're then going to take two blocks put them right sides together and here's the trick when it comes to the tri-duzzle is we have to find one of our trial tried out the block is going to be pressed this way and the other one can be pressed the other direction the reason why is we're going to put seams together and then we're going to nestle those seams and you can feel if you've got your blocks in front of you you can feel when those lines interlock and you can feel when they're not interlocked so the more snug they are together the more the better point you're going to have in the end right there so you're going to line these up right sides together interlocking those seams and what's important if you find that your blocks like this was a little oblongy something funky happened maybe i didn't sew my line very straight the important part when you're putting these blocks together is that this seam these seams together are nestled together all the way through the entire block if you're just making sure that this point and this point or these two points match up um you're gonna get a weird shift so it's important that your sew point and your sew point line up together the entire way don't worry about what's happening over here because again we're going to trim after this block is sewn we're going to trim everything up so we've nestled that pretty good we're proud of that then what we're going to do is we're going to draw another line over the top of our seam again you can use your quick quarter ruler or just draw a line with your whatever straightedge is near you again the same thing we're going to draw a line down the middle of our block crossing over our seam we've already sewn and we're going to sew a quarter of an inch on either side so you can mark those however you find is most useful to you all right we're going to take our next block we're going to do the same thing right sides together lining up our sew line we're going to and again feeling is really easy we're going to interlock those stitches right there so that when we open our block up we're going to have a beautiful point right there we're going to make sure it's happy from sew point to other sew point and if you feel like you want to at this point you can put a little pin in here so that you are sure that when you're actually marking your line your blocks have not shifted on you then once we figure that out we're then going to draw draw our line and again we're going to be trimming our block so even though this is a little something funky's happening over here is go off of the small block because again we're going to be trimming to the smallest size our blocks make okay and there we have our mark again if you're an over pinner just pin a few more spots and then you are ensuring that your block is not shifting while you're getting ready to sew so we're going to mark all of our blocks however you want use your quick quarter ruler or just draw a line from point to point making sure you're crossing over your seam line so that you're making an x all right so now that we have it lined all up marked pinned we're gonna go ahead and sew just like before we're gonna sew on the line we've drawn or we're gonna sew on a quarter of an inch on either side of the single line we've drawn all right we went ahead and sewn all of those hasher triangles together again um sewing again on the quarter of an inch on both sides of that line we're gonna have to go and cut those in half just like before and that's going to yield us a quarter square triangle the two identical quarter quarter square triangles so we've got these beautiful things again if this is a little too crazy for you go ahead and take a really cool vibrant layer cake and put it with a solid or tonal alternate one and it'll help cool it down a little bit for you if this is a little too much but super cool so once you've had those you're going to have a whole pile of these bad boys we're going to head press them all again we're going to be trimming afterwards so again a nice crisp press is what you need to achieve an accurate trimming all right we've pressed our triathlon go ahead and use best press some starch whatever you choose to make it nice and crisp and ready to go the trimming trick is pretty cool so i've turned my ruler here so you can see it better but the easiest thing is since you have this really nice intersection right here i'm going to find out what that measurement is so if we've started with a 10 inch block it's now gone a little bit smaller because we've sewn it a couple of times so we're going to just place our ruler on top this is a 10 inch square from quilter select and we're going to decide okay we want to trim this down maybe you think oh i want to do it you know seven and a half inches because i have some funny seven and a half inch squares i want to use you can choose what you want how much you want to trim or how little you want to trim when i'm looking at this i feel like an eight and a half inch block would be perfect i'm going to trim quite a bit but i feel like if i went nine i'm not trimming very much which means i might be leading myself into a little bit of a disaster where maybe some of my blocks didn't sew up as nice and nine inches is too big and i can't square up a block so i'd rather square them up all now instead of having to go back and trim them down even smaller because there's a few misfits in the room so what you're going to do is you're going to decide so if i'm going to go into eight and a half inch block that i'm going to trim to i know that half of that is four and a quarter so what i'm going to do is i'm going to measure down four and a quarter inches and come over and i'm also going to measure over four and a quarter one two three four and a quarter and then i'm going to take a wet erase marker and make a mark right there that is the point of my tridazzle block so when i'm trimming it gives me a really fast reference on where i want the center of my block to be and you'll also notice that the 45 degree line that is on every ruler runs right along that seam line hits my dot i've chosen and keeps on going so if you've decided that your block is going to be trimmed to an eight inch block you will find the four inch center and it just makes it really fast to trim then what you're going to do is you're going to trim both sides you're going to turn your block and then again fast reference you can see that your point is right in the center of your tri nozzle or you know of course your block is eight and a half inches you can see eight and a half eight and a half let me just get over to skosh and every and we're going to trim this side and you have a perfectly squared up try it as a block your intersections your perfect beautiful points you've made are right in the center of your block every single time i'll show you this one more time okay so here's another block that has been nice pressed starched it's ready to be trimmed again it's the same thing so we're going to trim it to an eight and a half inch block so we've found the center of our triazole block the center mark on our ruler and we're just going to double check eight and a half eight and a half looks good again look how little i'm trimming here but how much i'm trimming here that's the really nice trick of finding that center point is we might be skewed a little bit because of our not so straight seam maybe our blocks weren't cut as square as we thought we had cut them but that's okay because look our 45 degree line is also right on our seam so we're just going to trim this little wonkiness up we're going to cut that side oops we're going to twist our block again place our dot in the center of our tridazzle there and then we're gonna double check we've got eight and a half eight and a half i'm going to scoot over just a little bit double check remember cut measure twice cut once it's a rule for every cutting technique and we're gonna head and we're gonna cut that all off and then you are left with a beautiful eight and a half inch tried out the block perfectly centered okay finally i have finished trimming all these did i mention that every block you start with is how many blocks you have to trim at the end so if you start with 42 squares you're gonna trim 42 squares um i'm pretty sure i needed a wine break about after block 12 but anyways we've trimmed them all we got them all super pretty all eight and a half inches or whatever your blocks came out to if you started with a bigger square a smaller square you might have found that you trimmed it to a different size maybe your seams were a little different and your block came to eight it's all good your quilt is your quilt and what your block size is is your block size so we're gonna do is we're gonna talk a little bit about sashing so what we're gonna do is i'm gonna show you some sashing options to set these tridazzle blocks alright so i have some stuff ready so i can show you some sashing so the sashing is how we have set our block so here's our triadon block and these little strips and cornerstones here is what our sashing it's going to separate all of these triangles from each other so it's not so busy it gives you that little break now the sashing is really versatile one you can do it you don't have to do it two you can choose any size you want maybe your quilt maybe got tired of trimming squares and you're like nope i'm gonna save those for a rainy day this is what i'm doing because i have to get this quilt done today and quilt it tomorrow and give it away on monday whatever that might be um but you can make this any size you want my rule of thumb is don't go um more than you know the size of your block you know you can probably go as big as maybe like a four inch sashing if you want to or there's a different study you can do all together and i'll show you that towards the end of the video um where you can do a try out the block and then just a solid square block same size so an eight and a half inch triazzle eight and a half inch solid and you don't have to worry about the sashing at all but sashing is cool fun makes your quilt a little bit larger a little bit faster and i'm going to show you some options because your sashing will help make the quilt this quilt is very orange but we could have made it very blue or very green so i'm going to show you some options how the sashing will change the color of your quilt all right so i'm just going to use a few blocks to show you i've got i think five or six different fabrics to show you to see what might be cool so this one i have here is a batik because again mix your cottons and your boutiques it's all a 100 cotton very high quality fabric you can do whatever you can mix those it's no big deal put it in with your try nozzle blocks or put it as your sashing so we're just going to space these out this is about a two inch or so space and again you can decide how big that space is just by and this is just a visual thing i find that i am very visual so this is a little easier for me so if you see this one i feel like this one is was in my head a very cool pick because of some of these greens in here but it's a little for me a little faded out very white so for me it definitely makes it bright the quilt is very bright it brings out some of the more lighter spots in here so a very cool choice if you want something a little more on the mellow side but not solid white the next one i have is kind of a denim texture in a black which kind of looks on here almost a little blue because of all of the blue tones in my blocks very cool black again is the absence of color so it will create your regular try nozzle blocks to kind of be a little bit brighter so this is very cool it is definitely all about that try nozzle block the sashing if it's going to be this nice denim texture again it's kind of a black on black a little bit of a marble not totally solid it definitely shows off your quilt for sure the next one i have here is a green kind of grain texture this one goes with the stag and thistle collection very cool i like this one a lot the one thing you have to keep in mind of when you are doing something that's striped or something that's directional is when you're cutting you have to decide am i going to make all of my grain horizontal or all of it you know vertical you have to decide what that means to you you might have to get more yardage less yardage you know it's somewhere in between or you might decide oh i don't even care i don't care if this one is horizontal and these are vertical just throw them in there that is okay too i do like the color of this one but for me personally the stripes would drive me crazy they would definitely have to take the extra amount of time for me to have them all horizontal would be the easiest thing for me so um that is that little twist however it is pretty simple knowing that this material in particular from salvage to salvage when you cut it your stripes are already going to be horizontal so when we cut our stripe they are going to run horizontal the entire time so not horrible another thing you can think about for your cornerstone here it could be an entirely different color if you have a few leftover blocks from what you've cut up that can be a scrappy one all the way around it can be the same sashing color it can be an entirely different color that is all the same it can be a purple one that goes throughout the entire um cornerstones of your project this one i find you know if you have a lot of this green sashing your quilt's going to slowly look more and more green so if you find that this what you've got so far in your trials of blocks is a whole lot of purple and you were hoping that it was going to be more green or more blue the sashing is what's going to help you turn your quilt to be that more blue that more purple that more green quilt you want all right this one i'm super loving um this one's kind of a pink bottom with a lavender texture on top again it is a very a a print i would say it's very textured it definitely doesn't mellow out what's happening here but the color is super cool it's definitely bringing out the pinks in here the pinks in here it's going to turn my purple blue quilt definitely into more of a pink quilt a very cool option again the print even though it's the sashing is more of a pretty detailed print there's a whole lot of print happening up here so maybe if your quilt was very calm you might want something a little more crazy in your sashing to kind of jazz up your quilt a little bit but i find that even with these being so loud and so crazy i find that this is not out of the ballpark i feel like it definitely does talk the same language and could definitely be a great sashing option okay and then this option is just good old solid black again we had a little bit of a textured block we showed before this one's solid you know i also like this one too it definitely makes the blocks a little bit darker very saturated in color already but it kind of gives this more mellow tone where some of the previous ones definitely helped with the yelling that all those bright colors were doing so the black is very cool again if i were to do a black i probably do a pretty thin thin sashing to make it again a lot about my tridazzle block and this just enough to separate everybody so we don't have all of those points to connect in the end all right so i've put my blocks up here again i have about 42 blocks so when i'm all done even with my sashing my quilts are going to be lap size again probably 50 by 60 not super big but again you can make more blocks you can have you could have started with a larger block um and to probably no one's surprise i chose the pink one so sashing is pretty fun and pretty simple you choose the width of the ship the sashing that you'd like so i chose two inches um a lot of the time if i'm doing just kind of a sampler quilt like the rose sampler that we did or it's just different different blocks that are putting together like two and a half is like a standard size of sashing but it is entirely up to you um the orange one i had up before um we cut it an inch and a half so it's just a little sliver of color again you can adjust that to whatever you want or even make it a little bit bigger if you wanted to because again it is entirely up to you it is your quilt so for the sashing you could take a two and half into chip and just sew it right across you know the whole bottom of your blocks but i find since there's so many squares you don't always you can't always ensure that this point is going to match up with this point when you are sewing just strips to strip to strip i like to put in a cornerstone so a cornerstone is just going to be again it can be a different color it can be the same color as your sashing it is again your quilt do whatever you want but the cornerstone is going to ensure that i can match up this point to this point and this point to this point so your quilt is going to be square all the way down no matter how many triangle blocks you have so and then for cutting so your pattern of course you can purchase a pattern and you can follow the instructions on how big we cut the sashing but the trick is you choose your width and your sashing is cut the length of your block so we know that we trimmed our blocks to eight and a half inches so my sashing piece is two inches by eight and a half inches my corner square block is two inches by two inches and again you can make it the same color as your sashing if you want to let me just fold this bad boy up here and here you can look just like that but it is going to be its own individual block that we're going to stick in there so i'm going to lay this out for you and show you how to sew it all together okay so i've laid it all out so all the rectangles tangles are filled with my sashing piece and all of my squares have my cornerstones and this fabric that i chose is different when you cut it into two inch squares so again if this bothers you choose something different make it the same color as your sashing it doesn't matter then what we're going to do is we're going to sew our quilt together so row one is going to be our triathlon sewn to right sides together to our sashing strip from start to finish we're going to open that bad boy up and sew block three to your sashing strip we're going to sew that down and this you'll sew all the way across for however many blocks you go this will be row one row two is your sashing row so we're going to sew our sassing strip to our corner square sew that little guy down open sew our second sashing strip to our cornerstone sew that guy open it back up and again continue that all the way down so now we've sewn row one together row two together and we'll do the same thing to row three four so on and so forth then when we have that sewn together we'll sew those two units together so i went ahead and soaked these all together for us so we've got row one and row two i like to press my rows as i go it makes my quilt top more manageable otherwise you're gonna have this whole quilt all sewn together in a whole lot of pressing if i just have to press some rows after i've sewn my eight rows together that's no big deal so i know rule of thumb we're going to press to the dark so i know this sashing is lighter than the blocks so my sashing is going to be pressed to the dark pressed the dark and i know my cornerstone is darker than my sashing so i'm going to press the cornerstone press the cornerstone which is perfect because we're going to be able to nestle these seams beautifully because they are pressed in opposite directions okay so i just brought this down to the table so you guys can see um how we're going to put these together so again row one row two row one is our block sashing block sashing and so on our row two is our sashing cornerstone sashing cornerstone so we're just gonna turn these right sides together and we're gonna do some pinning i pin the first part of my block and again you can pin how you want to pin best i like to pin my point towards where i'm sewing for two reasons one reason i know i'm going to sew wherever my point is pointing to and two if i point if i pin this direction i don't have to necessarily remove my pin as i'm sewing down my quarter inch seam allowance then i'm going to come to my cornerstone and since we've pressed the dark on both the row one and row two those pieces they're going to nestle up just like before when we're making our tridazzle block they're going to nestle really pretty together and then i'm just going to pin that you can take two pins and pin at each seam allowance so that it's really secure and no one is going to be shifted as we are sewing our row together or what i usually do is again i line everybody up nestle my seam make sure they've interlocked really nice to have a really pretty point at the end i just go in on one side of my seam hook all the way through come back around and come out the other side creating an x that's going to pin those layers together all right we're going to keep pinning again i like the x go in on one side of my seam cross over and pin again keep in mind as i come to my intersections i will want to take this out or i'll want to be carefully when i sew over the pin and then i put another pin at the very end of my row here again i like the point to where i'm sewing so i know i'm sewing the right blocks together the right units together and then i might throw a pin in between some you know it's okay to put too many pins in it make sure that nothing shifts and we're going ahead and sew these two together and we're going to sew our row one to our row two all right so i've sewn um row one to row two for you guys and you can see interlocking those points have created really nice pretty points for us again if your points are off a little bit if you can live with it leave it alone don't rip it out i was always told when i started sewing that if you couldn't see it galloping by on a horse dart it out so it's a goal good rule to live by fabric is a stress fabric and sewing and quilting or a stress reliever so if you don't want to stress over it don't trust over it it's not a big deal you'll love it the person you're giving to it will love it even more so once we've done that well let's continue on the same steps over and over again sewing these this row together the sashing row sew them together and then keep going again i press as i go it just makes the quilt more manageable as it gets larger so as you keep doing that you can then decide are you gonna put a border maybe i tend to and i probably will with this quilt i'll probably take this sashing piece and create a first border or some people call it an outer sashing all the way around and i'm gonna probably put a bigger border on it of the cornerstone fabric just to be a little bit larger and super cool and hopefully i'll have time to show it to you by the end of this video we're going to sew those together and you'll have yourself a beautiful quilt i also want to show you before the end of this video i sewed up some five inch squares into a tri dazzle block that i want to show you so i have the triazole blocks again i started with five inch squares made my half square triangles sewed my half square triangles together did some trimming these are four inch squares lots of tedious trimming has gone into these but it'll be really cute so i've decided instead of doing sashing i'm going to offset my try nozzle blocks with a solid square block this is just a solid ivory nothing crazy super cute um this fabric in particular is a three sisters fabric line so you can see if it looks really familiar you probably saw something very similar to this on friday when we did our unboxing i just had some of these in my stash and i thought these are gonna be really cute so off setting with a solid block it's also very simple if you find that or thought that the sashing was a little bit over what you're comfortable with maybe you're very new quilter and sashing was a little scary it's okay set yours your try it as a block off with a solid square it'll make your quilt again a little bit bigger for you it'll also if you have something super wild that you want to tone down this four inch solid block or four inch whatever you choose block will help either jazz up your quilt or calm it down so lots of options choose the size square that fits best for you for the pre-cuts you have the stash you have the fabric you want to purchase you can choose anything you want and make your quilt as big as you'd like so i hope you enjoyed this tridazzle class there is a pattern available at our website fabricpatch.net you can do it as a printed pattern that we will ship to you or you can do a digital download and make this this weekend thank you for watching our video we invite you to leave a comment hit the like button or better yet subscribe to our channel so you never miss an episode you can also visit our instagram twitter facebook or pinterest pages or find all of those things and our online store at fabricpatch.net
Info
Channel: The Fabric Patch
Views: 541,988
Rating: 4.8739567 out of 5
Keywords: fabric patch, quick quilts, pre-cuts, 10, squares, fast beginner, kaffe, quilt, sewing, easy
Id: 1wI5NboAoFM
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 41min 44sec (2504 seconds)
Published: Mon Oct 19 2020
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