A friend and I hosted a hand appliqué workshop for the HHQG members. There were eight people in attendance and six if us doing appliqué. The others were sewing other projects on their machines.
During the class, we all made an acetate plastic template of the full block, to help with placement. We taught them how to do vines with a bias bar to get a very smooth stem. Then we moved on to showing them how to do regular appliqué and reverse applique on the heart. We covered placing the stem and heart using the acetate template. They learned how to overlap the stem to cover the end beneath the heart and also how to then trim back the background fabric prior to finishing off the outside of the heart.
Appliqué is a slow process and requires patience. The workshop was from 9:00 am to 3:00 pm and in that time, most of us got to this stage. Just these few steps though, shown in different techniques, will be sufficient to proceed to finish the block.
I did send everyone additional instructions in an email, just to go over the overlapping part a little more in depth, as the bird requires many pieces to fit underneath the bird body and letting them know that the body is not whole under the wing and that there is only the 1/4" seam that goes under the wing.
There were also some additional tips and tricks showing different methods on how to address appliqué in different ways. The outcome is the same, but the execution is sometime different. We went through lots and lots of information. Hopefully they were not overwhelmed.
After I got home and spent some time cleaning up the yard (it was such a beautiful day), I went down to my quilting studio to put away all the stuff I brought to the workshop, which was way more than I needed...lol. I still had some energy so decided to cut out all the pieces for the appliqué, before putting the fabrics away.
This is the pattern we went with. This is a version of the Distelfink bird. According to Google it is a prominent bird in Pennsylvania Germen (Dutch) folk art, representing happiness and good fortune. These stylized birds symbolize joy and harmony within German-American cultural traditions.
Take care everyone.



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