Sashed Half Hexi Quilt Tutorial

with
Jenny Doan

Sashed Half Hexi Quilt Tutorial

Quilt Size: 50" x 63"
Jenny makes a beautiful Sashed Half Hexagon Quilt using Victoria Findlay Wolfe Mostly Manor 10 inch squares of precut fabric (layer cakes), yardage for sashing and border, and the 10 inch half hexi template ruler.
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video transcript

Hi everybody, it’s Jenny from the MSQC. And I’ve got such a great project for you today. Let’s take a look at this quilt behind me. Isn’t this beautiful? I mean I just love this line of fabric. It’s very bright and happy. And this is a half hexi quilt project. So I can hardly wait to show you how to make this.

So to make this quilt what you’re going to need is one packet of ten inch squares. And we are using Victoria Findlay Wolfe’s fabric called Mostly Manor for Marcus. And it is, I mean I just love this line. It’s a very happy, very eclectic. It’s got older prints, newer prints. Just a lot of fun things happening in this fabric. So you’re going to need one packet of ten inch squares. You’re going to need 1 ½ yards of this black for our sashings. You’re going to need 1 ½ yards for our outer border out here. This is a 5 ½ inch border. And you’re good to go. You’re going to get a quilt that’s 50” by 63”. So it’s a great size. So let me show you how to do this.

So the first thing we’re going to do is you’re going to take your half hexi template and you’re going to cut hexagons out of all your ten inch squares. Now what I like to do, let me show you how I do this. There’s, you know, there’s more than one way to do this. But I like to take my square and fold it in half. And I’m going to line up my hexagon on the edge of my square, just like that. Then I’m going to cut my corners off, just like this. And turn it. This is a great time for a nice rotating mat. And I’m going to cut up here like this. And cut across the top. Alright, so now you have two hexagons right here. And what we need to do now is border the bottoms of them. So we’re going to take our 1 ¼ yards and cut that into 1 ½ inch strips. And we’re going to lay these on our strips like this. And we are going to sew them down just like this, a quarter of an inch but we have to put them apart. You know give it about an inch and a half or two inches apart because when we fold this over we’re going to trim this out because we’re going to make a piece that looks like this. See how that is bordered on the bottom of that half hexi. Alright so let’s go to the sewing machine and sew a couple of these down.

Again I’m just going to lay my, my hexi on here. I’m staggering it a little bit from the end so that I have room to cut that angle when I open it up. I’m going to set my presser foot on there. Just sew it down quarter of an inch from the edge just like this. I’m going to stop when I get to the end and I’m going to lay my next one I’m going to leave about, oh an inch and a half or two inches in there and sew again. So it’s the same kind of chain piecing. You just want to, you know you just want to slide along there. You’ve just got to leave that little space in between. You’re going to do this to all your half hexagons. And I’m going to just do it to a couple. And now we’re going to press them open. So I’m over here at the ironing board and I’m just going to roll those back just like that. Do it to both of them. And I like to press from the top to make sure there just aren’t any pleats or folds in here. So we just open that up.

Alright so now we need to trim these. And what we’re going to do is we’re going to use the edge of our little half hexi right here as the guide. So this edge right here becomes our guide. We lay our ruler along there. That gives us the right angle. And we’re just going to cut that off like that. And we’re going to do that on both sides. So here’s this one. Now if you’ve ever seen us put together the hexi braid, I mean it’s just so quick and easy. And we have several tutorials talking about this braid. But what we’re going to do is we are going to put six of these braids together and then cut it into a block. So it, that’s going to be fun to show you how to do. Alright. So I’ve got a little stack of these all done right here. And I’m going to show you how to put them together.

So when you start this, the hardest part about starting the braid is the start. When you start this you’re going to attach a side piece to a bottom piece just like this. You’re going to attach those and you’ve just got to match up this bottom line right here. Take it to your sewing machine and just sew that quarter of an inch right along that edge. So let’s do that. Alright. Now, now that you’ve done your side to the bottom, it actually works out very easily because then this part right here you just add your next piece right onto here like this. See how that goes. And then you add another piece on here and you add your other piece on here. And you’re going to do that until you have six of those added on. You can’t really make a mistake because you can’t add one over here. It always goes on this side. So this is your key right here: the side to the bottom piece. That’s the starting point and then the rest of it you  make the braid. So you’re going to sew six of those together and it’s going to look like this right here. You’re going to stop at six. Actually this is the front, that’s better for you. You’re going to stop at six and now we’re going to square up our blocks.

And so what we like to do is I want to lay this kind of on a line up here and this one on a line down here. You want to cut from this part first. So right here, where this is, where this one comes together, that’s the side you want to start your cut on. And we’re just going to cut a straight edge on that. And so you kind of want to make sure this is on a straight line and this is on a straight line. And then we’re just going to cut this right up here. I’m going to scoot it just a hair over. And we’re going to cut that straight across right here. Alright, then you’re just going to discard that. And then we’re going to come, flip, well however you need to do it, whether you’re left handed or right handed. We’re going to flip it over. And we’re going to cut our block 12 ½ . So here we are at the 12 ½ . Now I want to talk about this a little bit because we’re squaring this block up. This block is now a little wider than it is long. And so we need to square it up. So if you, if these are off a little bit out here, don’t worry about that a bit because we can just square it up. So again we’re making this block 12 ½ . So we’re going to come over here one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve and a half. We’re going to put our ruler right there. And we’re just going to take off that little bit on the edge. And there’s our block right there.

Now all the blocks are going to be a little bit different but I want to mention one thing really quick. If you take a wider seam than a quarter of an inch your block is going to be shorter than 12 ½ And if you take a narrower seam it’s going to be longer. So I would use as much width on this as you can. So if your block ends up being 13, square it to 13. You’ve got some play here. You can have a little bit bigger block. If your, if your seams are bigger, square it to 12. Whatever works for you. We’re going with 12 ½ because that’s how my seams came out. So you be sure and you know, check and see how much you can get on yours when you trim it up.

Alright so now the fun part. Here is the fun part. So you have to lay these blocks out. This is one of those quilts where you want to lay it out on your design wall or your design floor. And you want them going different directions. So I have some blocks over here already made and I have a sashing in between. Now you can see if we’re, you know, you turn them different directions to get that different, you know, that twisty, turny look. And we’re putting, taking a 1 ½ inch strip and sashing it in between our blocks. And like this. And you’re going to have three across just like this and four down. And then when you get your row done and it’s sashed you’re going to put a long row of sashing in between just like this. And again you’re just laying in on the side of your block, sewing it a quarter of an inch down it. And so then when you go to add your next row, again you’re going to have a row that you’ve already put your sashing on, you know, and you’ll have three blocks and they’re already sashed. Just make sure that they’re turned how you want them to be. That they’re mixed up, that they’re going in different directions and just, there’s a lot of movement in this quilt. You’re going to really enjoy that.

So the last thing you’re going to do is you’re going to add a little inch and a half sashing all the way around to frame up your quilt. Then you’re going to add your large border on the outside. And it’s just going to make this perfect little quilt. It’s just a great size. Again I think I said it earlier, it’s 50” by 63” so it’s a great size quilt. So we hope you enjoyed this tutorial on the sashed half hexi from the MSQC.

Outtakes:

On this tutorial on the saf-hashed, on the saf-hashed.

Do the end one more time.

Ok.

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