In this article, we will explore the pros and cons of a puzzle style T-shirt quilt. Understanding the good and the bad of a puzzle style T-shirt quilt will help you know if this style is good for your T-shirts.To read about the pros and cons of a traditional style T-shirt quilt click here.
As a result, you will spend time looking at the quilt over all and its particulars. This means that you will look at, see, and think about the T-shirts. And this ultimately is what the quilt is about.
You will know that you have an interesting T-shirt quilt, when someone says to you, “If you don’t want it, I’ll take it.”
One of the key features of a puzzle style T-shirt quilt is the use of multiple sizes and shape blocks. I developed this style of quilt in the early 1990's. The first stack of T-shirts I was given had designs of all different sizes and shapes. Cropping off a design just to fit in a uniform size block was not an option, so I developed a method that puzzled together blocks of many sizes and shapes.
The first quilt I made was a big hit. I have been making this style of quilt ever since. I still love the look and feel of these T-shirt quilts. I never get tired of them.
Planning a T-shirt quilt?
Here are step-by-step directions for ordering your Too Cool T-shirt quilt.
Some T-shirts are just more "meaty" than others. I can cut one T-shirt and get a tiny block. I can cut another T-shirt and get huge blocks from the front and back of the T-shirt and blocks from it's sleeve. These T-shirts are just not equal.
This can make planning this style T-shirt quilt difficult.
Click here to read more about how to plan a variable size block quilt.
But most of the time this can be fun. When you look for one particular T-shirt, you end up seeing three or four other T-shirts you hadn’t thought about. It can become like a "Where's Waldo?" puzzle. I like having to search for a particular block.
In this quilt here, we have drawn circles around particular blocks and have arrows pointing to the back side of a block. You can see from this simple example that you can spend a lot of time looking for a block.
That's a good thing. You get to see all sorts of other blocks as you are looking!
What does this mean for you? These quilts take a lot of time to make. As a result, they cost a lot more than a traditional style T-shirt quilt.
You can expect to pay anywhere from 5 to 10 times more than the traditional style T-shirt quilt. Read about the factors that effect cost here.
We design our quilts first according to block size and then by content and color. It just doesn't work the other way around.
If a quilt maker says they can lay a puzzle style T-shirt quilt out chronologically, I would suggest you be very skeptical. I have been making puzzle style T-shirts since I developed the technique in 1992. Experience says that a puzzle style T-shirt is not the right solution for T-shirts that need to be in a chronological order.
Before you have a quilt made from your T-shirts, you need to know exactly what style of T-shirt quilt you want. The style of T-shirt quilt you choose will influence the cost and look of your quilt.
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