Marmalade hearts

I’ve made another quilt as part of my quilting ‘stretch’ project using the block from Sherri at A Quilting Life’s mystery block a month. As I said then I don’t know if I’ll manage to make a quilt a month, but I won’t really know unless I try…

And now I don’t want to not achieve this goal I’ve set and so on I go.

This month I’m sharing my eleventh charity quilt and my new pile is now growing, since the first nine have now been donated to the Mansfield Coordinator of Project Linus UK.

My eleventh charity quilt

I looked at this month’s block and thought to myself ‘oh boy, how many small pieces in that basket’ and I seriously considered my sanity and why a hobby might get you cutting up bits of fabric, only to sew them back together. Oh boy for sure.

Once again, and like last month’s quilt my plan was to avoid pinks if I could. I’ve had some red material which I wanted to use for a while and it just hadn’t happened, so this month I tried harder and found myself drawn to matching it with some blues, but mostly oranges - hence the marmalade part in its name. The hearts are on the red material and there’s also smaller red hearts on a white background used in some of the ‘baskets’ so the quilt once again named itself.

A selection of red/orange and blue/purple toning fabrics pulled from my stash for the quilt's borders

The fabrics I’ve used in this quilt are from a mix of fat quarters I’ve had for a while (the red hearts, the cats, and the purple and blue flowered pieces), a shirt of MOH’s (the multi-colour striped fabric), some old curtains (the patchwork orange material) and two pieces of fabric I’m sure I used when I was quilting back in the 90s (the large flowered piece and the blue striped smaller piece). So it definitely fits in with using my stash, and sustainable sewing.

I’d made the four central blocks relatively early in the month, and almost without issue. Actually that’s not true, for the first time I had to completely restart a block which I’ll share more about in my next ‘craft room additions’ post as I think it will fit better there.

Laying out the borders

Learning from my ‘half the scraps’ quilt where I learnt it’s hard to do random, and that my eyes prefer balance I decided to lay out the borders and plan this more than I usually would as I knew I’d have to add in some toning materials as I was sure I didn’t have enough not to do this.

Laying out the four basket/centre blocks and laying two of the border fabrics alongside checking placement and layout

And it came together pretty easily - I was keen to have the baskets of the central blocks radiating out from the centre of the quilt, so laying it out like this helped me get that right too.

the four blocks, all with three borders each

With the final, and lighter border added to each central block I realised it needed more to retain the balance my eye craves.

4 blocks with three borders, now with the blocks all sewn together

And so with a quick dig through my stash I found a batik in a colour way that was pleasing to my eye.

With the addition of an L shaped border on the top and right hand side in a fabric similar in tone to the border on the opposite side

It looks so much better doesn’t it? And the eye is tricked into thinking there’s the same number of borders around the blocks, but when you look more closely, you’l see there isn’t.

I added a final border using the old curtains which I loved but have no use for now, and set about quilting this latest quilt top, reverting to my preferred straight line quilting and getting much braver with this opting not to use the tape markers again.

Quilting finished, with the batting still not trimmed

With the scrappy binding added, it was done - and its name of Marmalade Love feels right, and works on many levels for me.

The top of the finished quilt, complete with scrappy fabric binding
The right hand side of the quilt is folded over on itself to show the backing fabric, which matches the final border around the whole quilt on the front

Even on the back!

So that’s the eleventh quilt done, and I’ve already made the central blocks for the next one - but more on that next month, though pop back tomorrow to see how I got on with making my own block for my Mystery Block of the Month Quilt.

You can see my other quilts which I’ve made to donate to Project Linus - a charity whose mission is to provide love, a sense of security, warmth and comfort to children, who are sick, disabled, disadvantaged or distressed through the donation of new, homemade, washable quilts and blankets, including those that are part of this ‘stretch’ project in earlier posts. I’m aiming to publish an update on my progress in the last week of each month for the remainder of 2025.

Post Comment Love 24 - 26 October

Hello there, and welcome to this week’s #PoCoLo - a relaxed, friendly linky which I co-host with Suzanne, where you can link any blog post published in the last week. We know you’ll find some great posts to read, and maybe some new-to-you blogs too, so do pop over and visit some of the posts linked, comment and share some of that love.

Please don’t link up posts which are older as they will be removed, and if you see older posts are linked then please don’t feel that it’s necessary to comment on those. If you were here last week it was great to have you along, if you’re new here we’re pleased you’ve joined us.

Last week I shared a photo of the tiny yellow crab apples, this week it’s what they’ve become - the most bejewelled chilli jelly. And it made much more than I expected it too as well, so now I have nine little jewell filled jars, and plans to make some more with the addition of plums - assuming the crab apples survive the current Storm Benjamin!

Wherever you are I hope you’ve managed to stay dry and out of the wind - observing from inside is way better than experiencing it first hand!

Have a great week.

Some of the jars of my newly made chilli jelly - red in colour with flecks of chilli

You are invited to the Inlinkz link party!

Click here to enter

Thinking of the moon and stars, and bats...

* I was invited to this year’s Gardeners’ World Live and provided with a pair of tickets to the show, therefore all my posts will be marked as 'Ad’ though as usual my views and opinions are very much my own.

This garden, designed by Wouter Leyssen, was accompanied by and information stand hosted by one of the garden’s sponsors, the Bats Conservation Trust which is what initially caught our attention, but more on bats later.

To give this Beautiful Border it’s full title - The Milky Way - Thinking of the moon and stars, connects the night and day garden. Dark leaved plants allow the visitor to experience the alien world of the night garden during the daytime. When the usual green colours disappear, things start to look unfamiliar and look like a different world, and as you can see from the photos below it’s quite effective in replicating those night time shades.

Dark leafed plants either side of the gravel path which repesents the Milky Way

They’re hard to see in these photos, but the borders were scattered with white flowers (look bottom right in the photo below), and these represent the stars.

A wider view of the garden and the russet/black leaved hedging.  A black chair at the end of the path complete with a telescope

The white-green spherical evergreen shrub in front of the gate represents the moon, and the gravel path the Milky Way - which just goes to show with imagination almost anything can be replicated into a garden design, doesn’t it?

Looking at the chair and telescope from a different angle, with a galvanised watering can in the raised bed in the foreground

And the bats?

Well we were intrigued as we have a couple of bats which fly around our garden at twilight, and were keen to find out more about these peculiar little creatures. It was great to chat to the people on the information stand, and learn a little more about the fascinating species that so many of us are often quite oblivious about.

Did you know…

  • All British bats and their roosts are protected by law

  • A brown long-eared bat can hear a ladybird walking on a leaf

  • Bats are indicative of a healthy, diverse environment

  • A single pipistrelle can eat 3,000 tiny insects in just one night

  • Bats are the only mammal that can fly

  • Bats are gentle, clean and sociable animals

  • All of the 17 breeding species in the UK feed on insects

  • Bats can see but use their ears to hunt in the dark using echolocation

  • With wings folded a tiny pipistrelle could fit into a matchbox

  • Bats only have one baby each year, called a pup

  • Bats don’t make nests or chew wires when roosting in buildings

I didn’t know much about bats, but I did know some of the above. I didn’t realise that they fly all night either, which makes them truly fascinating. We recently joined a ‘bat walk’ organised by our local council at one of their parks, which was just as fascinating.

A fuzzy picture of the echolocator provided for our council organised bat walk

It was great to see so many people of all ages equipped with the provided echolocators (shown in the fuzzy picture above) keen to learn more, wandering around the park at dusk looking out and hoping to spot at least one or two of bats as they emerged for the evening.

From this walk we learnt that the bats in our gardens are most likely the tiny common pippistrelle, whose characteristics are the fast and jerky movements, but even so I’m pretty sure we’ll still be calling them Boris!

* With thanks to Gardeners’ World for inviting me to Gardeners’ World Live, it was quite a show! I’ll be sharing more from my visit to this year’s show throughout the year - I hope you enjoy them as much as I did the show.