Thursday, May 9, 2019

Serendipity

A New Project. 

Maybe these are a Stone Mason's Puzzle blocks or a variation. 


How did these blocks come to be? 

Serendipity. 

I recently saw Kaja, who blogs at Sew Slowly, making some blocks  that I love. Then I remembered that a long time ago I had bookmarked a similar quilt I love at a blog named Cactus Needle.  That quilt was in an exhibit in the San Jose Museum of Quilts and Textiles in 2011.   The info with the quilt was as follows:

 Unknown Crosses (Stone Mason's Puzzle) 

c. 1940-1970 
71" X 81" 
Collection of Roderick Kiracofe 
*The quilt top was found in Alabama 




Back when I saw the quilt from the collection of Roderick Kiracofe and the mention that it might be a Stone Mason's Puzzle I looked at the directions in my Ladies' Art Company Block Tool (now out of print but I see there's a new version) I saw pieces had to be cut at an angle, some pieces reversed, etc. and my lazy self decided then I didn't love the block all that much.  I also looked at the block instructions at Quilter's Cache and yuck...that version is paper pieced and I like that even less than cutting and sewing angled pieces.    So the idea of a Stone Mason's Puzzle quilt for me remained as a bookmark for many years until Kaja reminded me how much I liked it. 

My recent research shows that Jinny Beyer has free templates for 6, 10 and 12 inch Stone Mason's Puzzle blocks based on the Ladies's Art Company 1922 block. I still didn't like all that cutting, all those angled pieces, some reversed. I never remember to put the template on the fabric the correct way when there are reverse blocks.  But I was tempted by those templates and a small six inch block because I love scrappy small blocks. 

Then...

As you have seen the last few Wednesdays I've been making Spider Web blocks. While making those blocks an idea popped into my head as to how lazy me could make the Stone Mason's Puzzle. I gave the idea a try. 

 I cut 9.5 inch pieces of newspaper for foundations and  I made two blocks exactly the same. 
I cut strips and sewed them to the foundation, keeping both sides of the center strip the same. My center strip (aqua brown steam punk) is 3 inches, next pieces (orange) are 1.5 inches, the next two pieces (brown arrows and gold floral) are 2 inches and the corners are 2.5 inch squares cut in half. 
 Trim to 9.5 inches. 
 Cut on the diagonal making sure the block is oriented properly. 
Tear paper foundation off the back of four quarters. 

 They will be assembled like above...like I've been assembling Spider Web blocks...
 ...sew together the top two quarters, the bottom two quarters and then sew those halves together for a roughly 12 inch block.   

I notice that a lot of the versions of Stone Mason's Puzzle have a center square.  I might experiment with that by adding "flippy corners" to the center of the quarters before they are sewn together.  I also see a lot of the versions have all the same sized pieces. I might make some blocks substituting the 3 inch center and two 1.5 inch side pieces with two inch strips. When sewn together either sets of 3 center strips equals 5 inches. 

I also think I noticed last month when the Rainbow Scrap Challenge color of the month was aqua that aqua/teal/turquoise/sea foam, etc. goes well with every color. So I'm going to test that theory by using aqua in each block. Aqua is my neutral. 

Serendipity! 

22 comments:

Linda said...

Aren’t you clever? Such a clever idea and a great way to avoid cutting all those little pieces. This will be another wonderful quilt.

diane said...

How cool is that. Enjoyed your journey to making them. I couldn't believe cutting angles to get to where you did. Getting to the point that I want my quilts to look like they were hard to make but really they weren't. I always enjoy your quilting adventures.

Teresa said...


Sounds like you have a good plan. Congrats on finding an easier way.

Nann said...

Well, that is clever! You could sell the idea to Jenny Doan @ Missouri Star. After all, she is the queen of sew/slice/sew!

SandyPA said...

You came up with a much easier piecing for this block! I like the color combo you chose, and the block itself is intriguing. You must still have a lot of aqua even after those aqua-based quilts finished recently. Sandy at sewhigh.blogspot.com

beth s said...

You have inspired me to begin a new quilt! :)

---"Love" said...

What a brilliant idea! It will be a lovely quilt! ---"Love"

Cathy said...

Brilliant! This will be a fun one to watch!

Marly said...

Clever you, coming up with that idea; you're brilliant!

Janie said...

What an adventure here, lovely! I like that you had an idea for a block in the back of your mind for a while. And then as you were working on another project 'the light went on' and you saw how to make that first block in a way that made sense to you. Exciting process.

Marei said...

Brilliant!!! I'm stealing this.

Sue SA said...

Fantastic, I love it, thanks for sharing your great idea!

Louise said...

A very interesting way to make this block! I've also seen it done by sewing concentric squares then cutting that into fourths. Rotate each quarter 180 degrees and sew back together. Very similar look, but the corners aren't mitered.

And I completely agree that aqua is a great neutral :)

Pamela Arbour said...

I think you nailed it! Great job!

mangozz said...

That was genius coming up with that method of making the blocks!

Nicole said...

This is an amazing workaround! I'm so glad it worked out and you can make the quilt after all.

Kaja said...

That's the way I made mine too - if I'd had to fiddle about with all those little bits I'd not even have contemplated it! I'm looking forward to seeing how your take on this block comes out.

Cynthia Brunz Designs said...

These blocks are awesome. I am looking forward to seeing more :)

gayle said...

Excellent! When looking at that block tool picture, I thought there must be a strip and slice method out there! Glad you worked it out!
I also thought of slicing that square on both diagonals and inserting sashing w/cornerstone into the center of the block - which would give you the center square and make it more like that block tool version.

Julierose said...

Oh I love this one--how you sewed on papers--I will try this definitely--thanks for the info hugs, Julierose

Quiltdivajulie said...

Oh my goodness - Stone Mason's Puzzle. My reinvented layout for Optic Geese (now known as Conundrum) was recently inspired by String Grid quilt on page 22 of Roderick Kiracofe's Unconventional and Unexpected. My sewn together triangles (leftovers from Optic Strings) are a tad liberated (not too much but just enough) and the way I'm setting them, they look more like a not-quite-color-coordinated Stone Mason's Puzzle block than they do the String Grid blocks (which were VERY liberated). Love the photos you took of the quilt in San Jose. AND how we see things and then find a way to make them OUR way when the time is right. Fabulous post!!

Ann said...

Clever you. What an easy way to make these blocks. Who wants to cut all those trapezoids and reverse pieces, too? This makes a great scrap quilt. Good variation of that vintage quilt.