How to Use Quilting Practice Pieces?

August 12, 2019
Log Cabin quilting practice piece
Quilting Practice pieces-log cabin
Buongiorno, Quilters!

How do YOU use quilting practice pieces?

I love to turn my practice pieces and blocks into small works that I use around the house.

I call them “vase quilts” and I try to match the fabrics to the flowers.

A Quilt by Any Other Name

I made this log cabin (the cut size of the logs is 1 inch, finished size is 1/2″) with hand-dyed fabrics.  I used to dye fabrics a lot!  Then I used it to test a few different motifs.

(See another log cabin quilting practice piece here)

To make the vase quilt, I just added a binding.

But, a quilt by any other name is still a quilt.

Ask my grandson, Hugh!

 

Quilting Practice pieces-log cabin

 

What about YOU?

How do YOU use your practice pieces?

Do YOU make “vase quilts”?

Do YOU make baby blankets?

What is your favorite way to use quilting practice pieces?

We’d LOVE to hear!

May all of YOUR quilts become well-used and well-loved!

Meemaw Lori

PS…All tutorials, images and information are the property of Lori Kennedy Quilts and are intended for personal use only.  Feel free to re-blog, pin or share with attribution to LKQ.  For all other purposes, please contact me at Lori@LoriKennedyQuilts.com.  Thanks!

 

 

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38 comments

  • Diana Lassahn

    My guild and another quilt group I belong to have a charity called cuddle buddy bags: we make small bags with quilts; put in a stuff animal and give these to local police for domestic calls and fire calls to give to children they encounter. I use the best ones for this charity.

  • Mary heard

    I have used quilters muslin for both fmq and hand quilting practice. I found quite a few recently and have joined them together and now have a single bed quilt and it looks quite good though the “blocks ”
    are different sizes.

  • GrandmaSue10

    Everyone is so creative with their practice pieces. I have only one. I have a thermal pad for ironing on a table, but it has magnets inside, why, I don’t know. To make it easier to iron with it, I use my practice piece for a pad. I never worry about what’s underneath with these two items to take the heat.

    • HollyAnn

      The pad was probably designed to be placed on top of your washing machine or dryer and the magnets hold it in place there.

  • Thank you for the inspiration (and Hugh’s photo) regarding practice piece quilts! I have many such pieces that will now become “Vase Quilts” or table toppers! Perhaps I’ll try hand quilting them since I aspire to improving my skill as a Hand Quilter.

  • Susan Brausch

    I have been inspired to get a binding on my practice pieces! Thanks💗

  • Wow! These are great ideas…. So many creative minds out there!

  • Chris Reeske

    My practice pieces, the larger ones, go to my daughter who has 2 rescue dogs. They love them and they also get pillows stuffed with cloth and batting scraps. The smaller ones are turned into hot pads.

  • heather grover

    I turn the practice pieces into pages for my quilt books. or make placemats for meals on wheels at Xmas time.

  • Marilyn Larkin

    Just last weekend I looked at a whole lot of practice pieces, well real beginner squares, and concurrently we are experiencing a really cold blast of wintry air from the antarctic, so I now have two good size dog blankets and one appropriately sized cat blanket which they all love. I joined them all together using a quilt as you go method. The animals don’t care if they have mistakes and the colours are all mixed up, jolly for all of us to see lying around. What a timely request. Your practice pieces are amazing, maybe with a few more dog blankets under my machine I too can have great looking ‘practice’ pieces.

  • Barbara M Emerson

    Hot pads!!

  • Suzanne

    Wow! I have a stack of practice pieces that I couldn’t bring myself to toss but didn’t know what to do with them. Now I have lots of good ideas. Thanks everyone.

  • Sadie Jumper

    I use my practice pieces as protective pads between my frying pans in my kitchen cabinets. I pick a cheery fabric that makes me happy to look at. Every time I open the drawer full of pans, it makes me smile.

    • Maggie Martin

      I do this too and the smiles! Potholders get popped in the mail to make someone else smile.

  • Brenda Perry

    In addition to uses noted above, I use my larger practice pieces to make tops for pet beds that I donate to the local animal shelter. These beds have an interior pad that is stuffed with fabric and batting scraps and the shelter loves them! I also use practice pieces to make “toaster coasters” which are like placemats for your toaster.

  • Arvilla Trag

    I once made a queen-size practice piece. Not intentionally…

    • GrandmaSue10

      How in the world do you accidentally make a Queen size practice piece? Did you simply have to make the motif over and over to get it right, or were you entranced with the good work you were doing and just kept going? We’d all love to here the story!

      • Suzanne

        Dear GrandmaSue10, I believe Arvilla’s comment was “tongue-in-cheek”, in that the whole quilt was a semi-disaster (Apologies Arvilla, that was the only expression I could come up with) and could only be described as practice. I’ve made a few of those myself!

    • Suzanne

      I read this 5 minutes ago and I’m still chuckling…you’re funny!

    • Beth S.

      Love that, Arvilla!

      I have one of those that I just completed. I named it the “Fallacy of Sunk Cost, the Albatross.”, just in case I decide to enter it into an exhibition.:)

      It’s a current house favorite, for some odd reason.

  • Janet Bevan

    I make little fabric boxes, tote bags and cat mats. Sometimes join them qayg for picnic blanket and overdye them if they are in muslin./calico.

  • I turn practice into ART! I have a bad back so have to keep my quilting small, therefore I create Postcard Fabric Art as is or by adding some additional paint or stamps or really any type of embellishment if wanted. Then pop them in the mail to put a smile on someone’s face. =) <3 ~ Ann Lamy

  • I make them into pillow/cushion covers for the couch and chairs. The more I make, the more frequently I can change out the look of my decor.

  • Joanne Glass

    I had an extra block from a quilt top left over and tested the quilting pattern I thought I’d use on the big quilt. It’s not going to work. But the fact that I got to test before committing to a big project was so helpful, I’ll try to do this with all my quilts. Meanwhile, I’ll use the test blocks as a placemats. I’ll have a table setting that looks like a crazy quilt!

  • Vickage

    I like to use fabric scraps in coordinating colors. I precut a bunch so that they’re ready to go. I always make sure that my backing is larger than my top fabric and batting when I test out machine quilting patterns. Then I save up the samples and sew them together as a quilt-as-you-go comfort quilt. My guild give them to hospitals, nursing homes, etc.

  • Barbara Keefer

    I’ve used some seasonal practice pieces as hot pads; I was able to cut some motifs out and use as mug rugs.

  • Marilyn

    I piece simple baby quilts for Project Linus that include some space for free motion – even if my stitching is a bit wonky, no one but me notices, and this gives me lots of opportunity for practice.

  • Barbara Gibson

    I use a fair amount of my practice pieces to make zippered pouches for use in my purse or suitcase – to control the clutter. There is nothing floating around in the bottom of my purse to get lost in the shuffle :>))

  • I use my practice pieces for vase mats. I love all the other ideas, like using them under pots and donating them to animal shelters! Thanks Lori for all your inspiration. I have now tried larger projects and have become a free motion junkie!

  • Bunny

    We make doll quilts for our town’s Santa to give with each doll at Christmas. Also dog and cat beds for the local shelter. And we cut them up for potholders!

  • Donna Sofokles

    I’ve made some into tote bags for PhD’s (a/k/a UFOs) and small clutch purses. If I have used different colored threads, they’re quite interesting

  • Julie Landrith

    I make them into dog dish mats, put them between my pots and pans to avoid banging them up, coffee table mats (I guess they would be the vase-mats), sometimes a doll, or stuffed animal, blanket.

  • Vase quilts, table runners, placemats, pouches and soft boxes for sewing nick nacks… they all start out as practice FMQ before I add the motifs to the quilt. My latest is as shelf liners for my mixers and heavy kitchen appliances.

  • Barbara Unger

    I serge the edges and donate them to a local animal charity for cat and dog blankets.

    • Adrienne Dold

      I do this, too. I even piece together my scrap fleece to make practice pieces. The shelter takes whatever I bring them.

    • Karen Fairbrother

      Our local cat shelter loves to receive my quilt “samples”. Sometimes though they are just too nice to give to the shelter so they become wall or vase quilts to spread splashes of joy either in a friends home or in my own.

  • Hi Lori,
    I am hoping to learn FMQ so as to make preemie quilts for a group here in SC called Preemies of of the Carolina’s. But as of yet, none of my practice pieces would even allow me to even start on an actual little bitty quilt. So, I will keep doodling until they are good enough.

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