FreeSpirit Circle of Makers

Happy New Year everyone!

The last three months have been spent sewing up a storm for my time with the FreeSpirit Fabrics Circle of Makers tour. The makers act as brand ambassadors for FreeSpirit, and insipre us with their creative pursuits while featuring the different fabrics FreeSpirit and their designers have to offer. You can learn more about the program and the individual makers HERE.

I am honored to have been a guest maker in 2025, working with Giuseppe Ribaudo, aka Giucy Giuce, Hue and Gemini. The collections are bright, colorful painters palettes of rainbow blenders – Gemini as dual tone ombre, and Hue as single blenders with a pair of gorgeous panel prints.

I received my box of fabric and Aurifil Thread in October, and after opening the panel print, immediately knew it was time for a make I’ve been wanting to complete for a while. I picked up a water repellant lined wool blend a while back, with full intentions of making myself a rain coat. The west coast doesn’t get snow in the winter – it rains. and rains and rains and rains and rains and rains……….

The only bright spots are when the sun shines through and you get rainbows. It doesn’t happen as often as one might like, so I decided I would be my own rainbow. The panel was perfect for the umbrella. I really wanted to keep the shape of the panel. I picked up the umbrella kit from Stitch & Bobbin, a local BC shop, pulled the coat pattern from my library, and got to work.

The panel wasn’t quite long enough for the umbrella panels, so I adjusted the panel to piece it together. I used Odicoat to waterproof the panel and accent fabrics. Then, because I was going to be doing some topstitching, I got some tent seam sealant. the last thing I need is my umbrella leaking through the holes. It worked like a charm! I am so happy with the finished umbrella, its so bright and colorful and BIG!

The coat took the most time. Its a princess seam high-low that I’ve been itching to make since I picked up the pattern. I used one of my Hue prints for the hood lining. The main coat is lined with a Kaffe sateen wideback from my LQS. The 108″ wideback from Hue wasn’t going to be ready in time, and because the jacket is a high-low, the lining would be visible.

I made over 200″ of 1/2″ and 1/4″ bias tape for each color. That felt like it took forever!

The 1/4″ tape went into the cuffs and hood.

The 1/2″ tape was used on the hem. I used every single bobbin I had. It was a ton of sewing, but I emptied every bobbin I own at one point, and had to wind a new one. It was a great way to use up all the small amounts of thread, and it made the inside of the coat extra colorful. I know no one is going to see it, but I know its there, and it makes me so happy!

My machine only has a straight stich, so I got to dust off a skill from eons ago, and made welt buttonholes. I used some gorgeous gold buttons from my stash to finish the coat. I may still switch them out for gold stars if I can find them in the correct size. My favorite cartoon growing up was Rainbow Bright, and the more I worked on the coat, the more I realized it was channeling Rainbow Brights outfit, which made all the stripes worthwhile.

I love my coat! It makes the days a little bit brighter!

Happy stitching,

Terrace Garden Quilt Tutorial and giveaway *winner announced!

A few months ago I got to play with some gorgeous new prints from a brand new FreeSpirit designer, Amy Reber. Her debut line, Posy, is a visual wonderland of bright bold prints and colors.

The three individual pallets are perfectly balanced and work well individually together or in a group quilt.

I wrote a free pattern for the line called Blossom. You can find it here. Blossom uses the Rosa color group, but you could easily swap out for Julep or Abelia, the other two color groups (aren’t those names just delicious?) There is a shop as well that is carrying the pattern as a premade kit!

Kit available from Village Fabric Shop

I had a hard time trying to narrow down my favorite prints, they are all pretty great!

At the very top of my list is the main print – Bunches. It contains many of the individual elements in a gorgeous collage setting. This is the print I designed teh entire Blossom quilt around.

Then there is Perfect Petal. I love the purple hue, and the black and white is so striking! 

Then of course is the Sunglow Stripe. All three colorways make perfect blenders.

With my bundle of Posy, I decided to make something quick and simple that would show off all the prints to their finest. I decided to use Half Rectangle Triangles. I feel like HRT are an underrepresented quilt block. They are super fun to make and showcase large prints to great effect.

Say hello to Terrace Garden!

The prints are showcased perfectly, and to soften the hard edges of the block shapes I used an all over swirling design for the quilting.

I used a dusty teal thread for the quilting that matched the prints.


Terrace Garden


A Stacey in Stitches Tutorial

Materials

1 F8 bundle of Posy by Amy Reber (24 prints) for HRT

3 yards Gray (FreeSpirit Designer Solid in Manatee) for background and binding

 

Cutting

From each print cut:

(1) 6 3/4″ x 11 1/8″ rectangle (24 total)

From the gray solid cut:

(24) 6 3/4″ x 11 1/8″ rectangle

(1) 10 1/2″ x 36 1/2″ rectangle

(1) 10 1/2″ x 30 1/2″ rectangle

(1) 10 1/2″ x 24 1/2″ rectangle

(1) 10 1/2″ x 18 1/2″ rectangle

(1) 10 1/2″ x 12 1/2″ rectangle

(2) 6 1/2″ x 10″ rectangles

(7) 2 1/4″ x WOF strips for binding *to use a print binding you need 1/2 yard of fabric

Instruction

All seam allowances are 1/4″. Press seams open.

1. Stack the print 6 3/4″ x 11 1/8″ rectangles right side up in groups of 6. Cut the rectangles in half on the diagonal as shown. Repeat with the gray solid.

2. Sew a gray HRT to a print HRT right sides together as shown. Press. Repeat for all gray and print HRT.

3. Using the layout diagram as a guide, sew the HRT and all gray rectangles together into rows. Press, then sew the rows together into the finished quilt top, matching seam allowances carefully.

 4. Cut a backing approx 68″ x 78″. Layer the backing, batting, and top. Quilt as desired.


 

Giveaway time!

I am offering up a pair of precut Posy bundles that you can use to make your own Terrace Garden. Just add your own background fabric! I will be giving away one here, and the other on my Instagram account @staceyinstitches. You can earn up to FOUR chances to win!

To Enter on the Blog:

  1. Follow me here or on Instagram, and leave a comment on this post telling me where.
  2. Leave a second comment telling me your favorite Posy print.
  3. Follow Amy Reber @amyreberdesigns on Instagram and leave a third comment letting me know you’ve done so!
  4. Share this post! Then leave a comment telling me where for a bonus entry!
  5. If you follow me on Instagram you can enter on my IG post for a chance to win the second bundle.

That’s it! I will run the giveaway until Friday at 4pm PST. Winning fabric is a great way to kick off a summer weekend, don’t you think!


Congratulations

My favorite print is Posy Bunches – Abelia because oh.those.colors!


 

Until then,

Happy Stitching!