Capper's Farmer

Quilt Block Tablecloth

By Lynn Bowen Walker

I’M what you might call a “random quilter,” meaning I don’t actually follow patterns, but instead just sort of sew on my own terms. I take pieces of fabric, squares and triangles mostly, start stitching them together, and see what happens. The scraps grow into larger squares, proliferate into a massive stack, and, eventually, get laid out on the floor, where I arrange and rearrange them until I figure out what it is I’m going to make.

I know it sounds odd, but it seems to work for me.

One day while digging around in my cabinet of craft supplies, I came across some random completed squares stuffed way in the back. I couldn’t remember making them, but there were more than 20 of them, predominantly made of fabrics salvaged from old button-down shirts my sons had outgrown or my husband had discarded.

Some of the squares I’d made into pinwheels, and some into bow ties, and they were all different sizes. I

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Capper's Farmer

Capper's Farmer4 min read
Summer's TASTY FLAVORS
SUMMERTIME is a season that’s welcome around the farm. Summer, in many ways, gives us permission to be as busy or as lazy as we’d like. We can fill our days with harvesting vegetables, weeding, cleaning, and preserving, but the days can also be just
Capper's Farmer6 min readCooking, Food & Wine
Magical MEMORIES
MEMORY is a funny thing. We can forget what we did last weekend, but we can remember with sparkling clarity a conversation from 40 years ago. Some events, and some places, just seem to have a grip on us, rooted in our minds forever. That’s what my gr
Capper's Farmer4 min read
The Ever-Useful HAY HOOK
EVER since people ceased being nomadic and began living permanently in one place, they’ve kept animals that helped supply their needs. Those that produced milk, such as goats and cattle, were highly prized. In areas with mild winters, they were easy

Related