sewing Honeycomb Stars

Stitch, stitch, whirrrr. It’s always a wonder that humble thread can transform flimsy pieces of fabric into a new and wonderful whole. Patchwork is a just fabric mosaic, and thankfully our tools are much lighter and easier than stone and mortar.

Starry chain piecing. Stitched in Color.jpg

Today I am chain-piecing these simple blocks into rows and rows. I sew without stopping to cut threads, just feeding one pair after the other under the needle. With chain piecing, you sew briefly through air between fabrics, causing a little thread chain to bridge the gap between each pair. Then separate the pairs with the thread-cutter notch on the side of most sewing machines - easy and fast!

Starry rows on design wall. Stitched in Color.jpg

It’s always intriguing to note how much the patchwork “shrinks” as the blocks are joined. Diamonds in particular tend to surprise me. I purposely made the quilt wider than seemed necessary on the design wall in order to balance out the seam-allowance loss for diamonds. We shall see if it ends up a square quilt, as I suspect.

Starry patchwork rows. Stitched in Color.jpg

These hexagons and triangles make honeycomb stars. Do you see? If I were to make this a pattern someday, that would surely be the name - Honeycomb Stars. Maybe with an option for a larger scale version, with bigger blocks? Hm, I think I would like to sew that as well!