Hello everyone! I hope you're all doing well. I wanted to share this butterfly block that I came up with last night. I thought it was pretty cute, so I made one, then two, and then decided to finally take pictures and do a tutorial with the third one. :) I hope you enjoy this block, and if you make one I'd love to see the finished product!
So, here are the directions and what you'll need to make your very own butterfly:
You'll need 4 different shades of fabric:
Background fabric
Body fabric
Top wing fabric
Bottom wing fabric
From the background fabric cut:
(1) 10.5" x 2.5" rectangle
(10) 1.25" squares
(6) 2.5" squares
From the body fabric cut (1) 10.5" x 2.5" rectangle
From the top wing fabric cut (2) 6.5" x 4.5" rectangles
From the bottom wing fabric cut:
(2) 4.5" squares
(2) 2.5" squares
To assemble the body, take (4) 1.25" background squares and the body rectangle piece. Lay a background square on each corner of the body piece. The background squares will not overlap, they will just meet in the middle of the rectangle.
Now, one at a time, sew diagonally from corner to corner on each of the background squares. You can mark a line on the back of each one and sew on the line if you want to, but I didn't do that for any of my corner squares for this block. They are small enough to be manageable by hand without moving too much. Pinning usually helps me more than a line across the block.
Once all four corner squares are sewn on, set this piece aside.
To assemble the top wings you'll need the 2 top wing pieces, (4) background 2.5" squares, (2) background 1.25" squares and both of the bottom wing 2.5" squares. Lay out the pieces like this:
The pieces will be a mirror image of each other so that the wings are symmetrical.
Starting with the bottom wing squares, sew diagonally across the small square (right sides together) to attach that piece to the top wing piece.
Trim 1/4" away from the line you just sewed:
Press toward the bottom wing pieces.
Now sew on the rest of the background squares in the same manner. The large one on the bottom with the bottom wing square will overlap the bottom wing piece. Set the top wing pieces aside for trimming and pressing later.
To assemble the bottom wings you'll need both bottom wing 4.5" squares, (2) 2.5" background squares and (4) 1.25" background squares. Lay out your pieces like this:
Sew them together one at a time on the diagonal to attach the background squares to the bottom wing pieces.
Now, take all of your pieces and trim each corner square you sewed on, 1/4" away from the seam. Your pieces should look like this now:
Now you're ready to press your seams. For the body piece, press toward the background squares. For the top wings, press the top two corner squares toward the large wing piece and press the bottom two corner squares away from the large wing piece. For the bottom wings press all of the corner squares toward the wing piece. Your seams should look like this:
Pressing in this manner will make your seams nest for the next steps in sewing the block all the way together.
Now, sew each top wing to each bottom wing. The corner square seams will nest giving you really crisp points. I usually pin in the middle by the nesting seams and near the end.
To make your points match up perfectly your stitch line should intersect the corner square seams where they cross. Like this:
Now, press the wings. I pressed toward the bottom wing since the top already had a lot of seams. You could press the seams open though.
Now sew your wings to your body. The bottom corner squares on the bottom wing will nest with the corner squares on the bottom of the body piece. I started pinning here, then pinned the top end and then pinned each seam in the middle. Press the seams toward the body piece (or again you can press them open if you wish).
Now, take your last remaining background rectangle (10.5" x 2.5") and sew this to the top of the butterfly, pinning in place. Press toward the background rectangle.
The last thing you have to do is embroider your antennae. I drew mine on with a washable pen.
Then embroider and pressed the block one last time.
And that's it! :) Now you have a beautiful butterfly. But, he needs a few friends, so this is what he looks like with some others:
I'm planning on making 9 of these into a baby quilt. The outside columns will be flying north and the middle column will be flying south. I also plan to add a 2.5" sashing between the columns to give it a little more width and then border the whole thing out in 2.5" background fabric.
I found this pattern is great for scraps. I didn't really cut into my stash at all except for the background white pieces. A black and white jelly roll would also work well since the background pieces and the body pieces can easily be cut from the 2.5 inch strips. Anywho - thanks for reading all the way to the end and happy crafting!