Told me to stop and check the layout -
For my Mulberry 16-patch -
After I webbed the rows -
And before I sewed the columns together -
Good thing I did -
Because the bottom two rows are upside down -
Needless to say -
Tomorrow will be spent "un-sewing" -
And then "re-sewing" those two rows -
Because I sew the blocks into columns as I go -
I should be able to remove the bottom two blocks -
From each column -
Reverse them -
And then sew them back on -
At least that's the plan - LOL - ;))
Talk to you later - gotta go - gotta sew -
4 comments:
That's interesting because I have had a run on upside down blocks lately. Of course, hand sewing is a bit easier to take out.
It’s contagious. I discovered one upside down block in my monster king quilt in progress. But it’s SO scrappy that I decided to leave it. I’m counting on it looking just fine. Machine stitches made it easy to decide that!
My layouts have often "changed" while I was sewing them together. If I don't "hate it" then I just leave it. But I have been known to be cozy with Jack the Ripper.
Glad you caught it when you did. Sometimes, no matter how careful I am, I make major goofups that I can't figure out what happened. Makes me nuts. I hate ripping most of all, but I think you will be fine.
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