Site icon Southern Charm Quilts

How to Turn a Quilt Block into a Pillow – French Seam

 

Hey lovelies!  I wanted to show you the French seam today.  It’s pretty easy and has a lovely finish.  Before we jump in…. if you are looking for the free motion quilting tutorial for this particular pillow top I’m working with, you’ll find it here.  If you are liking the fabrics:  the gold is here and the aqua floral here.

Seam Methods

 


See All The Posts Here


 

 

So on the outside, a French seam just looks like any old seam.  It’s on the inside that’s where the magic is.  I prefer this method to all the others, because I feel the quality of the work is just much better with this method.  It’s like it has “more” if you know what I mean.  However, it does have a few drawbacks.  You can’t use it if you have points on the edges.  The French seam uses up so much “edge” of the pillow for it’s seam that it’s best used for one single fabric pillows or something with a wide border.  It also shrinks the finished size of the pillow in size much more than the other methods.

If you are new to pillow making, here’s a few details below.

The Details

Pillows are made up of 5 layers:  The top, batting, and bottom (this bottom is inside the pillow and you can’t see it from the outside), and lastly your two pieces of backing.  Plus, an insert or cushion to go inside of it.

Tips

 

 


Product Spotlight

Far Far Away 2

Get your bundle here.

 

 

The Tutorial

  1. Make your block.
  2. Cut your batting and bottom 2-4″ bigger.
  3. Layer bottom, batting, and quilt block.  Baste and quilt.
  4. Square up the block.  Trim away all extra batting and backing.
  5. Time to cut the backing.  You need two pieces.  Take the height of your block and cut a strip of fabric with the same measurement.  In my case, it’s 18″.
  6. Now you want to subcut that strip by the width minus 3″.  In my case, my width is also 18″, so I’ll subcut my first piece 15″.  Your second piece is always 12″.  So I’ll have one piece that is 15×18″ and another that is 12×18″.
  7. On both pieces, find the 18″ side (just one of the sides) and fold and press it 1/4″.  Repeat this one more time.
  8. Sew along just beside the fold and press it again.
  9. With your pillow top right side down, you’ll layer first the smaller backing piece and then the bigger, right sides up (wrong sides together).  Make all edges flush with each other and pin.
  10. Sew a scant 1/4″ along edge.
  11. You can go ahead and cut a bit of the corners off if you want, so that your pillow turns easier, but to be fair, French seams don’t turn very easily anyway.
  12. Now turn your pillow so that the right side is on the inside and the wrong side is on the outside.  Give the edges a good press so that the seam is on the outer edge.
  13. Sew along the edge of your pillow again, but this time with a 1/2″ seam.
  14. Turn pillow right side out and stuff it with your insert.  You may find with a French seam (depending on how you like the look of your pillows) that you can go down a size in pillow form.
  15. Beam with pride!

 



 

 

So that’s that.  Also, I’m planning on putting a bunch of these gold pillows on my front porch, so there should be a whole bunch more FMQ video tutorials to come.

Thanks for reading!

 



 

3
Exit mobile version