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M12 is another modified 9-patch, although you can't really tell it from this scan.
This is another block I tried with the light green William Morris. I still feel
the print is too close to any of the creams I am using as a background, but everyone
else seems to like it (and those wobbles should press out!)
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Very reminiscent of I2, K9 is one of those I really feel that Jane Sickle
used to build up to the more complex blocks with even smaller pieces.
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Every so often I run across a block in the book that I really think is not
quite the same as the quilt. Usually I mean to redraft them, but somehow
I ended up cutting this one out before I thought about it. Obviously,
this one is based on a 4-patch.
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D5 is another square in a square. This fabric isn't William Morris, but it
does seem to go well with it. The funny thing about this block was that I
was watching Simply Quilts while working on it and they were using the
same cream fabric I was.
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More fun with X-Blocks. One thing about this quilt is that I will probably
know how to build any block just by looking at it. L8 is constructed of an
X Block as the center block of a 9-patch.
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And just when you thought that no more could be done with an X-block. A4 is
an X-block inside an X-block. Except for the 1/4" strips in the center,
this one was probably the most fun I've had working on this quilt.
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F7 is another star block, but this one uses "flying geese" as the points
in a simple 9-patch. The outer border is stripped pretty much like a log cabin.
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H1 looks like another X block, but it isn't really. The center is an obvious
4-patch with a dark "courthouse steps log cabin" around, even
though the pieced corners make it look like an X block, it's really closer
to a square-on-point.
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