Stained glass quilt made easy with HeatnBond by Paul Leger February 13, 2017 written by Paul Leger February 13, 2017 1.2K Today, with the help of HEATNBOND® Lite Iron-On Adhesive Sheets we’re going to make this quick and festive little project and there’ll be very little sewing to do! HEATNBOND® Lite Iron-On Adhesive Sheets With St. Patrick’s Day just around the corner, I’ve decided to show you how to make a festive stained glass quilted wall hanging using products that will make this project super quick and fun to complete! Today we’ll select and cut our fabrics, then get them ready to be combined in this project. This stained glass quilted wall hanging featuring a shamrock will be created over the next three days. materials Fabric One fat quarter of a light blue (not too busy) fabric for the background One 8½” square piece of green fabric for the shamrock Two co-ordinating, but contrasting green fabrics, one strip 21” long and the other 31” long, each 2½” wide A fat quarter of a solid black* fabric Notions One package of HEATNBOND® Lite Iron-On Adhesive Sheets Black thread *A lighter weight fabric will work best for this project. I enjoyed working with Northcott’s ColorWorks Premium Solid 9000 collection. Click the picture to download this pattern Choose fabrics that are co-ordinating but have contrast. I like to use HEATNBOND® Lite Iron-On Adhesive Sheets for the stabilizer: very user-friendly! Let’s get started! From the 17” long side of the iron-on adhesive sheet, cut three strips, each just shy of 2½” wide. Next, cut one 8” square from the iron-on adhesive sheet. Cut your HEATNBOND® Lite Iron-On Adhesive Sheets strips just shy of 2½”. Place the adhesive strips paper side up on the wrong side of the fabric strips – you will need to cut the third adhesive strip so that part can be ironed onto each of the two green strips of fabric. Make sure the adhesive strips are centered from edge to edge on the fabric and don’t overhang; you don’t want to press the adhesive to your ironing board cover! Following the temperature setting guide recommended on the package, press the stabilizer strips to the wrong sides of the green fabric strips. Press the adhesive strips onto the wrong sides of the fabric strips. Download and print the shamrock template. Using the template trace the design onto the paper side of the 8” square adhesive sheet. Press it onto the wrong side of the 8½” square of green fabric. *You may have noticed that the image on the template appears reversed from the image of the completed project. Once you’ve pressed the stabilizer onto the fabric and cut out the design it will resemble the final project image. Now it’s time for cutting fabric! From the 21” long strip of green fabric cut eight 2½” x 2½” pieces and from the 31” long strip of green fabric cut eight 3¾” x 2½” pieces. Now cut the shamrock shape from the fused square of green fabric! All the fabrics needed to give the stained glass great color Using a pencil, draw a 10″ square in the center of the light blue fat quarter that will be used for the background. Remove the adhesive paper backing from all of the pieces of fabric that you’ve cut. Place the shamrock in the center of the 10″ square drawn on the background fabric. On the outer edge of the 10″ square place the 2½” squares and the 2½” x 3¾” pieces as shown in the photo below. Center the shamrock shape inside the 10″ square and then frame it with the green fabrics. Once all of the pieces have been placed, press, using a hot iron to fuse them to the background fabric. Remember when using HEATNBOND® Lite Iron-On Adhesive as the stabilizer you’ll only need to press each piece for a couple of seconds. All pieces of the green fabrics have been placed and fused to the background fabric. So far, so good! Once all of the fabrics are fused to the background, we are ready to go on to our next step. The HEATNBOND® Lite Iron-On Adhesive Sheets made these first steps in our project so easy! Tomorrow we’ll work on making the black, fusible bias strip so we can give our project a realistic stained glass look. This is part 1 of 5 in this series. Go to part 2: 5 tips for making fusible bias tape with tools from Heirloom and HeatnBond Print this page or save as a PDF 0qs142heatnbond iron on fusiblestained glass FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinRedditWhatsappTelegramEmail Paul Leger I took my first quilting course in September 1994 in Barrie, Ontario, near the armed forces base where I was stationed. After moving to Ottawa in 1996, I joined my first guild. I took more courses and began to buy quilting books and lots of fabrics. Quilting has become my passion. I have made over 150 more quilts since then, and have never looked back. I now share my knowledge of quilting by teaching and doing presentations, and blogging! previous post Sew a super cute Valentine’s Day Banner next post 5 tips for making fusible bias tape with tools from Heirloom and HeatnBond YOU MAY ALSO LIKE... Gütermann Thread completes your quilt, like – wow! Odif 606, fusible interfacing in a can |... Odif 808 converts paper into freezer paper for... 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