Cont. than the palm of my hand. Ladies were making quilts from double knits, and, gasp, tied them together with yarn. Other ladies called those ugly, or worse, Utility quilts. Not everyone can afford quilt shop quality fabrics. Personally, well, no one cares what I think, but I never get tired of looking at quilts and marveling at the imagination, resourcefulness and love that has been put into them. Liz, I admire your Christmas quilt. I’d never have thought of making a medallion quilt basically starting with a comparatively tiny center. Your quilt is striking. I, too, was hoping to see the back. Bet it’s beautiful, too! Natalie, I really look forward to The Final Stitch. I learn something every time I watch. Please keep your high quality, encouraging, knowledgeable shows coming. I confess that I stay up late on Thursday night to get the jump on others to watch Jenny’s tutorials, but I also watch for your offerings as soon as I see one has been posted. I’m a fan, and hoping to get to Hamilton to see the empire your family has built and, just maybe, take some classes. 😃😄😀
Natalie, you are delightful! I am sure your parents are proud of how you have inherited the passion and purpose of Missouri Star Quilt Co. And we, the consumers, are grateful.
Thank You for sharing Your quilt Liz. It is Beautiful. I have several panels that I want to grow into big bed size quilts so it is always fun to see creative ways to do that. I am also the kind of maker that has to do all of my mitered borders at the same time to get them to look right. Maybe because I just don't make them often enough so I forget (& by the time I get to that part I am just so eager to get the quilt finished I get in a hurry. What can I say, I get excited about anything quilting, fabric... very easily :) Natalie I love that You are teaching the additional steps that go into making a quilt with The Final Stitch. You are an awesome teacher & very generous to share Your creativity with all of us. Thank You & God Bless...
Oh thank you MSQ and ladies. I’m currently working on a quilt for my son. It’s not going to be near large enough for his taste. I was searching on YT for border ideas and came across this video. I see it’s ok to mix fabric, design and lines. The quilt you are showing has pulled so many beautiful colors yet you never lose the integrity of the quilt. Thank you so much for sharing all the information. 😊😟
This is exactly the answer to the question I didn't even need to ask. My sister told me MSQC would have all my answers if I just looked. You are the best!!!!!! Thank You LIZ.
This was great, ladies. I'm a new quilter and just bought my first panel print that I want to turn into a large throw and this helped tremendously. What seems so easy in your mind turns into a "now what do I do" when you get it home. I've seen other, more creative and unusual borders on Pinterest and would love to see you demonstrate how to do those as well. Every little tip is so helpful. Thank you so much!
Thank you for this episode. It was really helpful. I am a beginner and working my way through my fabric stash. Sometimes I get the information before I need it and sometimes it is late but I learn from it. Great to see gorgeous Liz with the beautiful voice in front of the camera with you. Please do more and show us the back next time. I could only see a glimpse of it. Have a good day. Greetings from Germany.
Natalie, thank you for such a great blog on borders! When you look and smile at me through the camera, it’s like your talking to me and I like that! I love you approach to quilting!
When I was learning to quilt, the ladies of the quilting group advised me to use a multiple of the size of the block, i.e. the multiples of a 12" block are 1,2,3,4,6,12. This has always worked for me, as a starting point for adding borders of different sizes.
Factors are the numbers that can be multiplied together to get that number. The factors of 12 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12. Multiples of 12 would be 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, etc
Loved seeing Liz and her quilt. The little glimpse of the back looked, like that was pieced also. A great Christmasy quilt that can stay on all winter.
Oh my goodness, what a beautiful quilt. Definitely gives a lot of food for thought. I would never have thought about doing something like that. It is beautiful!!!
Thank you Natalie and Liz for a nice start to my quilting day! Liz's quilt is beautiful and unique with her use of borders. I'm a big fan of multiple borders.
Great vid...informative and to the point without unecessary chitchat and interruptions. Panels that we once thought were limiting, are now shown to be unlimited in creativity. Liz, beautiful quilt! Thanks,natalie!
Liz, that was a wonderful way to use a panel you love and make it your own. I absolutely love your approach and never thought of doing this the way you did. Using different borders on the sides and top never occurred to me. You rock!
Thank you so much for giving me “permission” to play with the sizes and mix patterns in the border! I have a couple of orphan blocks that are very large but so pretty. I have plenty coordinating fabric to enlarge them into usable quilts with this great idea. You ladies are the greatest!
Yes this was so expiring to me cause you take a panel and just start building boarders around the panel and there’s no limit or rules, the sky is the limit!!! Just loved this tutorial and what a beautiful quilt that was shown in this tutorial!!! This tutorial makes me feel more comfortable and to be not afraid to try and experience with different patterns of fabrics and with different colors as well!! Thank you girls!! I always love the creative ways of quilting!! Happy Quilting! ♥️😊
Perfect timing! My daughter and I just finished the main body of a quilt (started 3 yrs ago) and it is not big enough for her queen size bed. I was frustrated as to what to do now. I do not have fabric from the body left over large enough to make a wide boarder...this was a great object lesson that we can go back to the fabric store and incorporate different fabrics into the boarder. Thanks Liz, your quilt is gorgeous. Thanks Natalie, I love your segments as well as Triple play.
Liz and Natalie I really like what you are creating here. There are few enough channels that talk about the actual stumbling bumps and mysterious should and should nots in quilting. I appreciate your approach, Natalie, that there might be things that were once considered the”right” way to make a quilt, and the rest were not worthy methods of producing a beautiful quilt. Not everyone aspires to make that blue ribbon quilt. Not every quilt needs to be hand quilted with 10-12 stitches per inch. When I first started quilting in 1982 (there, I said it) we didn’t have nearly the fabulous selection of high quality fabrics we have now. Mostly there were grey blues, burgundy, tan, olive drab and white/muslin. Very few prints were larger tha
The glimpses of the back definitely was a tease. It is a beautiful quilt, =) Maybe in the next "Final Stitch" you can take a few min to show the back. That's a quilt to keep , Liz, very well done. I was planning to make a quilt with quite a few cat fabric pieces I have as left overs. The borders are very encouraging for making my next quilt more grand in size , and eye appealing.
That is a beautiful quilt!!! I've not seen one done like that. Great creativity. I can see smidges of the back as yall are holding it. Looks like it might be just as interesting. Please show it
love your quilt Liz. it really gave a full example of how to add borders of different sizes to grow a quilt. Natalie, love you to pieces, can you please do a video on mitered borders. I know in my mind how but it does not translate into my hands for some reason.
Extra top and bottom borders are also great for quilts that are used in recliners. My stepfather was tall and use his quilt in the evening while watching TV and said it was too short to cover him from shoulders to feet and he wished I had made it longer.
Really lovely quilt thankyou for sharing. I have always done this with all my quilts, I like to wing it as they say. I thought everyone did this to alter the sizes of their quilts.... obviously not. So great idea to help others have food for thought. Truly lovely quilt.
What a beautiful quilt, it has inspired me to be braver with my borders. I would have liked to see the back. It was also nice to see Liz in front of the camera.
I love that quilt at 3.59. I am hand sewing my large quilt and I have already put a 1.5” border as a frame. Then I wanted to do three different borders of the same width and have the same narrow strip in between but I thought it would look funny. I love how your narrow strip framed each border so I will go with what I planned. My actual centre is different sized blocks made of my son’s hoodies.
What a nice surprise to have a face to go with the “voice” 😀 Beautiful quilt and thank you for the great info about boarders. I added one to my first quilt but made it too wide for the print/block patterns. Lesson learned and I will have the 3/4th of the block size in my mind for next time as the starting point!!!
Thank you for this video. I was just wondering about panel quilts as well as square quilts. Quite frequently, I will look at the dimensions of a quilt and say.. Oh it's too small or its square, so I disregard the pattern because I'm not thinking about increasing the size of the quilt. Especially when needing to add length now that my grandkids are getting older. Hooray for me... I now have more tools in the belt to make more quilts. Thanks ladies for helping me out today with this video. As a suggestion, please have Jenny do a tutorial about adding borders to make your quilts larger. I'd love to see it. Liz, your quilt is beautiful. Thank you for sharing it.. Natalie I love your Create Better Bindings Class. My bindings have never looked so good. Thanks again ladies. 😀
These bigger borders are always a good option to make a quilttop wider. I also used inner borders to give the top the right size to add a Seminole (patched) border, that means the top and boddem stripes were a bit wider than the side stripes. Liz quilt is beautiful and I would liked you showed the back, too. The quilttop also reminded me on Row by Row's you can make with your PW group etc. Thank's for a great video. Greetings from Germany 🙋♀️
My very first bed quilt was created with a panel. Several of my borders consisted of different blocks between other border strips. It turned into a king size by the time I added my last border. Gave it to my son & daughter-in-law as a wedding gift and they keep it displayed on their guest bed.
Thank you Natalie. I am just making a quilt from scraps from last year. It is colorful solids and after adding white trim to all the squares the top came out square and smaller than I wanted. I added a large, bright yellow border on the top and bottom. Then the same border on the side which is half the width Now my quilt is rectangular as I want it, but still too short. After watching this I will think about how to make a spot for my eyes to rest and be careful not t make it too big. I also intend to do a flange border as you showed before.
Do you ever hand quilt any of your beautiful projects? Can you talk about techniques and tips, possibly different threads we can use? I like the look of hand quilting but I'm looking for different thread ideas. Thanks for the great series, I'm learning so much!
Thanks for the ideas.. I currently have two small pieces that should be wall hangings, but I don’t have anywhere to put them. I was thinking of trying to make them bigger and now feel comfortable enough to try to make them lap size throws..
This was great, and very inspirational. I have a square quilt top of greens and cream that I could keep small but I’m thinking to have fun with some borders.Thank you for the advice. PS. I kept my quilt small and I love it. But I saw in a very old magazine something called a medallion quilt. It starts with a central square and is surrounded by additions like multiple borders like your nice big quilt. They had pieced borders and appliqué in these additions.
I was so glad to hear you say to remember the quilt will grow by adding borders. You said to remember by adding the border it doubles by adding the amount to each side. . I wanted my cute camper pillow top to be 16 inches and it turner out 20 inches. I'd hate to admit the time it took to figure how my pillow top got too big.
Cont. than the palm of my hand. Ladies were making quilts from double knits, and, gasp, tied them together with yarn. Other ladies called those ugly, or worse, Utility quilts. Not everyone can afford quilt shop quality fabrics. Personally, well, no one cares what I think, but I never get tired of looking at quilts and marveling at the imagination, resourcefulness and love that has been put into them. Liz, I admire your Christmas quilt. I’d never have thought of making a medallion quilt basically starting with a comparatively tiny center. Your quilt is striking. I, too, was hoping to see the back. Bet it’s beautiful, too! Natalie, I really look forward to The Final Stitch. I learn something every time I watch. Please keep your high quality, encouraging, knowledgeable shows coming. I confess that I stay up late on Thursday night to get the jump on others to watch Jenny’s tutorials, but I also watch for your offerings as soon as I see one has been posted. I’m a fan, and hoping to get to Hamilton to see the empire your family has built and, just maybe, take some classes. 😃😄😀
Wish we could have seen the back of Liz's quilt. It looks very interesting! Wonderful video, as usual.
Natalie, you are delightful! I am sure your parents are proud of how you have inherited the passion and purpose of Missouri Star Quilt Co. And we, the consumers, are grateful.
The glimpses of the back are tantalizing❣ Please, please, please have a lesson or two on pieced backings❣❣
Thank You for sharing Your quilt Liz. It is Beautiful. I have several panels that I want to grow into big bed size quilts so it is always fun to see creative ways to do that. I am also the kind of maker that has to do all of my mitered borders at the same time to get them to look right. Maybe because I just don't make them often enough so I forget (& by the time I get to that part I am just so eager to get the quilt finished I get in a hurry. What can I say, I get excited about anything quilting, fabric... very easily :) Natalie I love that You are teaching the additional steps that go into making a quilt with The Final Stitch. You are an awesome teacher & very generous to share Your creativity with all of us. Thank You & God Bless...
Oh thank you MSQ and ladies. I’m currently working on a quilt for my son. It’s not going to be near large enough for his taste. I was searching on YT for border ideas and came across this video. I see it’s ok to mix fabric, design and lines. The quilt you are showing has pulled so many beautiful colors yet you never lose the integrity of the quilt. Thank you so much for sharing all the information. 😊😟
This is exactly the answer to the question I didn't even need to ask. My sister told me MSQC would have all my answers if I just looked. You are the best!!!!!! Thank You LIZ.
This was great, ladies. I'm a new quilter and just bought my first panel print that I want to turn into a large throw and this helped tremendously. What seems so easy in your mind turns into a "now what do I do" when you get it home. I've seen other, more creative and unusual borders on Pinterest and would love to see you demonstrate how to do those as well. Every little tip is so helpful. Thank you so much!
Thank you for this episode. It was really helpful. I am a beginner and working my way through my fabric stash. Sometimes I get the information before I need it and sometimes it is late but I learn from it. Great to see gorgeous Liz with the beautiful voice in front of the camera with you. Please do more and show us the back next time. I could only see a glimpse of it. Have a good day. Greetings from Germany.
Natalie, thank you for such a great blog on borders! When you look and smile at me through the camera, it’s like your talking to me and I like that! I love you approach to quilting!
When I was learning to quilt, the ladies of the quilting group advised me to use a multiple of the size of the block, i.e. the multiples of a 12" block are 1,2,3,4,6,12. This has always worked for me, as a starting point for adding borders of different sizes.
Factors are the numbers that can be multiplied together to get that number. The factors of 12 are 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 12.
Multiples of 12 would be 12, 24, 36, 48, 60, etc
Natalie you are becoming so calm in front of the camera ❤️
Natalie , your tutorials are appreciated.
I love Natalie and Liz have such calm voices
Loved seeing Liz and her quilt. The little glimpse of the back looked, like that was pieced also. A great Christmasy quilt that can stay on all winter.
Was hoping you would show the back! Good to see the face that goes with the voice we hear on videos, Liz.
This is a stunning quilt! Great job!!!
I LOVE the Final Stitch!!!! Thank you so much Natalie and Liz!!!!
Liz, it is great to see you in front of the camera instead of always behind! Thanks Natalie and Liz! Beautiful quilt.❤️
Oh my goodness, what a beautiful quilt. Definitely gives a lot of food for thought. I would never have thought about doing something like that. It is beautiful!!!
Absoltely loving your videos Natalie. You are so authentic. Keep it up.
The peak of the back looked interesting too. Love the quilt Liz!!!
Thank you Natalie and Liz for a nice start to my quilting day! Liz's quilt is beautiful and unique with her use of borders. I'm a big fan of multiple borders.
Great vid...informative and to the point without unecessary chitchat and interruptions. Panels that we once thought were limiting, are now shown to be unlimited in creativity. Liz, beautiful quilt! Thanks,natalie!
Liz, that was a wonderful way to use a panel you love and make it your own. I absolutely love your approach and never thought of doing this the way you did. Using different borders on the sides and top never occurred to me. You rock!
I love the king size quilt. Thank you for remembering that some of us are tall. And I love to wrap my feet around my quilt.
This is genius! I love how it stared off with a panel. Beautiful quilt
Thank you so much for giving me “permission” to play with the sizes and mix patterns in the border! I have a couple of orphan blocks that are very large but so pretty. I have plenty coordinating fabric to enlarge them into usable quilts with this great idea. You ladies are the greatest!
Gorgeous quilt, Liz! Great to see you two gals together! ❤️❤️
Yes this was so expiring to me cause you take a panel and just start building boarders around the panel and there’s no limit or rules, the sky is the limit!!! Just loved this tutorial and what a beautiful quilt that was shown in this tutorial!!! This tutorial makes me feel more comfortable and to be not afraid to try and experience with different patterns of fabrics and with different colors as well!! Thank you girls!! I always love the creative ways of quilting!! Happy Quilting! ♥️😊
Beautiful! So inspiring. I have a panel with Santa sewing a quilt and now I know what it needs-
thanks for the inspiration-its gonna be fun!
Luv listening to Liz. Her voice is very mellow and comforting.
I love the missouri star in the background created by quilting rulers, so clever!
Perfect timing! My daughter and I just finished the main body of a quilt (started 3 yrs ago) and it is not big enough for her queen size bed. I was frustrated as to what to do now. I do not have fabric from the body left over large enough to make a wide boarder...this was a great object lesson that we can go back to the fabric store and incorporate different fabrics into the boarder. Thanks Liz, your quilt is gorgeous. Thanks Natalie, I love your segments as well as Triple play.
Liz and Natalie I really like what you are creating here. There are few enough channels that talk about the actual stumbling bumps and mysterious should and should nots in quilting. I appreciate your approach, Natalie, that there might be things that were once considered the”right” way to make a quilt, and the rest were not worthy methods of producing a beautiful quilt. Not everyone aspires to make that blue ribbon quilt. Not every quilt needs to be hand quilted with 10-12 stitches per inch. When I first started quilting in 1982 (there, I said it) we didn’t have nearly the fabulous selection of high quality fabrics we have now. Mostly there were grey blues, burgundy, tan, olive drab and white/muslin. Very few prints were larger tha
Love this, as always, appreciate all that you teach us, Natalie! Thanks for overcoming your shyness Liz, so good to see in front of the camera!
Wow! Great quilt! Wonderful options! Thanks Liz and Natalie.
-Jean
❤
The glimpses of the back definitely was a tease. It is a beautiful quilt, =) Maybe in the next "Final Stitch" you can take a few min to show the back. That's a quilt to keep , Liz, very well done.
I was planning to make a quilt with quite a few cat fabric pieces I have as left overs. The borders are very encouraging for making my next quilt more grand in size , and eye appealing.
That is a beautiful quilt!!! I've not seen one done like that. Great creativity. I can see smidges of the back as yall are holding it. Looks like it might be just as interesting. Please show it
I would have loved seeing this quilt on your bed! (I agree with others...nice to “see” the voice we hear all the time!)
love your quilt Liz. it really gave a full example of how to add borders of different sizes to grow a quilt. Natalie, love you to pieces, can you please do a video on mitered borders. I know in my mind how but it does not translate into my hands for some reason.
Mitered borders would indeed be an episode not to miss.
I Love your quilt Liz, and your butterfly earrings. Just Beautiful!
That is a gorgeous quilt. Nice to see you Liz. 😀
Extra top and bottom borders are also great for quilts that are used in recliners. My stepfather was tall and use his quilt in the evening while watching TV and said it was too short to cover him from shoulders to feet and he wished I had made it longer.
Really lovely quilt thankyou for sharing. I have always done this with all my quilts, I like to wing it as they say. I thought everyone did this to alter the sizes of their quilts.... obviously not. So great idea to help others have food for thought. Truly lovely quilt.
I love quilt panels and adding borders. Thank you for sharing ideas and suggestions.
What a beautiful quilt, it has inspired me to be braver with my borders. I would have liked to see the back. It was also nice to see Liz in front of the camera.
Would love to see the back of the quilt! The glimpse I got looked totally fascinating!
Liz’s quilt is amazing! I’m definitely going to make something like it. Would love to have seen the back.
What a beautiful quilt! It looks like the back might be just as beautiful ❤
Hi Liz! And Natalie! Nice to see you both😉
I love that quilt at 3.59. I am hand sewing my large quilt and I have already put a 1.5” border as a frame. Then I wanted to do three different borders of the same width and have the same narrow strip in between but I thought it would look funny. I love how your narrow strip framed each border so I will go with what I planned. My actual centre is different sized blocks made of my son’s hoodies.
Love your butterfly earrings! OMG!!! that's a lot of borders. I can barely keep two of my borders flat. Amazing!!!
Beautiful quilt! And it was nice seeing Liz in front of the camera😊
What a nice surprise to have a face to go with the “voice” 😀 Beautiful quilt and thank you for the great info about boarders. I added one to my first quilt but made it too wide for the print/block patterns. Lesson learned and I will have the 3/4th of the block size in my mind for next time as the starting point!!!
This is gorgeous, Liz! Now, I just need Kaffe Fassett to make a panel. 😁
Thank you Natalie and Liz, Your quilt is amazing Liz ❤️🥰 Have a wonderful week! Chris-Raleigh NC
Great video Natalie and Liz!
You read my mind I was wondering how to make a panel into full size quilt yesterday. Thanks a million!
Thank you for this video. I was just wondering about panel quilts as well as square quilts. Quite frequently, I will look at the dimensions of a quilt and say.. Oh it's too small or its square, so I disregard the pattern because I'm not thinking about increasing the size of the quilt. Especially when needing to add length now that my grandkids are getting older. Hooray for me... I now have more tools in the belt to make more quilts. Thanks ladies for helping me out today with this video. As a suggestion, please have Jenny do a tutorial about adding borders to make your quilts larger. I'd love to see it. Liz, your quilt is beautiful. Thank you for sharing it.. Natalie I love your Create Better Bindings Class. My bindings have never looked so good. Thanks again ladies. 😀
These bigger borders are always a good option to make a quilttop wider. I also used inner borders to give the top the right size to add a Seminole (patched) border, that means the top and boddem stripes were a bit wider than the side stripes. Liz quilt is beautiful and I would liked you showed the back, too. The quilttop also reminded me on Row by Row's you can make with your PW group etc. Thank's for a great video. Greetings from Germany 🙋♀️
Liz, that Christmas quilt is GORGEOUS!!!!!
Love The Final Stitch! Thanks.
Thank you!!! I asked about the borders a week ago during a Tuesday live! Glad you showed off this quilt!
Hi Liz, wonderful to see the face behind the camera. I would love to see tutorials on mitered corners.
Thank you. I’ve recently discovered panels and am not sure what to do. This was a great help! Now I can make quilts vs wall hangings!
Great video. I'm sooo happy to see multi-borders are ok... good, great. 💕
My very first bed quilt was created with a panel. Several of my borders consisted of different blocks between other border strips. It turned into a king size by the time I added my last border. Gave it to my son & daughter-in-law as a wedding gift and they keep it displayed on their guest bed.
Beautiful quilt with interesting fabrics.
I like how you put a stop border between borders
Your borders are like a quilt! Like a quilt on steroids! Very brave and the result is phenomenal! 💕
As a beginner quilter I found this video so helpful. I had always wondered if you could make a quilt larger adding more borders.
Beautiful quilt! Love all the patterns you put together.
Thank you Natalie. I am just making a quilt from scraps from last year. It is colorful solids and after adding white trim to all the squares the top came out square and smaller than I wanted. I added a large, bright yellow border on the top and bottom. Then the same border on the side which is half the width Now my quilt is rectangular as I want it, but still too short. After watching this I will think about how to make a spot for my eyes to rest and be careful not t make it too big. I also intend to do a flange border as you showed before.
I like the red binding as well as the quilt...beautiful job.
Great video and Natalie needs her own show, she’s an amazing 🧑🏫 teacher. The quilt is gorgeous. Thanks
Do you ever hand quilt any of your beautiful projects? Can you talk about techniques and tips, possibly different threads we can use? I like the look of hand quilting but I'm looking for different thread ideas. Thanks for the great series, I'm learning so much!
Thanks for this easy to understand video on adding borders. Very helpful and something I can certainly put to good use in the future. Great job!
Was beating myself up trying to figure out how to enlarge a guilt while still making it eye pleasing. BOARDERS !!! thank you girls!
Nice seeing Liz. Great job.
What a beautiful quilt.
Thank you for this wonderful idea on how to expand a quilt to a size I want it to be.
Thank you for this tutorial. Very helpful. I audition mine by folding the fabric the width I am thinking of.
Love this. Thank you for sharing your talents with us!
Beautiful quilt. Please do mitered borders in one of your next videos. Love these!!!
It's nice to be reminded that it's OK to give our creativity permission.
HAHA Natalie-place for the eye to rest then have a little party!!! Liz-beautiful quilt :)
Love your quilt. Love your videos & I learned so much from you.
Beautiful quilt!! ❤️
Thankyou!!!!!! I’m a newbie and I need to make my quilt bigger that I am working on right now!👏👍
Thanks for the ideas.. I currently have two small pieces that should be wall hangings, but I don’t have anywhere to put them. I was thinking of trying to make them bigger and now feel comfortable enough to try to make them lap size throws..
That is a beautiful quilt and so well planned out, too.
Very timely video for me as I’m trying to figure out borders on a quilt top given to me by a friend. I will be donating it to my guilds charity.
NIC units are great places to donate little quilts. Those tiny babies and worried parents are so appreciative.
Your pieced backing looks amazing too
This was really awesome. I have several panels I would like to do this with.
Very pretty. Very creative. 😍
Thank you Natalie and Lisa it was great knowing that the rules can be broke 😀 I love it because I like breaking the rules lol
This was great, and very inspirational. I have a square quilt top of greens and cream that I could keep small but I’m thinking to have fun with some borders.Thank you for the advice. PS. I kept my quilt small and I love it. But I saw in a very old magazine something called a medallion quilt. It starts with a central square and is surrounded by additions like multiple borders like your nice big quilt. They had pieced borders and appliqué in these additions.
love to add borders to compliment as well as enlarge!
Thanks for sharing
I was so glad to hear you say to remember the quilt will grow by adding borders. You said to remember by adding the border it doubles by adding the amount to each side. . I wanted my cute camper pillow top to be 16 inches and it turner out 20 inches. I'd hate to admit the time it took to figure how my pillow top got too big.
Beautiful quilt
Very Beautiful and so unique