Spectacular design using Fast Flying Geese and the Wing Clipper 1 tool to create blocks with no "Y" seam construction. Adding a bit of applique and a super Migrating Geese border will complete the project with style and impact.
Project size : 58" x 58"
Block size: 16"
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If you've ever made Deb's Atlantic Flyway or any of her Carolina Lily patterns, we'd be willing to bet you're a fan of Migrating Geese! They look like offset flying geese, but are built in a row as a braid rather than individual units. We absolutely love to use it in our designs, and we wanted to... Read more
With all of the geese traveling around this quilt, Atlantic Flyway seemed a most appropriate name. Techniques include "Fast Flying Geese" with the Wing Clipper I ruler, and "Migrating Geese" for the border and a bit of paper foundation piecing for the tricky star points. A wonderful... Read more
Flock of Geese is a modern take on the traditional Birds in the Air quilt block designed for advanced beginner / intermediate level quilters. A coloring diagram of the quilt top is included to audition possible color schemes.
Are you ready to add a wow factor to your next Rapid Fire Lemoyne Star project? This is it! A slivering construction step allows you to create amazing, spiked Blooming Lemoyne Stars, and the unusual block arrangement adds the extra impact you are looking for.
Have you ever wanted to make a group of two color Flying Geese that are all the same, with one color small triangle on the left and a different color on the right? Some designs call for it, and quilters have asked us if there's a way to do that with the Fast Flying Geese method. And our answer is,... Read more
Foundation papers for the Chatsworth Quilt by Doug Leko for Antler Quilt Designs. Makes 50 blocks, 8" x 4" finished size, 8.5" x 4.5" with seam allowance.
What a fun use of the Wing Clipper and Tucker Trimmer! Start with a simple square, add logs, trim the corner, and repeat. There's a bit of oversizing and trimming down thrown in to keep your block perfectly sized. You'll find loads of uses for this simple-to-make yet complicated looking block, and... Read more
Look up! It's spring and birds are navigating northward. Whether it's big-beaked white pelicans soaring aloft or the honk of geese flying in a v-formation, catching a glimpse of flocks aloft is always a delight. Spring Migration is reminiscent of birds winging above farm fields as half-square... Read more
Whatevers are 8" Collage Blocks that you can turn into runners, potholders, quilts or continue making the designs for a large collage quilt. Patterns include complete color photo instructions to complete the block. You can do whatever you want with the finished block
This duo, wall quilt and table runner, are certain to enhance the look of your fall decor. Both projects include a favorite Leaf Block and Flying Geese strips to create their overall design, and both are perfect scrap projects. Deb's Wing Clipper 1, Corner Beam, and Square Squared tools ensure... Read more
Now you can put a little twist on your Flying Geese with Studio 180 Design's Geese on the Edge Technique using the Wing Clipper I tool. A Toolbox Blitz offers 9 quilt designs in sizes from baby up to king. You select the design, the size and the size units you would like to make. It's like a pattern... Read more
Companion product for Wing Clipper 1 and 2. This technique sheet provides two methods to make a rectangular unit that looks like a flying goose with only one side triangle - like the Pickets on some Picket Fences. In both cases you make your unit oversized and trim to perfection with your Wing... Read more
Featuring the collection FRISKY available through Moda Fabrics Finished size: 65" x 65". A new twist on a classic pattern. These" geese "fly in all directions and soon land in your home thanks to basic fabrics and the clever no-waste -flying-geese technique.
Featuring the collection FILIGREE available through Moda Fabrics Finished size: 65 "x 65 ". A new twist on a classic pattern. These" geese "fly in all directions and soon land in your home thanks to basic fabrics and the clever no-waste-flying-geese technique.
Carrie Nelson
Maybe you should call me the "Goose Girl". Despite some unfortunate encounters with nasty geese in my formative years, I love geese. As much as I enjoy flocks flying overhead, I'm especially fond of the quilt kind, to the extent that a quilt made entirely with flying geese is not uncharted territory for me.