Merricks Update


Two days from now, I should receive via email the final installment for Merricks Nth, the BOM I've working on struggling with for the past year. I'm nowhere near where I would like to be on this. 

It started out fine, with the assignments for the first couple of months going together very nicely. Then came Month #5 when the deterioration began. I finally got the Wiggly Worms panel done, and it wouldn't have been so difficult if I'd paid more careful attention to the directions. But the Lozenges, last dealt with in December, remain an unsolved mystery. And there are a couple of other months that just got printed and set aside as they arrived while I concentrated on Pick A Petal.

Today I cleared off the design wall, put the photo of what the final proj is supposed to look like at the top, and they put up all of the elements that are [perhaps] finished. 


I also prepped three innocuous-looking panels (two of which are shown here) that I will enjoy hand-buttonholing. The pattern calls for needle-turn applique, but y'all know how I feel about that. So buttonholes it is. Also, after consulting with Himself, I've decided that I'll do the stems in the dusky green they feature, but I'm not going to match threads for those bazillion leaves. This quilt-to-be is already plenty busy, so I'm going to do those leaves in that rich purple from their background. 

Tomorrow and the next day are relatively empty, so I think I'll spend some time working on the rest of the unapproached patterns. They don't appear to be too challenging. I've said that before.

The unanswered question remains: Should I take one more stab at those wretched Lozenges (starting from scratch since the first attempt ended up in the bin) with no better idea of how to do them? Or should I measure the size of what the finished panel would be and design something else entirely to fill it? I'm leaning toward the latter, but I won't really know until everything else is done.

Oh, and here's what the final project is supposed to look like. The big center medallion instructions will arrive this week. The dreaded Lozenges are under the medallion, a bit left of center.



Comments

abelian said…
Rather than completely eliminate the lozenges panel, could you divide the background squares into four HSTs? Those extra seams would make it much easier to piece. Dot
mckie2 said…
There is a blog called 'Quilts .... etc' https://karensquilting.com/blog/ and she is making those 'lozenges'. She calls them Honey, Honey , I guess because they look like a honeycomb. She is English paper piecing them. If you look at the June 27th entry you can see what she has done so far. If you go back a little farther you can see how she puts them together. Looks kinda like paper piecing strange hexagons.
Quiltdivajulie said…
I don’t know how the lozenges are “supposed” to be constructed but … there is a straightforward way to piece those blocks using traditional piecing. If you are interested, let me know and I can explain further.
Nann said…
I'd make the lozenges with a square and two snowball corners!
Juliann said…
I applaud your commitment to this project. I am going to revisit the bits I made in July and decide how to use what I made without giving myself a headache. The worms and lozenges have stumped me too.
Barbara Anne said…
I think you can, I think you can! This will be a quilt of sheer delight and whimsy and is so worth your time, thought, and bravery in carrying on. Do the best you can on those lozenges or use they ones you've already made. No one will notice!

Hugs!
Katie said…
The quilt is so beautiful, I can see why you persevere. But I also understand the frustration of patterns that don't make sense (we won't say they're wrong, they just don't make sense in our brains!). I often find myself figuring out alternate ways of constructing blocks in those cases. I hope you figure something out because I'm enjoying seeing your progress, however slow.