Haunted House Paper Pieced Mini Quilt. This spooky Witch's House mini quilt is the perfect sewing project to create eye-catching Halloween decor!
Materials:
½ yard - Kona Cotton Thistle
½ yard - Kona Cotton Kumquat
½ yard - Kona Cotton Pewter
½ yard - Kona Cotton Crocus
½ yard - Kona Cotton Bonsai
½ yard - Kona Cotton Hibiscus
½ yard - Kona Cotton Mango
½ yard - Kona Cotton Honey
½ yard - Kona Cotton Shadow
1 yard - Kona Premium Cotton Jet Black
1 yard - Cotton + Steel Surpreme Solids Indigo
½ yard - Cotton + Steel Surpreme Solids Goldilocks
½ yard - Cotton + Steel Boo Ghosties Natural Pearlescent
½ yard - Cotton + Steel Boo Halloween Beads Black
½ yard - Cotton + Steel Black and White Mini Squares
¼ yd. fusible webbing
Thread
Witch's House Free Pattern
Embroidery Floss (optional)
Markers or colored pencils (optional)
Finished Size
36 x 32 ½” (wall hanging)
Techniques Used
Foundation Paper Piecing
Applique
Traditional Piecing
Continuous Bias Binding
Project Prep
Background Fabric:
21 ½ x 16 ½”
30 ½ x 3”
Ground Fabric: 36 x 3”
Backing: 8 x 35” (can be pieced from leftover fabric)
Binding: 22” square (if using continuous bias binding method)
Step One
Print your pattern (sized for printing on 11 x 17 paper) and cut out all the pieces. A ¼” seam allowance has been included around the pieces- make sure to cut on the dashed lines and not the solid lines!
Step Two
Grab your markers or colored pencils. To keep track of what fabric goes where, it’s helpful to color the template of the whole house (and it’s fun to color).
Step Three
Start sewing! Fabric can be cut as you go, or you can pre-cut some pieces. I found that I generally cut 1 ½”, 2 ½”, and 3” strips. The windows also lend themselves great to fussy cutting, add a few skulls, spider webs, or spooky cats.
Fabrics for Fussy Cutting:
Cotton + Steel Boo Halloween Beads Black
Cotton + Steel Spellbound Metallic Floral
Cotton + Steel Boo My Pet Skeleton Teal
Step Four
With everything sewn and trimmed, it’s time to assemble the house and hill. Follow the guide below for putting the pieces together, press seams open or to the side with the least resistance.
Example: Sew B1 to B2 to B3 to B4 to B5, sew B6 to the bottom of that section, then sew B7 to the side, and finally sew B8 to the bottom
A1 + A2
(((B1 + B2 + B3 + B4 + B5) + B6) + B7) + B8
C1 + C2
D1 + D2
(((E3 + E4 + E5 + E6 + E7) + E2 + E8) + E9) + E1
((G1 + G2) + G3 + G4 + G5) + G6
(((i1 + i2) + i3 + i4) + i5 + i6) + i7 + i8
((J3 + J4 + J5 + J6 + J7 + J8) + J1 + J2) +J9
Hill1 + Hill2 + Hill3 + Hill4 + Hill5
Once all the individual sections are sewn together, the house can be put together in the following order- press seams open or to the side with the least resistance.
Example: Sections A, B, and C have been assembled, sew section B to C, then attach A to the top
A
B + C
D
(F + G) + E
(H + i) + J
K + L
Step Five
Add the background and ground fabric. Press seams to the side. Sew a 21 ½ x 16 ½” rectangle of background fabric to the top of the hill.
Between the house and hill sew a 30 ½ x 3” strip of background fabric, connecting the house to the hill.
Sew a 36 x 3” strip of ground fabric to the bottom.
Step Six
Time for the applique! Raw-edge applique works well for this project, with either a blanket stitch edge or free-motion quilting to sew the edges down.
Follow the fusible webbing directions for attaching to fabric.
Cut out the fence (a precision knife is helpful for this one), clouds, moon, and grave markers. Place and iron onto the quilt top. Then either embroider or sew around the edges.
Step Seven
Make your quilt sandwich and quilt with your desired pattern. I used free-motion quilting for this piece, with a loop pattern in the sky and pebbles for the ground.
Step Eight
Prepare and attach binding.
I was recently introduced to continuous bias binding and it’s a huge time (and fabric) saver, I highly recommend it. Using the continuous bias binding method, cut a 22” square piece of fabric, to make 2 ½” binding strips.
Now all you need to do is find the perfect spot to display your Witch’s House!
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