The sunburst quilt that I thought was ready to put together was being built to a size that my brother said they wanted for their queen bed. It was an odd size that he requested: 84 x 104. The more I thought about that odd size, the more it bothered me.
So last night I called my brother and his wife to see if they really wanted it that size. Apparently my sister in law had measured the bed and doesn’t remember why she had recorded that rectangular size. I told them that queen size quilts are typically square and around 90 inches on each side. My brother ran upstairs and measured their bed and said that size would work really well.
So, during my lunch break today I took a look at the blocks on the design wall and then put pen to paper to sketch out how to make it square and the size I want. And all I had to do was remove the three rows on the left side. Here’s the resulting square layout.

It sounds so easy. But before I did all thisI messaged my friend Karen last night, an experienced and accomplished quilter, to ask her about calculating the finished size of a quilt with blocks set on point. I was having a tough time wrapping my head around it.
Being a scientist and very math-capable, she generously provided a formula that was like a foreign language to me.

So I asked her to explain it to me like I was a math challenged liberal arts major. Here’s what she said:

And that all made sense to me. So I was able to determine, with as much confidence as someone with poor math skills can have, how big this quilt top would be once all the blocks were sewn together. It will come out to around 81 or 82 inches.
I really wish that I had a better foundation in math when I was young. It would come in really handy . In the mean time, I have my friend Karin.
Did I say that I decided to use Kaffe’s wine lotus leaf fabric for the setting triangles and border? And I’m going to make the setting triangles larger than the blocks because I want them to overlap at the points of the blocks so that I won’t lose my points when I sew on the border. The points will float in the red fabric.

I will add a sizable border in the same fabric to get the quilt up to around 95 inches to allow for shrinkage from quilting and washing.
I also decided to purchase some wide backing fabric since this is a good size quilt and I wasn’t looking forward to piecing the backing. I knew that it could likely make me delay finishing this quilt yet again.
Here’s what I bought. It’s Kaffe’s Enchanted in red. I think it will be really fun with that scrappy quilt top.

I purchased it last night and had confirmation ths morning that it had shipped.
I used one of the Kaffe wide backings on my blue 16 patch quilt that I gave as a Christmas gift a year ago.


These wide backings are a cotton sateen and they are lovely. They feel soft and silky, and the prints are a larger scale than their regular quilting counterparts. I’m really happy to be using another one since I was so happy with the first one.
I could feel the weight of piecing a large backing lift from my shoulders as soon as I clicked the button to complete my purchase on this one! Ahhhhh.
And now that I’m making this quilt top smaller, I have 26 of the sunburst blocks left over. I tossed around a couple ideas of what to do with them. Here’s one I like.

You know me. I like me some graphic black and white fabrics with these bright prints!
I would makes the sashing pretty wide. maybe finish them at around 3 inches. I’d like to be able to make a throw size quilt out of these 26 blocks without having to make more blocks!!! And I have plenty of that black and white jumble in my stash.
I’m absolutely exhausted tonight after being on the job at 6 am both of the last two mornings. I’m looking forward to more sleep tonight! And I’m really happy tomorrow is Friday!






























































































































