chickenjulie says:
Along the same lines as the above quilt, but a bit more simple - random shirts in the center, a white border (or maybe a double border of white and then the blue we looked at today) on a solid background. Again, I'd want to use a slightly darker neutral on the background - we could discuss.
chickenjulie says:
Another variation on the above two quilts - these are wonky, but could be done with right angled-squares. Random size pieces of t-shirts with two or three borders around them on a white background or a color - your choice. This one lines up a bit more into even rows/columns vs. a more random scattering in the above two. I'd make the borders on each square large or small enough so that the finished size of each block is roughly (if not exactly) equal.
chickenjulie says:
The one that we've discussed. Your largest shirt squares are about 8-9", so with the white border, we're looking at about 4 squares across by about 6 squares down - 24 pieces of shirt. For the smaller squares, I'd use complimentary borders around them of my choosing to make the square reach that 8-9" target and then put the white around it - that way, all of the squares would be equal. Does that make sense?
chickenjulie says:
Really random and new thought here, but you can see where you'd have your bigger squares and then some smaller squares of little t-shirts in a single quilt block. This would be on a white background. Not sure if I'd use sashing (which are the brown lines you see here dividing the squares from each other.
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