Pretty Little Mini Quilts by Ray Hemachandra


Pretty Little Mini Quilts
Title : Pretty Little Mini Quilts
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 160059493X
ISBN-10 : 9781600594939
Language : English
Format Type : Hardcover
Number of Pages : 144
Publication : First published March 2, 2010

Pretty Little + Mini Quilts = ONE BIG SUCCESS! Right from the start, crafters embraced Lark's Pretty Little series?and they’ll love this exciting new entry, too. Acknowledging the widespread popularity of quilting today, Pretty Little Mini Quilts focuses specifically on this hot trend in stitchery. Mini quilts are no larger than three feet in length or height, making them perfect for quilters in the mood for a smaller, quicker project. These wonderful, modern designs?suitable for beginners and intermediates?are the creations of 25 leading artists, many of whom have a prominent online presence. The featured techniques, all explained in the Basics section, include machine and hand quilting, piecing, embroidery, fusing, embellishing with beads and other materials, and trapunto.


Pretty Little Mini Quilts Reviews


  • Melki

    This book offers a nice assortment of traditional and nontraditional designs using a variety of techniques. A nice resource if you want to produce a lovely work of art with minimal time. The colors and fabrics used in the samples make all the projects VERY tempting.

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  • JayeL

    This book was sent to me for free by Lark Books unsolicited. I was pretty excited to receive it! It is part of the Pretty Little Series, which also includes another book about pillows. The 'mini' part of the title is defined, in the Introduction, as projects that are less than 36" square. This size is appealing to people with small spaces to display their works and those that want to try a lot of different techniques.

    This is obviously an inspiration book. The colors, shapes in the projects, and design of the book all make my mind swirl. The book has a high level of eye candy from the beginning. The photography is very well done. The layout and graphics were noticeable right away. What drew me in, immediately, was the hexagon piece, called Spanish Flowers (directions on pg.102-105) on the inside front flap. The colors are really vibrant and the piece has an interesting shape. It is different from the other hexagon pieces I have seen. Another element I really liked were the different colors on the page edges. The color for each chapter is different, adding interest and giving the reader an additional visual cue as to where they are in the book. The images of spools and stacks of fabric seen before page 7 are appealing as well.

    This is another project book which tries to go it alone. It devotes the first quarter of the book to basics including information about different types of fabric and tools, what a fat quarter is and how to make a quilt. For the size of the section, it is a relatively comprehensive section. The paragraphs on tools are entertaining. For example, under the section entitled needle threader, "Folks with perfect eyesight and rock-steady hands can skip this tool. Otherwise, save yourself some frustration by using a needle threader." The section continues and I like the tone. It isn't dull and a bit Mark Lipinski-esque. I wonder if that is a new style of writing?

    I didn't like the references to "...thoughts of a quilting bee near that little house on the prairie" or "Unless you're stitching up petticoats, nothing you're sewing has stronger ties to the past than quilts" in the Introduction. Once I read the second paragraph I got joke, but the first couple of sentences put me off. I think clothes were probably made before quilts and I prefer not to read assumptions like the above without references to the source. This isn't a historical tome, so I shouldn't demand it, but such statements can perpetuate untruths and questionable "facts" and there are enough of those going around the quilting world.

    I do think this book is one that can open the minds of readers to the possibilities of quiltmaking. the different stitching, both hand and machine as well as the colors and variety of techniques all show that quiltmaking is not boring. The book does show a 9patch (pg.45-47), but it also introduces the idea of scanning a photo and turning it into a quilt (pg.77-79). I am not that interested in photo realistic quilts, but I do think the photo of the "Portrait of Velma" piece shows a quilt that is pretty well done.

    I really wish that major publishers would each write a basic sewing/quiltmaking book and refer back to it rather than recounting the same basic quiltmaking information over and over in every book they write. The idea of a book like this teaching a new sewist to quilt from a list of supplies and 12 steps in a project is crazy as well as potentially frustrating. I know little to nothing about the costs of producing a book, but I do know that publishers are under fire and want to appeal to as many readers as possible, which is why they use this kind of tactic. I would keep the layout the same, but refer back to a book with much more detail on how to make a quilt. A direction such as "Quilt the quilt using diagonal lines that run through all the large white squares and diagonal lines that run through all the checked squares" seems so easy. After all, whole books are written about machine quilting, such as those by
    Diane Gaudynski,
    Harriet Hargrave and
    Sue Nickels. The beginning section, as noted above, does have more information about the mechanics of quiltmaking, which are a big help. I think it would be a service to add a comprehenisve beginning quiltmaking book to a publisher's line that they could keep in print over a long period of time and revise as needed. Such a book would also have an appeal to new quiltmakers over time.

    There are a number of appealing projects in the book. My favorite is the Corner Store pattern (pg.51-53). This is the first pattern, which I noticed, that acknowledged that there is a quiltmaking community outside of this book. The designer refers the method of piecing as
    Gwen Marston's 'liberated piecing' technique. I think the book would have benefited from other references to the quiltmaking community. I like this project because of the red background. I also like the line drawing that was included to show what the designer meant about adding triangles to a squares. I have a lot of triangles which work for this project from cutting the FOTY 2010 diamonds and seeing that line drawing inspired me.

    I liked the 'Have a Cup' project as well. The style of it gets ideas related to my various
    House and
    Garden quilts flowing. One thing I would have liked to see, in this quilt in particular, is a couple of versions of the quilt made in different colorways. My mom and I had a discussion about several of the projects and the discussion centered around the colors. I kept reminding her that she didn't have to make the project in those colors, while she insisted that colors drew her in or repelled her. Again, I know the cost of the book is a factor, but that would have been a nice addition.

    "Give me a Hand" (pg.114-117) is a good reminder that we can make our own patterns and redwork is especially conducive to family type quilts.

    One project "Star & Cross" (pg.126-129) includes paper piecing, which is interesting. This book really tries hard to give the reader a full quiltmaking experience.

    The other inspirational part of this book is the "about the designers" section. There are two pages worth of designers in this book and the editors have included a brief bio as well as links to their websites or blog. Really nice to be able to look up more of their work. I have heard of a number of the designers and am actually Internet acquaintances with two of them.

    I was sorry to see that I would need to take the book to a copy store and enlarge the patterns. I prefer to have full sized patterns in a pocket in the back or download them from the publisher website.

    The book also gets high marks for including an index and a comprehensive table of contents.

    All in all I like this book for its inspirational qualities. I think it has the potential to help quiltmakers think outside the box.

  • Sandy H

    For a more comprehensive review of Pretty Little Mini Quilts,(most of which I agree with), see
    Jaye L's review. I will say that I enjoyed the eye-candy and got some good ideas, but as an advanced-beginner-to-intermediate-to-advanced-intermediate quiltmaker (I can never decide where I fall on the spectrum), I'll say that it's not a book I'm hankering to own. I borrowed a copy from the library and thoroughly enjoyed looking through it, but now the images are in my head and can serve as inspiration for later projects. I don't feel the need to have the book for reference or to follow any of the patterns in making my own project. I have discovered recently that I have a thing for birds in quilts, so those designs in this book caught my eye in particular. But in general I liked getting a sense of balance, proportion, line, and use of negative space--the more artistic concerns--more than I liked the patterns themselves. Don't get me wrong--I liked the book a lot. For me, in my current stage in my quiltmaking career, it simply wasn't something I felt the need to make space for on my shelves.

  • Emily

    I like this series a lot. This one was good for inspiration, though I admit nothing jumps out at me to make. But even if you just want to look at the pictures, it's worth glancing at, especially if your local library has it.

    Update January 2015
    I recently got bitten by the min-quilt bug, though I am yet to actually make any. But when this desk showed up on a cart I was shelving, I checked it out again. Good inspiration here, and there were a few I am potentially interested in. My favorite is “whimsical rose” on page 83. I was also intrigued by “Spanish flowers” on page 102 and “drop everything” on page 48.

  • Marie Z Johansen

    "Pretty Little Mini Quilts" is the latest Lark Book from the "Pretty Little..." line. These books are always little treasures that contain an eclectic assortment of whatever the "Little Book" is covering. The book itself is a comfortable to hold size of 8.24 inches X 8.25 inches (20.955cm X 20.955cm). The book's description "...more than two dozen talented designers create 31 mini quilts that look to the past as they rush forward to a fresh future...". An apt description since the books contains the best of traditional, what I like to call 'traditional with a twist, and whimsical art quilts. There really is something for everyone in this lovely little book! None of these small art works is larger than 36 inches (91.4 cm) in length or height.

    The basics pages covers everything that you might need or want to know about how to create your own mini masterpiece. Covering what basic sewing tools you will require (measuring tape, scissors,pins, tailor's chalk, rotary cutter and mat etc etc. All types of quilting materials (cottons, linen, fleece felts, interfacings, fusible webs) are covered as is a really comprehensive section on quilting techniques that covers both machine and hand stitching and how to build a quilt; piecing, attaching borders, appliqueing, embroidering etc. A jam packed how to section that is condensed yet very thorough.

    Each quilt pattern relates the things that are needed to make the quilt, the finished size, and detailed instructions for each step of the quilt journey! This is a small book that packs a lot of enjoyment between its pages. You will find yourself returning to it often for a fresh idea or a new technique. I think it would make a welcome addition to any fiber, quilt and/or textile enthusiast!

  • Kelly H. (Maybedog)

    3.5 stars

    In this book are some of the ugliest quilts I've ever seen. There's a platter like thing with rolls of fabric, like sushi, that are supposed to be roses. It's so odd. There are some really bizarre quilts like a plain rectangle of beige fabric with seven teardrop shapes across the bottom, right justified. Also a pink square without any border with four trapunto um, things, in pinkish hues on it and a plain patchwork mess of large rectangles and small circles that is random but not in a creative way.

    Some of the "story" quilts as I would call them--a depiction of a scene or a memory, although you might call them art quilts--are good ideas and have some interesting colors. The colors and abstract quality of the Spring haiku but the actual combination of objects doesn't make a lot of sense. The Yard Tale which is made to look like a painting of a house in a wooden frame, is a nice idea but again, ugly choices. There's a cute whimsical bunny? deer? jackalope? embroidered on a simple rectangle.

    I like the abstract-ish Whimsical Rose, the traditional The Trip Around the World Quilt called Checkered Past, Through the Labyrinth which depicts a maze, and Kelp Wanted, an asymmetrical quilt with fronds rising from the bottom. I really like Elephants in the Garden which is brightly colored with a palm tree's leaves extending beyond the edges of the quilt, and Spanish Flowers made of descending rainbow batik hexagons that end at the bottom with some of the hexagons missing.

    I can't decide if I love or hate a dress-shaped thing with randomness attached to it.

    So this is an average so-so book but there are a couple I want to make badly and will probably buy the book for it.

  • Laurie

    Some of these little quilts are so pretty and I bet fun and satisfying to make though I don't know what you'd do with them all; I guess I'd rather just make one large quilt. Maybe one of these days! Most require use of a sewing machine and I've not used one since I made a pillow in 8th grade home ec...I now have no clue how to use one.

  • Hag of the Dribble

    I love mini quilts - mostly because I don't have the patience to do anything larger but I found this book fell flat. There were a few quilts I liked the idea of but didn't love. I also found the projects photographed looked sloppy and hastily done. Not very polished. I won't be buying a copy of this for my own bookshelf.

  • Niki

    Not much to be inspired by here.