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Weekend Wonders with Fabric.com: Laminated Picnic Blanket with Carry Wrap

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When I was young, one of my favorite cartoon characters was Hanna-Barbera's Yogi Bear and his sidekick Boo-Boo Bear. In fact, my sister and I used to greet each other (okay... sometimes we still do) with the Yogi catchphrase, "Hey there, Boo Boo." I liked Yogi because he was always in search of pic-a-nic baskets, and I figured there must be yummy things in those baskets I would like to eat. So I was very happy when we decided to add a pic-a-nic blanket to this second week of the Weekend Wonders series with our friends at Fabric.com. As usual, we weren't satisfied with your av-er-age blanket (because we are not your av-er-age bears), so we made one side cotton sateen, the other side cotton laminate, and quilted them together with polyester batting sandwiched in between. Then, we created a clever carry wrap with shoulder straps. Fold and roll the blanket, wrap it up, Velcro® it closed, and you're good to go."Hello, Mr. Ranger, sir!"

Weekend Wonders are great projects you can whip out in a weekend; so, undoubtedly, you'll want to make each and every one! Check out these Wonders from Week #1: Kitchen Towels, Pocketed Placemats, Outdoor Pillows, and Reversible Apron, as well as this week's Beach Bag. There are Zippered Pouches to come, and on Friday... make sure stop by and enter to win an amazing Great Giveaway full of tools, books, notions and more all from our Weekend Wonderful Sponsor: Fabric.com!

Our fabric choices feature two of Westminster Fibers most popular designers: Amy Butler of Rowan Fabrics and Tula Pink of FreeSpirit Fabrics. We paired Amy's Lark cotton sateen with Tula's Prince Charming cotton laminate. It is a wonderful blend, but by no means the only choice. In fact, below are are few other combinations we put together and loved before deciding on our final pair. Spend a few minutes browsing on Fabric.com and you're sure to find much, much more!

Top : Amy Butler Cameo Laminated Cotton Tea Rose Silver, Michael Miller French Journal Laminated Cotton Belle Rose Pink, Greenhouse Laminated Cotton Buttonwood Grass, Urban Zoologie Slicker Laminated Cotton Owls Natural 

Bottom: Heather Bailey Garden District Caiman Stripe Canvas PInkHeather Bailey Garden District Mockingbird Sateen TurquoiseP Kaufmann Lila Raspberry (stain repellent cotton duck), Heather Bailey Garden District City Grid Sateen Pink

Sewing Tools You Need

Fabric and Other Supplies

Getting Started

  1. From the fabric for the blanket top (Amy Butler's Sun Glow in Lake in our sample), fussy cut the following:
    ONE Width of Fabric (WOF) x 62" rectangle (54" x 62")
    ONE 12" x 27" rectangle
  2. From the fabric for the blanket bottom (Tula Pink's Prince Charming in Frog Price in our sample), fussy cut the following:
    ONE 52" x 60 rectangle
    ONE 12" x 27" rectangle
    ONE 5" x 31" strip, which should then be cut in half into TWO 2½" x 31" strips
  3. Cut the Velcro® into TWO 11" lengths
  4. Cut the batting into ONE 52" x 60" rectangle.

At Your Sewing Machine & Ironing Board

Blanket

Our picnic blanket finishes at 52" x 60, so you'll need a large flat space on which to work: a table or more likely... a clean floor.

  1. Place the sateen piece wrong side up and flat on your work surface.
  2. Mark and press back the raw edges by ¼" all around.
  3. Place the batting down on top of the sateen.
  4. Place the laminate on top of the batting.
  5. Align the laminate with the batting so the edges of these two 52" x 60" pieces are flush on all four sides. 
  6. Adjust the laminate/batting layers so they are centered on the sateen. There should be ¾" all around from the edge of the laminate/batting to the folded edge of the sateen. 
  7. Clip around the edge, then use the large safety pins to "pin baste" through all three layers. 
    NOTE: If you are familiar with laminates (or you read our great tutorial about How To Work with Laminates), you know pinning laminate it not usually recommended. Be a bit frugal with your safety-pinning (pin-basting), but don't stress about the fact you are using pins. We are going for water resistant... not waterproof. 
  8. If possible, attach a Walking foot
  9. Quilt the layers together a simple horizontal pattern. We marked our quilting lines at 9-10" intervals across the width of the quilt. Quilt with the sateen side facing up. This will allow the blanket to move more easily through the machine.
  10. This is a large project, it will help if you roll the blanket to get it to fit better in your machine and it will be easier to manage.

    NOTE: If you are new to quilting, our good friend, Heather Jones did a fabulous Guest Tutorial for us on Straight Line Quilting. Her technique shows a much denser quilting, but you could certainly adapt it to these much wider lines of quilting. 
  11. When the quilting of the layers is complete, you will wrap the excess sateen from front to back to create the binding. 
  12. Place the quilted layers flat on your work surface with the laminate side facing up. The original ¼" folded-in crease lines should still be visible along all sides of the sateen.
  13. At each corner, fold in the point of the sateen ¼".
  14. Bring in the folded point of the sateen to cover the point of the laminate. Pin in place. 
  15. Fold in one side, creating a diagonal line at the corner. This is acutally a double fold, the ¼" of the original fold-and-press and an additional ½", encasing the first fold and wrapping around the laminate.
  16. Fold in the opposite side, matching the diagonal to produce a "faux" mitered corner. 
  17. Continue folding in the sides to wrap the raw edges of the laminate and batting, and repeat the "faux mitering" process at each corner.
  18. Still using a Walking foot if possible, edgestitch around all four sides.


Blanket tote

  1. Find the two 2½" x 31" laminate strips.
  2. On one strip, fold in one long side towards the center of strap ¾". Finger press. 
  3. Fold in the opposite side ¾", overlapping the first edge. Finger press and pin in place.  
  4. The strap should now be 1".  
  5. If possible, attach a Teflon® type foot. We used our Janome Ultraglide foot. Sew down center to catch both sides.

    NOTE: If you don't have this type of foot, you can use wax paper or parchment paper between the laminate and the foot. Simply tear it away when the seam is finished. For more about working with laminates, take a look at our handy tutorial.  
  6. Repeat to create the second strap.
  7. Lay the 12" x 27" sateen piece flat and right side up on your work surface.
  8. Pin one strap along each 12" side of the sateen, aligning the raw ends of the straps with the raw edge of the sateen. The wrong side of the strap should be facing down against the right side of the sateen. Also, make sure the loops of your straps are not twisted.
  9. The outside edge of each strap should be ⅝" from the side of the sateen.
  10. Place the 12" x 27" laminate piece right sides together with the sateen, sandwiching the straps in between the layers. Pin in place around all four sides, leaving a 5-6" opening for turning along one 12" side between the straps.
  11. Using a ½" seam allowance, stitch around all four sides, pivoting at the corners. Remember to lock your seam at either side of the 5-6" opening left for turning. 
  12. Clip the corners.
  13. Turn right side out through the opening. Pull out the straps. Gently push out the corners, using a long, blunt end tool, such as a chopstick or long knitting needle. 
  14. Turn in the raw edges of the opening so they are flush with the sewn seam and pin in place.
  15. Switch to a regular presser foot.
  16. With the sateen facing up, edgestitch around the entire tote. This closes the opening left for turning and helps keep the layers stable.
  17. Find the two lengths of Velcro®. 
  18. Pin the Velcro® in place on the sateen side of the tote along both ends. The Velcro® should fit just shy of edge to edge. If it overlaps at all, trim the Velcro® to fit edge to edge.
  19. Stitch the Velcro® in place around all four sides. Pivot at the corners and go slowly to keep your seams neat. You are creating a "box" of stitching that will be visible on the laminate side, so you want it to be pretty.
     
  20. Fold the blanket in thirds, then in half and roll. The finished circumference should be about 24"
  21. Wrap the tote around the blanket and head to your pic-a-nic.


     

Contributors

Project Design: Alicia Thommas
Sample Creation and Instructional Outline: Debbie Guild

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Comments (13)

Carol from LI, NY said:
Carol from LI, NY's picture

I made 6 of these, slightly smalled, for my grandkids for when they visited us this summer. Each carried  their own over their shoulder (not heavy at all) and no more arguing over who had more "room on the blanker." They were huge hits. Great idea.

Rosemary Rivas(nellieduclos@yahoo.com) said:
Rosemary Rivas(nellieduclos@yahoo.com)'s picture

What a great idea for the beach so you don't collect all that sand!

Barb C said:
Barb C's picture

Fabric.com has some beautiful laminated cottons.. I already purchased one I loved, NOW I have some ideas for it!

Jessica Jordan said:
Jessica Jordan's picture

It's beautiful!  I'm going to have to break out my machine!

Dorothy Schreffler said:
Dorothy Schreffler's picture

What a great idea!!  If you add loops or grommets to each corner, you could stake this down on the beach and it won't blow away.  We just got home from the beach and would have loved to have this there.

Triciawa said:
Triciawa's picture

Great project. If you are cutting a 62" piece and a 12" piece of the deco fabric wouldn't you need more than 2 yards?

Liz Johnson.Editor.Sew4Home said:
Liz Johnson.Editor.Sew4Home's picture

@Triciawa - you're right! I've added 1/8 of a yard to both as a "just in case." When you buy yardage from Fabric.com you always get at least 37" in a yard rather than 36" - so we had enough with our 2 yard order to create the full 62" and 12" cuts - we used the entire piece. Another great benefit of shopping with Fabric.com. 

Triciawa said:
Triciawa's picture

Thank you. Good to know about the 37" yards at fabric.com.

Christi295 said:
Christi295's picture

This looks like such a great project. I remember once we used a fleece blanket for a picnic - I spent hours picking out the leaf bits!! Thanks for such a wonderful idea!

Anna from Prague said:
Anna from Prague's picture

Beautiful!!! But - Isn´t it heavy?

What about washing, fit it into washing machine?

I LOVE YOUR TUTORIALS AND SEND GREETINGS FROM PRAGUE, CZECH REP.!

Liz Johnson.Editor.Sew4Home said:
Liz Johnson.Editor.Sew4Home's picture

@ Anna from Prague - the blanket is not heavy. The batting and laminate are quite lightweight and the cotton sateen is only slightly heavier than normal. It's very easy to carry. And, yes, it is washable on a gentle cycle in cold water - hang it to dry. The laminate side can also be wiped clean.

Anna from Prague said:
Anna from Prague's picture

Thank you very much!

And thanks for really awesome tutorials.I read your site regularly, it´s like a school for me :-)

Wish a beautiful day!

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