-This post may contain affiliate links. As an Amazon affiliate, I earn from qualifying purchases. I receive a small commission at no cost to you when you make a purchase using my link. Fabric used in this project provided by Missouri Star Quilt Company.-
The 4th of July is just around the corner so I thought it would be fun to make a patriotic pillow to decorate my living room. I had a red, white, and blue charm pack, Old Glory, that I ordered a couple of months ago from Missouri Star Quilt Co. with this project in mind when I got it.
The whole pillow is made with the one charm pack plus a little bit of yardage for the lining. The front of the pillow is made with charm squares cut in half to make rectangles, arranged in red and white strips with blue in the top corner. I also used charm squares to make the back panels, but there are a few different ways you can choose to finish the back.
My favorite way to make pillows is with overlapping flaps in the back so that you can easily remove the inserts. I prefer this because then rather than having to store a bunch of different pillows I can just store the pillow covers and switch them out for different seasons or when I just want a different color of pillows. You could also do this with a zipper, but I don't love sewing invisible zippers so I find the flaps to be the easier way to go. I did accidentally sew my flaps wrong, I wanted the smaller flap on the top to overlap the bigger flap on the bottom but I laid them out wrong so the bottom flap overlaps the top. It isn't a big deal and still functions the same so I didn't worry about changing it, I just personally prefer the look of the top flap overlapping the bottom, especially because it was the smaller flap. I also include a few alternate options for the back if you prefer a different method for backing.
The pieced front is quilted prior to sewing to the back. I just freehand quilted wavy lines going horizontally across the pillow. I thought they could kind of represent a waving flag, and also they were a lot more forgiving than straight lines since they were meant to be wavy and random.
Once the whole thing is pieced, quilted, and sewn together all that is left is to put the insert inside and you have a cute, patchwork, patriotic pillow. The simple design works up really fast and easy.
How to Make the Old Glory Patchwork Pillow
You will need:
- Old Glory charm pack (or any charm pack with red, white, and blue fabrics with at least 8 red squares, 4 blue squares, and 6 white squares)
- 5/8 yard fabric for lining (I used a solid white)
- 20" square of thin batting
- 18" pillow insert
- rotary cutter
- ruler
- mat
- sewing machine
- thread
- pins or clips
- basting spray
Instructions:
- 8 red squares
- 6 white squares
- 4 blue squares
- 20 squares in any color (you will use 38 squares total so if your charm pack has 42 squares you will only have 4 left unused)
*There is one white square missing from this picture, you need a total of 6 white squares, not the 5 shown |
- 18.5" x 9.5" for the top panel
- 18.5 x 14" for the bottom panel
- Instead of the pieced back panels you can just make 2 panels that are solid fabric cut 18.5" x 12". Narrowly hem one edge and assemble the pillow in the same way, right sides together, with the hemmed edges overlapping in the center and then sew around the outside.
- You could also make a pillow that is completely enclosed (non-removable insert) by cutting a piece 18.5" square, or piecing 4 charm squares x 4 charm squares for a finished 18.5" square, sew 3/4 of the way around, insert the pillow and sew the open end closed. (This is not my preferred way because I like to have a removable insert)
- Another option is to add a zipper instead of the paneled flap opening that I used. I will be honest and say this is not my area of expertise but I am sure there are a lot of great tutorials out there that can help you if you choose to go this route. You would likely want to use an invisible zipper so it is, well, invisible, and I have never had great luck with invisible zippers so I generally avoid them, but that is just me.
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