Things You'll Need:
- scissors
- thread
- sewing machine
- old jeans
- polyester quilt batting
- fabric to use on the back
- large pins
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Step 1
The biggest element to this task is, of course, collecting the old jeans. Depending on the size of quilt you want, you’ll need many pairs. My quilt is about 6′ x 6′, and has 144 six-inch squares in it. I found that I could get about 4 squares out of a pair of jeans, so I needed about 36 pairs for the whole project. That may seem like a lot, but if you start asking your friends to keep an eye out for discarded jeans, you’ll find that you reach your goal sooner than you thought. You can always adjust your finished quilt size to suit the amount of material you have, too.
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Step 2
Placing the patternOnce you have enough jeans gathered for your quilt, start by making a pattern. I wanted my finished squares to each be 6″ x 6″, so I made my pattern 7″ x 7″, which gave me a half-inch seam allowance around all edges. I cut the pattern out of cardstock.
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Step 3
I then took my pattern card and positioned it on the material and turned it until I got the desired impact. I decided I wanted my seam to go diagonally across the square. (I kept the seam out of the corners, though, because I knew that much bulk in the corners would make the squares very hard to sew.) Once I had the pattern card positioned the way I wanted it, I drew a line on it to mark where the seam was, so that I could easily make all the squares match as I cut them.
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Step 4
Then the lengthy task of cutting the squares began. I would lay my pattern over the jeans and trace around it with a marker, then cut them out. Denim is tough, so make sure you have some good fabric scissors that can handle it! Cut however many squares you will need for the quilt you want to make. As I mentioned before, my quilt was 12 squares wide and 12 squares long, which meant 144 squares. Whew!
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Step 5
Once all the pieces were cut out, I began sewing them into strips of 12. I highly recommend you use a sewing machine for this, because it would be way too hard to sew by hand. Once the strips were done, I sewed them together into a large sheet. Remember as you grab each square that you should pull them from the pile randomly. Some of your squares will be darker and others lighter. You want to mix them up really well so that you get a nice pattern across the quilt.
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Step 6
When I finished sewing all the squares together into a sheet, I was ready to start assembling the layers of my quilt. I started with the fabric that I wanted to use for the back of the quilt. I found some fabric that was printed to look like a red bandana, and I loved it the moment I saw it. I knew it would look just right with the jeans. It wasn’t wide enough to cover the whole quilt, but it was easy enough to sew two lengths together to make a wider sheet. My finished size on the bandana fabric was quite a bit larger than the quilt (7′ x 7′) because I wanted to leave lots of extra on the edges to use for the trim. So I laid the bandana fabric down on the floor, wrong side up. I then topped it with a 6′ x 6′ piece of polyester quilt batting. Finally, I put down my giant sheet of jean squares, right side up.
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Step 7
With my three layers in place on the floor, I then started pinning them together with large safety pins. I put one pin in each square, so that I could be sure the layers weren’t going to slide around on me.
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Step 8
Stitch lines marked in yellowThe next step was to actually quilt the fabric. This involves sewing all three layers together, using some pattern for the stitching. I again opted for machine sewing, and I knew that I wanted to follow the pattern of the squares. I decided to sew long diagonal rows of stitches across the entire quilt, matching the diagonal seams along each square. I just fed the quilt through the machine over and over, until the whole thing was covered in diagonal stitch lines.
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Step 9
Bandana backingThe only thing left now was finishing off the seams. First I trimmed the layer of batting that stuck out so that there was about 1 inch showing all the way around. I then cut the red bandana fabric so that it stuck out 2 inches beyond that (3 inches total). I then folded the red fabric over the exposed batting, folding the edge of the red under for a nice seam, and making sure that it went in far enough to cover at least 1/2 inch of the jeans. I pinned that down and took it back to the sewing machine, where I ran a line of stitching all the way around, securing the seams in place.










Comments
chicaandjo said
on 2/11/2009 lene2, the best way to make the quilt be exactly as big as you want is to measure your bed to see how big you want the quilt to be, and work from there! :)
I also found a good site with info about standard bedspread sizes. You might want to check it out: http://www.denverfabrics.com/pages/static/yardage-estimator-bedspread.htm
Once you have the size determined, and you have the size of your quilt block determined, you can do some easy math to figure out how many blocks you need. In other words, if you want the quilt to be 4 feet wide, and your finished block size is 6 inches (not counting seam allowances), then you will need 8 blocks in that direction.
Hope that helps. Good luck with the quilt!
P.S. I've also got a great quilt project written on our our site, where I embroidered designs onto each denim block. You can see details here: http://www.chicaandjo.com/2009/01/0
lene2 said
on 2/11/2009 I am new to quilting and this look like a good idea, what are the blocks size to fit a crib, twin, double, queen and king size bed. How manys blocks would it take for it one. What size bed did your quilt fit.
smidgen said
on 11/5/2008 I have made a few like this and it FANTASTIC for the home and keeping warm! I love the way that you wrote this article 5 stars!
LilacGirl said
on 7/30/2008 Beautiful picture! I always wanted to make one of these.
Firefly0576 said
on 4/16/2008 I always wanted to this with my boys old jeans. I have over a 100 pairs I can not wait to get time to do this