The Nona Quilt Along, Week Three: Cutting the Fabric

Hi, Friends!  Welcome back!  Jessica Dayon here and today we are starting week three of The Nona Quilt Along.

If you missed the first two parts of The Nona Quilt Along, you can read all about it here:

Jessica Dayon and the Materials Needed for the Nona Quilt Along BERNINA WeAllSew blog
Jessica Dayon and the Materials Needed for the Nona Quilt Along BERNINA WeAllSew blog

In week three, we are cutting the fabric for our Nona Quilt.  This is the first step in actually making a quilt. Let’s do it together!

Materials Needed for the Nona Quilt Along
Materials Needed for the Nona Quilt Along

Cutting Tips

Notes on Cutting Instructions

Cutting the fabric is a very important step.  If you cut accurately, you can piece your quilt accurately, and therefore, your quilt will be easier to put together and will look nice at the end.  However, if the cutting is inaccurate, you will have trouble getting the pieces to go together correctly and the quilt-making process will be a struggle.  For those reasons, we are going to cut slowly and accurately.  If we cut a piece incorrectly, we will cut a new piece to use for the quilt.

Keep a Record of Where Fabric was Bought

Every quilt pattern will contain a section of fabric requirements.  These requirements take into account the fabric you need to make the quilt.  However, they don’t take into account any mistakes you might make in cutting or piecing.  So, I like to keep a list of the fabric I use in each quilt and where I got it from and that way if I make a mistake and need to buy more, I know exactly what I need and where to get it.

To Stack or Not to Stack?

When you have a fresh rotary blade on your cutter, it can easily go through multiple layers of fabric at once.  This saves time and helps you cut your fabric faster.  However, if you are struggling with getting the fabric cut accurately, I’d recommend cutting one piece at a time until you consistently get accurate cuts and then you can try stacking and cutting.

Cutting Instructions

First, make sure you have your Nona pattern in front of you, which can be downloaded below.  We are working in the section titled ‘Cutting’.

Download Free Pattern

Cutting the 5″ Squares

We will start with the package of 5″ squares.  We need 30- 5″ squares.

Narrowing Down the 5″ squares

A standard package of 5″ squares comes with 42 squares.  So, the first thing to do is choose 30 from the 42.  When doing this, I like to start by laying out all of the squares in the package in color groups.  Once I see how many squares I have in each color group, I select the squares that I will use in the quilt, trying to keep the number of squares I use from each color group roughly even.

A selection of 5" squares for the Nona Quilt
A selection of 5″ squares for the Nona Quilt

After you choose your 30 squares, take 1-4 squares, depending on how many you want to cut at one time, and lay them in a 5″ x 5″ spot on your cutting mat.

A 5" square centered on the cutting mat grid
A 5″ square centered on the cutting mat grid

Using the 6 1/2″ square ruler, cut the square(s) 2.5″ in from the left edge vertically.

A 5" square cut vertically in half
A 5″ square cut vertically in half

Then, cut the square (s) 2.5″ in from the bottom edge horizontally.

A 5" cut horizontally in half
A 5″ cut horizontally in half

You will be left with 4- 2 1/2″ squares.

Four 2 1/2" squares that were cut from one 5" square
Four 2 1/2″ squares that were cut from one 5″ square

If you stacked a few 5″ squares before you cut, you’ll have multiple 2 1/2″ squares in each pile.

Multiple 2 1/2" squares stacje that were cut from a stack of 5" squares
Multiple 2 1/2″ squares stache that were cut from a stack of 5″ squares

Repeat these steps for all 30- 5” squares.

A rainbow of 2 1/2" squares for the Nona quilt
A rainbow of 2 1/2″ squares for the Nona quilt

Cutting the Yardage

We have 4 different colors of yardage that we need to cut.

Cutting the Alpine Yardage

The first piece of yardage we will cut is the alpine fabric.  We need 4 strips each measuring 6 1/2” x 42”.  Then we cut those strips into 60- 2 1/2” x 6 1/2” pieces.

Cutting the Alpine fabric yardage with a ruler and rotary cutter
Cutting the Alpine fabric yardage with a ruler and rotary cutter

Note: Patterns often say 42” as the width of fabric even though it is 43/44”.  Patterns that refer to 42” are actually referring to the usable space.  The fabric might measure 43/44” from selvage edge to selvage edge but you can’t actually use the selvage edge in your projects.

Here we don’t actually need to cut the fabric to 42” (by 6 1/2”) because we are further cutting the strips down.  If we were not cutting the strips down and we needed a 42” strip in our quilt, we would need to cut the piece to measure exactly 42”.

Cutting the Pink Yardage

Next, we will cut the pink squares from yardage. We need 4 strips each measuring 2 1/2” x 42”.  Then we cut those strips into 60- 2 1/2” x 2 1/2” squares.

Cutting 2 1/2" squares with a ruler and rotary cutter
Cutting 2 1/2″ squares with a ruler and rotary cutter

Cutting the Background Yardage

After the pink, we will cut the background yardage.  We have two different sizes that we need to cut out of the background fabric.

  • Cut 4 strips each measuring 6 1/2” x 42”.  Then we cut those strips into 60- 2 1/2” x 6 1/2” pieces.
  • Cut 14 strips each measuring 2 1/2” x 42”.  Then we cut those strips into 210- 2 1/2” x 2 1/2” squares.
Cutting yardage with a ruler and rotary cutter Nona Quilt BERNINA WeAllSew blog
Cutting yardage with a ruler and rotary cutter Nona Quilt BERNINA WeAllSew blog

Cutting the Binding Yardage

The final fabric we need to cut is the binding fabric.  This fabric will finish the edges of the quilt so that all the raw edges of the fabric are enclosed. We need 6 strips each measuring 2 1/2” x 42”.  It is not necessary to trim the fabric strips down from 43/44″ to 42″.

Cutting binding fabric with a ruler and rotary cutter Nona Quilt BERNINA WeAllSew blog
Cutting binding fabric with a ruler and rotary cutter Nona Quilt BERNINA WeAllSew blog

Once you have all of these fabrics cut, you are finished for this week!  I like to store my cut fabric for a project in a 12″ scrapbooking container.  These containers are a great way to store your fabric while it isn’t in use.

Cut fabric needed for the Nona Quilt BERNINA WeAllSew blog
Cut fabric needed for the Nona Quilt BERNINA WeAllSew blog

Remember to watch the Week 3 YouTube video on my channel.  This video coordinates with this post and I show how to cut all the fabric for the Nona Quilt in real-time.

Thank you for following along and I’ll see you next week!

– Jessica

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