Unit A. Unit B. Wide. Fabric 11. Narrow. Unit C

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Elephants, giraffes and zebras traverse this delightful crib-size quilt measuring 45" x 50". The large patches feature subtle images of friendly African animals, and are easily cut and pieced with basic quiltmaking skills. The borders are cut and sewn using Jinny s no-math method of adding mitered borders. Read the entire pattern before beginning. All seam allowances are ¼". Pattern assumes basic quiltmaking knowledge. Press seams after sewing. WOF = width of fabric (assumes 40"); LOF = length of fabric. Step 1: Cut the Fabrics Fabrics 1-6. Follow the Fabric Requirements & Cutting Guide for your colorway on on page 5 or 6. Take some time to choose which fabric motifs to capture; the fabric requirements are generous to allow some fussy cutting. Fabric 7. Cut four strips 1½" x WOF and reserve for Border 1. For the sashing strips, cut six strips 1½" x WOF then subcut them as follows: From one strip, cut lengths measuring 11½,, and 4½. Repeat for three additional strips. From one strip, cut two lengths measuring 16½". From the remaining strip, cut one length 28½. Reserve the remaining fabric for binding. Fabric 8. Separate the wide and narrow stripes by cutting in the seam allowance area between them, allowing ¼" of seam allowance fabric on both long sides of each stripe. Set aside the narrow stripes for another use. Step 2: Make the Quilt Units Follow the illustrations below to sew the rectangles and sashing together into four units. (Number-letter combinations indicate the fabric-shape.) Take care to orient the rectangles so the animals heads are towards the top of the blocks. 1A 4D 2B 3C 5E 5D Unit A 2E Unit B Wide Seam Allowance 3C Narrow Seam Allowance Seam Allowance Fabric 11 6A 1B Unit C Separate the wide and narrow border print stripes. Reserve two of the wide stripes for the top and bottom borders. From each of the remaining four wide stripes, cut a strip measuring 35" for the side borders. (The side borders must be pieced to allow the fabric design to flow uninterrupted around the quilt corners.) 5B 6C 3A 2E 4D 1

1E 4D Unit D Step 4: Add the Borders Add the borders to the quilt, following the instructions for Framing a Rectangular Quilt and Applying Multiple Borders in Adding Borders the Jinny Beyer Way on the following pages. 2C For a video demonstration of the bordering technique, visit www.jinnybeyer.com/bordertips. 6B 5A Step 5: Quilt & Bind Layer the quilt as follows: backing (wrong side up), batting, quilt top (right side up). Baste the layers together. Quilt as desired. Step 3: Assemble the Quilt Top Follow the illustration below to assemble the units and the remaining sashing strips into the quilt top. When the quilting is completed, trim the backing and batting even with the edges of quilt top. Make binding strips your preferred width (up to 2½" wide) using the reserved Fabric 7, and bind using your favorite binding method or by following the instructions at www.jinnybeyer.com/promos/binding. A 16½" B 28½" C 16½" D 2

Adding Borders the Jinny Beyer Way Jinny Beyer s border prints are designed specifically with the quilter in mind. Each fabric has a wide and a narrow stripe which coordinate in both design and color. Both stripes have mirror-image motifs which are essential for perfectly mitered corners. In addition, the two different stripes in the border print are separated by at least a half-inch so that a 1/4" seam allowance is provided for on both sides of the stripes. From selvage to selvage, there are always at least four repeats of each stripe across the fabric so calculating the yardage needed to border a quilt is easy: you need the length of the longest side of the quilt plus an additional half-yard to match design elements and allow for the miters at the corners. For a video demonstration of this bordering technique, visit www.jinnybeyer.com/bordertips Framing a Square Quilt 1. Place a strip of the border print across the middle of the quilt, centering a motif from the border at the exact center of the quilt. (Because of minor differences in seam allowances taken and stretching that can occur on bias edges, opposite edges of a quilt often measure slightly differently. Using a measurement taken from the middle of the quilt will help keep the quilt from ruffling at the edges.) 2. To mark the first miter, position a right-angle triangle so that one of the sides of the right angle runs along the bottom edge of the border print. Then carefully move the triangle until the angled side touches the point where the top edge of the border print meets the edge of the quilt. (See arrow in Diagram 1.) Mark, then cut the miter line. (Because the miter is cut right at the edge of the quilt, the seam allowance is already included.) Diagram 1: Mark the miter. 3. Carefully pick up the mitered side of the border strip and lay it on top of the strip on the opposite side of the quilt, right-sides together, placing the top edge of the strip at the edge of the quilt. If necessary, adjust the top strip so that the design motifs on the top and bottom match exactly. If you have centered a motif from the border print in the middle of the quilt, the designs should match at the edges. Cut the second miter. (Using the cut edge as a guide, rather than the triangle, ensures that your design motifs will be an exact match.) 4. Using this first mitered strip as a guide, cut three more identical pieces, making sure that the design on the border print is exactly the same on all four pieces. Diagram 2: Cut three pieces identical to the first. 5. Mark seam intersection dots on the short side of each of your border strips. To find the spot, simply draw a short line 1/4-inch inside the mitered edge and the short edge of the border strip. Mark the dot where the two lines intersect. Do the same for each corner of your quilt. 6. To sew the borders to the quilt, pin the mid-point of one of the border pieces to the middle of one of the edges of the quilt. Next, match and pin the dots on each side of your border with the dots on the quilt corners. Continue pinning the border to the quilt, easing in any fullness. (The edge of the quilt is usually a little wider than the center because of bias edges or seams.) Sew the border to the quilt, starting and stopping at the dots. Sew the mitered seams last, starting from the inside dot. When pinning the edges together, be sure to match the design elements on both pieces. Diagram 3: Correctly cut and sewn borders will have designs that flow around the corners. 3

Framing a Rectangular Quilt With rectangles, you cannot always be assured that the designs will automatically match at the corners so you must take an extra step. 1. First, follow steps 1-3 above and cut two identical strips for the short ends of the quilt. The pieces for the other two sides of the quilt must be cut differently: for the corners on all pieces to match, there must be a seam in these long pieces at the exact center of the quilt. 2. Place one of the cut strips on top of a length of the border print stripe, matching the fabric designs. Cut one miter to match the miter on the top strip. Set the top strip aside. Lay the newly cut strip on top of the quilt through the center, aligning one mitered edge with the edge of the quilt. Mark the center of the quilt on the strip as in Diagram 4. Move the strip from the quilt and cut it off ¼" beyond the center mark. Using this cut strip as a guide, cut one more piece identical to it. You also need two strips that are the exact mirror images of these pieces. Using one of the strips you just cut, flip it over and lay it on a Diagram 4: Find and strip of border print, matching the fabric mark the center of the quilt design exactly. (The two strips will be right on the border strip. sides together.) Cut the miter and straight edges to match the top piece. Using the newly cut strip as a guide, cut one more piece. g 3. Sew the seams at the middle of two mirror-imaged strips and attach these borders to the quilt as in Steps 5 and 6 in Framing a Square Quilt. Sewing the borders to a rectangular quilt in this manner assures that the corners will match. There will be a seam at the center of the long strips (Diagram 5), but the design at that center will mirror-image as well, allowing the design to flow around the quilt. Diagram 5: The long borders on rectangular quilts have center seams. Applying Multiple Borders Jinny often designs quilts to make full use of the border prints. First, she will frame the quilt with the narrow border stripe, then add a coordinating fabric as a second border. The quilt is finished off with the wide stripe from the border print. Jinny personally measures and adds each border separately. However, when the middle border is a fabric that doesn t have to be matched at the corners, she recommends the following method as being a little faster: Sew the second border to the first and then measure and cut them as a single border in the steps above. (If the quilt is rectangular, sew the second border to the first after it has been pieced.) Measure, cut and sew the third border separately after the first two borders have been completed and sewn to the quilt. Binding the Quilt: When Jinny uses a border print to frame a quilt, she typically sews the binding to the back of the quilt and turns it to the front. This allows her to carefully hand-stitch the binding along a straight line printed on the border print fabric. For details, see www.jinnybeyer.com/binding. Diagram 6: Applying multiple borders Adding Borders the Jinny Beyer Way-2 4

Red Fabric Requirements & Cutting Guide 2661-01 Fabric 1 ½ yard Cut one each of A, B, and E. Fabric 2 ½ yard Cut one each of B and C, and two of E. A B 2663-05 Fabric 3 ½ yard Cut one of A and two of C. C 3½" 2664-01 2663-03 2661-04 2664-04 Fabric 4 ¾ yard Cut four strips 2¼" x WOF for Border 2, then cut three of D. Fabric 5 ½ yard Cut one of each A, B, D and E. Fabric 6 ½ yard Cut one each of A, B and C. Fabric 7 7 /8 yard 9½" D 4" E When cutting the pieces, be sure to position them as shown above, with the grainline arrow along the lengthwise grain. This will ensure that all the animals will be oriented correctly! Although these pieces are easily cut using a quilter s ruler and rotary cutter, you might choose to cut the shapes out of paper first. That will allow you to play with positioning them on the fabric so you can feature elements of the fabric designs. 2665-04 Fabric 8 1½ yard 2666-04 5

Teal Fabric Requirements & Cutting Guide 2661-03 2663-04 Fabric 1 ¾ yard Cut four strips 2¼" x WOF for Border 2, then one each of A, B, and E. Fabric 2 ½ yard Cut one each of B and C, and two of E. Fabric 3 ½ yard Cut one of A and two of C. 2664-01 Fabric 4 Cut three of D. ½ yard 2663-01 Fabric 5 ½ yard Cut one of each A, B, D and E. 2661-01 2664-03 2665-03 Fabric 6 ½ yard Cut one each of A, B and C. Fabric 7 Fabric 8 7 /8 yard 1½ yard A B C 3½" 2666-03 9½" D 4" E When cutting the pieces, be sure to position them as shown above, with the grainline arrow along the lengthwise grain. This will ensure that all the animals will be oriented correctly! Although these pieces are easily cut using a quilter s ruler and rotary cutter, you might choose to cut the shapes out of paper first. That will allow you to play with positioning them on the fabric so you can feature elements of the fabric designs. 6