The last few times I've put together directions for making a quilt block that has half-square triangles (HST), aka Triangle Squares, as one of it's components, I've left the specifics of how you cut and sew those units up to the quilter.
Today, it occurred to me that it could seem a little bit like a cop out, a bit like
quilt as desired.
So while I was making some new blocks that had triangle squares as a component, I tried making them a few different ways and thought about the list of ways to make them.
I can't share the blocks I made for another week or so, but here's my list of ways to make triangle squares. Did I include your go-to method?
Cut individual triangles by:
- Cutting a square 7/8-inch larger than finished
size and cutting it in half diagonally, or
- Using a specialty ruler or
- Using a die-cutting machine.
Pair triangles together and sew together
to form a triangle square.
USE this method when you want unique, scrappy combinations and are comfortable working with bias edges.
One Triangle Square (HST unit) at a Time
- Cut two squares that are the SAME size as your desired UNIT size
- Stack the two fabric squares with right sides together
- Draw a line diagonally from corner to corner on the top square
-
Sew ON the drawn line
- Trim ¼ inch from the seam (on the side you don’t want to keep
- Sew the small triangles together for a smaller bonus square.
USE this method if you only need one HST unit or if you want to control the direction of stripes and other one-way fabric designs
Two (HST units) at a Time
- Cut two squares that are 7/8-inch larger than your desired FINISHED size
- Stack the two fabric squares with right sides together
- Draw a line diagonally from corner to corner on the top square
- Sew on each side of the drawn line, ¼-inch away from the line
- Cut on the line to create two HST units.
USE this method if you want to avoid techniques that require cutting/sewing bias edges.
Instead of drawing the line first, cut the stacked fabrics diagonally from corner to corner and sew the triangle pairs together.
USE this method if you like to use a ¼-inch foot with an edge guide and are comfortable sewing bias edges
Four Triangle Squares (HST units) from Two Large Squares
- Calculate the size of large squares by dividing your desired UNIT size by .64 and round up to something measurable. For example, if you want a 2” finished size triangle square, take 2.5 (the unit size) and divide by .64 for 3.9 inches, which I rounded up to cut two 4-inch squares.
- Stack the two fabric squares with right sides together
- Sew around the outside edges of the square
- Cut diagonally from corner to corner in both directions to create 4 units
- Press and square up to the correct size.
WARNING: This method results in HST units with bias on all sides. USE this method ONLY if you are VERY comfortable working with bias edges.
Using Printed Foundations to Make Triangle Squares
Printed Foundations for making HST units are available commercially as strips or sheets from several sources and are also available as free downloads. This example, for 2-inch (finished size) units, came from
here.
- Cut the sheet to a size appropriate for the number of triangle squares
- Cut two pieces of fabric to the same size as your paper foundation
- Use a smaller stitch length and stich through the stack of foundation and fabric
- Cut along all solid lines to create HST units.
USE this method if you need to make MANY matching HST units beginning with large pieces of fabric or if you are working with pre-cut strips. See the
Thangles website to see how this technique works with their strip-based product.
Making Many HST Units from Bias Strips
Create a striped fabric square from bias strips cut as wide as your desired UNIT size, alternating your two fabrics, then starting at one corner, cut HST unit squares.
USE this method if you need to make MANY HST units from two fabrics, are comfortable working with bias edges and don’t like removing paper foundations.