I’m working on my latest string quilt today. I plan to hand-stitch the binding, so it might be a day or two before I can take a photo of the finished quilt, along with five other string quilts needing photos.
It’s made with animal skin prints leftover from quilts I made in 2023 and 2024.
I wanted to try making these first 3 quilts after seeing photos from a blog where the quilter had made similar ones in a class. (I’m sorry but I don’t remember the blog.) The method was to use the same strip strata in 3 different layouts. I never saw the last quilt, so I had to guess. It’s the first quilt below. While the class made smaller baby sized quilts, I decided to make adult lap-sized quilts instead. She had chosen animal skin prints for the class. I fell in love with her quilts the minute I saw the photos and remembered I had a yard each of these prints still on my fabric shelves. I gave them to my 3 step-grandsons: Robert, Matthew, and Joseph.



I had extra fabric, so I tried the pattern Simply Serene from Pleasant Valley Creations based on a photo of the pattern. The pattern description suggests using a charm pack or 5″ squares, but I used 3 1/2″ squares, making my quilt a bit smaller. I like this one so much I’ve kept it – for now. 😉

I obviously like working with jungle animals prints because I came across photos of these quilts I also made in 2023 & 2024.

The pattern I used for the panel is called Call of the Wild Leopards by eQuilter.com. It was free when I downloaded it, but I searched and it seems that it no longer exists.

Someone gave me a yard of this animal print. It took a while to decide how to use it. I decided to go with one of my favorite 3 Yard Quilt patterns called Town Square by Fabric Cafe. It’s a great one for showcasing large prints that you don’t want to chop up too small.

I followed this block tutorial to create my lone star wall hanging, but I used 2 1/2″ strips instead of 1 1/2″ it shows in the tutorial. I wanted mine to be a bit larger in order to qualify for a little quilt swap..

I had a lot of short pieces in the little drawer of animal skin prints. I usually save the shortest ones to use last, but not this time. I had an idea I wanted to try and two pieces of leftover backing that would work to get the woven effect I wanted.
After sketching it on graph paper, I used 3 1/2″ wide adding machine tape to create the needed string lengths. The tape was from our local Resource Depot, a non-profit that sells donated office and craft supplies. I used partial seams to avoid cutting and matching sections. Despite being a simple quilt, it took longer than I thought.


My first animal print quilt was the one above. I made it several years ago when feeling angry after seeing the disturbing barbaric photo on the right that was all over the news. Creating quilts have always helped me find calm amid anger or sadness. Although to this day, that photo still stirs a revulsion that I’ll probably never shake completely.

This is what I’ve been working on this week. I hope to have the finished quilt photo ready to share by Friday or Saturday.
Most of my animal skin prints came from Marshalls Dry Goods. You don’t need a wholesale account to shop that section of their website so I often buy wide backing by the bolt there too. I’m a fan of their great prices, big selection and good customer service.





































