Curves
Ice Cream Cone
A semicircular scoop sits on a triangle cone. Sew the two top background corners to the scoop first, then attach the cone unit below. Pins along the curved seam help ease the fabric.
Cut list
Dimensions for a 12 inch finished block with a standard 1/4 inch seam allowance. Scale proportionally for other finished sizes.
| Region | Role | Pieces | Cut size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top Left Background | Background | 1 | 6 1/2" × 6 1/2" |
| Top Right Background | Background | 1 | 6 1/2" × 6 1/2" |
| Scoop | Feature | 1 | 12 1/2" × 6 1/2" |
| Cone | Accent | 1 | 12 1/2" × 6 1/2" |
| Bottom Left Background | Background | 1 | 6 1/2" × 6 1/2" |
| Bottom Right Background | Background | 1 | 6 1/2" × 6 1/2" |
How it goes together
- Step 1
Cut your pieces
Cut each region using the dimensions in the cut table for a 12 inch finished Ice Cream Cone block. Standard 1/4 inch seam allowance is included.
- Step 2
Piece curved seams first
Pin curves at the midpoint and quarters, then ease the seam. Press toward the concave piece.
- Step 3
Assemble the block
Join the sub-units into rows or columns, then join the rows. Press as you go. Square the finished block to size.
Read more
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Value is how light or dark a color is. Hue is what we usually call “the color itself.” In quilts, value carries the design — hue carries the mood.
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Quilt block families, explained
Most quilt blocks belong to one of six families — Patchwork, Half-square triangles, Flying geese, Stars, Curves, and Hexagons. Each family is a way of piecing fabric together.
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The quilter’s seam allowance, explained
A seam allowance is the strip of fabric between the seam and the raw edge. Quilters work in a standard 1/4 inch — and getting it right is the difference between a top that finishes flat and one that fights you.
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Try the Ice Cream Cone on a real layout.
Open it on the Design Wall. Try a few colors, see the math, change your mind.