I have had several comments a year asking how to sew together fabric pieces cut on a curve. Here is a blog post with some “how to” guidance, reposted from July 17, 2017.
CURV
ED PIECING is one of my favorite characteristics of contemporary quilting. Traditional quilting relies almost completely on straight edge piecing but unlimited options open up when you begin to sew curves. Curves can be small wiggles or whole circles though often whole circles are made with four blocks of quarter circles (see quilt in photo). Curved may create layered colors in your design, as you see in one of my sunset quilts, or they may depict actual circles as shown in another quilt pictured here. Curves provide interest, color blending and depth to contemporary quilts.
There are many tutorials on the internet that show you how to sew curves, too many for me to mention here. Simple type ‘curved quilt piecing’ into your search engine and you will find a personal sewing lesson. Most simply you follow the steps below:
Take two fabrics, both with right side up.
Overlap one on the other so you have the wrong side of one fabric on top of the right side of the second fabric.
Cut what I refer to as a “wallpaper cut”. In my photo example I did a simple curved line in just one direction.
Remove the fabric you cut off from the top and bottom and line up two pieces for sewing, allowing for a 1/4″ seam allowance.
I’ve seen a variety of different tutorials that give you different ways to sew…check them out and decide what works for your machine and your skill. I have a Bernina 750 with some features that making sewing curves fun and easy such as a HOVER feature for my presser foot. Be sure your machine stops with the needle DOWN.
I sew about 1/2″ at a time and then readjust the fabric so you are easing the top fabric into a match with the bottom fabric for sewing. Some people use a lot of pins and work the curve together before beginning to sew but I have found I like the sew, pause, adjust, sew, pause, adjust method the best.
When finished, press the seam and you have pieced a curve!
Check out my quilts in my Gallery and you will see that I use curved piecing A LOT!! Give it a try!



Sharon, thank you for the tutorial. I used it to sew an art quilt seascape I’m still working on for my bedroom. My husband and I recently moved to Myrtle Beach and this should be perfect for our new home.
I’d love your advice on what batting to use for my wallhanging? Do you recommend cotton, polyester, a blend?
Thank you in advance. Your work is so inspiring, it’s wonderful.
All the best
Beth Hull
Glad to hear about your sewing success. Regarding batting, I use a cotton polyester blend and I double it for greater bulk for a thicker wall quilt. I think it hangs better.
Thank you Sharon! I so appreciate your help. Tomorrow I’ll visit my local quilt shop and look for a cotton polly blend batting.
Can’t wait to see what you create in 2026,
All the best
Beth