I was in a meeting the other day at work, and the subject was QR codes. I was asked to write technical guidelines on how to use them in business. As the meeting began, I pulled out my quilted covered notebook to take notes and one of my coworkers said "you could make a QR code quilt." We all had a good laugh, and the meeting commenced.
But the thought stuck in my mind. For years, I have been saving 2-inch squares of batik fabric. For some reason I decided that if a scrap of batik was big enough to get one or more 2-inch squares, I'd keep it. I don't do this with any other fabric, just batiks. These squares would be perfect for the QR code quilt, but what would happen when the QR code quilt is scanned? I decided to use my web site address KristinLaura.com for the QR code. Using a QR code generator, I produced a 29x29 grid of squares...that comes out to 841 shares! No way am I going to piece together 841 2" squares, but I remembered reading about watercolor quilts that use a fusible gridded interfacing. I will give that a try...
But the thought stuck in my mind. For years, I have been saving 2-inch squares of batik fabric. For some reason I decided that if a scrap of batik was big enough to get one or more 2-inch squares, I'd keep it. I don't do this with any other fabric, just batiks. These squares would be perfect for the QR code quilt, but what would happen when the QR code quilt is scanned? I decided to use my web site address KristinLaura.com for the QR code. Using a QR code generator, I produced a 29x29 grid of squares...that comes out to 841 shares! No way am I going to piece together 841 2" squares, but I remembered reading about watercolor quilts that use a fusible gridded interfacing. I will give that a try...
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