Our Tiny Tile Quilt’s diagonal lines and tiny pieced diamonds may give the impression of expert quilt making, but the reality is much simpler than that. All you really need is the easiest of building blocks: a basic square… and lots of them!

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Piecing these squares, corner by corner and then row by row, creates this seemingly complex play of colorful diamonds. Add to that our palette of fresh spring blossoms and fruity sorbets, and the result is playful, sophisticated and a little bit surprising.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Pick up all the fabrics you’ll need with our Tiny Tile Quilt Bundle and make an heirloom… even if you’re a quilting newbie! -Corinne

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Update: Now In Spectrum Cotton

October 22, 2019

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Our Tiny Tile Quilt is a classic for good reason! We’ve updated this classic project using our Spectrum Cotton. This garment-dyed cotton is gloriously colorful, spectacularly soft, and just right for this very special quilt. Make your Tiny Tile Quilt like ours with our Tiny Tile Quilt Bundle in this glowing Sunrise palette, or pick up an earthier version with the cool and collected Peninsula bundle. Either way, many tiny tiles make one heck of a beautiful quilt! Read all about it here!

Materials

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Our Tiny Tile Quilt Bundle includes all the supplies you’ll need to make your very own heirloom blanket. Our original design includes a few fabrics that are no longer available but our updated bundle features two color options and includes all the needed supplies to make your very own Tiny Tile Quilt In Spectrum Cotton!

NOTE: This bundle is no longer available, but you can still shop many of the materials individually below!

  • Quilter’s Dream’s Natural Request Dream Batting, Throw Sized, 100% cotton
  • Backing Fabric: 3 yards of Kiyohara’s Fine Solids in Beige
  • Binding Fabric: ¾ yard of Kiyohara’s Fine Solids in Black
  • Fabric A: 1¼ yards Moda’s Muslin, 110-inch,  200 Count in Natural
  • Fabric B: Remainder of Kiyohara’s Fine Solids in Beige (after cutting for Backing)
  • Fabric C: ½ yard of Kiyohara’s Kokochi Double Gauze in Pink
  • Fabric D: ½ yard of Kiyohara’s Fine Solids in Yellow
  • Fabric E: ½ yard of Robert Kaufman’s Kona Cotton in Peach
  • Fabric F: Remainder of Kiyohara’s Fine Solids in Black (after cutting for Binding)
  • Fabric G: ¼ yard of Robert Kaufman’s Kona Cotton in Mango
  • Two 274-yard spools of Gutermann’s 100% cotton thread in color 1040
  • One 220-yard spool of Gutermann’s Hand Quilting Thread in color 919

These are enough materials to make one 50 x 60-inch quilt.

You will also need…

Size

Finished dimensions: 50 inches x 60 inches

Note

Prewash and iron all of the fabrics (but not the batting) before starting.

Pattern

Prepare the Backing

Trim the selvage edge off one side of Fabric B.

Cut the Backing Fabric in half across the selvages so that you have two pieces that are approximately 43 x 54 inches each.

With right sides together, stack the two pieces on top of each other, matching up the trimmed selvage edges. Pin the two pieces together along this trimmed edge.

Sew along the pinned edge and press the seam to one side. This piece measures approximately 54 x 84 inches.

Trim this piece down to 54 x 64 inches. This is the Quilt Backing.

Do not discard the 54 x 20-inch piece of fabric you cut off! You will use it later for the Quilt Top.

Cut

If you’re new to rotary cutting, please refer to our Rotary Cutting Tutorial before you start.

For the Binding

From the Binding Fabric, cut six 2 ½-inch strips from selvage to selvage and then trim off the selvages.

For the Quilt Top

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

This quilt is made up of 120 Large Squares, which measure 5 ½ x 5 ½ inches, and 480 Small Squares, which measure 2 x 2 inches.

Cut 120 Large Squares from Fabric A.

Cut a total of 480 Small Squares (2 x 2 inches) from Fabrics B-G in the following amounts . . .

Fabric B: 120

Fabric C: 120

Fabric D: 90

Fabric E: 88

Fabric F: 40

Fabric G: 22

When you have finished cutting the Small Squares, put them into a paper bag and jumble them all together.

Organize the Large Squares into 12 piles of 10 squares each.

Piece the Squares

Pull 10 Small Squares from the paper bag (no looking!). Do not worry about having an even amount of colors in the pile. The random mix of colors and tones is part of the charm of this quilt!

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Pull one Small Square from the pile, and with the wrong side facing up, use your preferred fabric-marking tool (I used a water-soluble fabric marker) and a straight-edge ruler to draw a diagonal line from one corner of the square to another, as shown above.

Repeat for all 10 Small Squares.

Now, grab the first stack of 10 Large Squares.

Lay one Large Square out flat with its right side facing up.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

With its wrong side facing up, place one Small Square on one corner of the Large Square so that the marked line runs across the Large Square’s corner (rather than through it), as shown above. Pin in place.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Repeat with the remaining Large and Small Squares.

Now, sew each Large and Small Square together along the marked diagonal line. You can sew the Squares one at a time (you don’t need to backstitch at the beginning and end of the seam), or use the quilt-making technique called “chain piecing,” which means continuously sewing the pieces together without lifting the presser foot or cutting the threads. Here’s how . . .

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Start sewing the first Square in the pile. When you reach the approximate center of the marked line, grab the next Square in the pile and place it in front of the working Square. Orient its marked line so that it is in line with the marked line of the previous Square. The Large Squares of the two pieces overlap, but the two Small Squares abut, and you should only ever sew through one set of Squares at a time.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Continue like this until you have joined all of the pinned pieces. And that’s chain piecing!

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Now, carefully snip the threads between each piece.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Lay one pieced Square out flat. Trim the corner where the Small Square is attached, leaving a ¼-inch seam allowance. The Small Square is now a Small Triangle!

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Press the Small Triangle up, pressing the seam allowance towards the Small Triangle.

Repeat with the remaining pieced Squares.

Now, grab 10 more Small Squares from the paper bag. Mark, pin and sew them to an un-sewn corner of the same 10 Large Squares, as described above. Trim the Small Squares into Small Triangles and press, also as described above.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Repeat for the remaining un-sewn corners of the Large Squares, grabbing 10 more Small Squares from the paper bag for each corner.

Once you have pieced all four corners of the Large Squares, you can set these aside and grab another stack of 10 Large Squares from the pile. Piece the Small Squares to these Large Squares in the same manner.

Repeat until all 120 Large Squares have been pieced.

Arrange the Quilt Top

Although the layout of the finished Tiny Tile Quilt appears random, and to a certain extent it is, I suggest arranging the pieced Squares before you sew the rows. This allows you to space the colors as you like and to check that the bold colors don’t group together.

Arrange 10 squares across and 12 rows down.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

You will notice as you lay out the Squares that the Small Triangles group together and create rows of colorful diamonds. Group the Triangles as you like, and play around until you have an arrangement of colors that you are happy with!

Take a picture of your final layout. You can reference this photo as you piece the Squares into rows.

Piece the Squares into Rows

Working row by row, organize the Squares into 12 stacks of 10 Squares each.

Sew together a row of 10 squares, working left to right along the row. Here’s how . . .

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

With right sides together, stack the first and second Square on top of each other and pin along their adjacent sides (refer back to your photograph, as needed, to remind yourself which sides are adjacent in your layout). Sew along the pinned edge with a ¼-inch seam allowance (you don’t need to backstitch at the beginning and end of the seam).

Now, stack the third square on top of the second square, again with right sides together and adjacent sides aligned. Pin and sew, as described above.

Repeat with the remaining squares in the pile, working in order and referring to your photograph as needed.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Press all the seam allowances in the same direction.

Sew together the next stack of 12 Squares.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Once you have finished piecing this row, press all the seams in the opposite direction as you did in the last row (if you pressed all seams towards the beginning of the previous row, press this row’s seams towards the end, or vice versa).

Repeat with the 10 remaining stacks, always pressing the seams in the opposite direction of the previous row.

Piece the Rows

To finish the Quilt Top, sew together these 12 finished rows. Here’s how . . .

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Working from the top down and with right sides together, stack the first and second row on top of each other. Align the long bottom edge of the first row with the long top edge of the second row. Pin them together along this edge, making sure that all straight seams are aligned.  Sew along the pinned edge with a ¼-inch seam allowance. Press the seams open.

Now, stack the third row on top of the second row, again with right sides together and adjacent sides aligned. Pin and sew, as described above.

Repeat with the 10 remaining rows.

Your Quilt Top is now finished!

Mark for Quilting

Press the Quilt Top and then, with the right side facing up, lay it down on a clean, hard surface, most likely a floor.

Using masking tape, tape the fabric down to the floor around all four sides, pulling it taut as you tape. First tack down the centers of the opposite sides and then tape along each side, from the center out.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Using a long ruler and starting in one corner, use your preferred fabric-marking tool (I used my Hera Marker) to mark a line along the seam of the corner Small Triangle, shown above in bold.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Now, mark a line 5 inches below and parallel to that line. Use the seam line of the Small Triangle in the opposite corner of the Square as your guide.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Mark the next line 2 inches below and parallel to the last. Use the seam line at the other side of the diamond as your guide.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Continue marking the Quilt Top in this manner, drawing parallel lines that follow the seam lines of every other diagonal row of diamonds.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Now, draw a line perpendicular to any previously drawn line, running along the seam line of any previously marked diamond.

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

Draw lines parallel to this line in the same manner as described, following the seam lines of every other diagonal row of diamonds.

Baste

Make a quilt sandwich and pin-baste the Backing, batting and Quilt Top together. For instructions on how to do all this, please check out our Pin-Basting Tutorial!

Quilt

Now it’s time to quilt all the pieces together along the marked lines, first sewing all the lines slanting in one direction and then the lines slanting in the other direction..

Using your machine’s walking foot, start with a line that runs through the center of the Quilt (or close to it), sew along this line from one edge of the fabric to the other (you do not need to backstitch at the beginning and end).

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho

To sew the next line, rotate the Quilt 180 degrees and sew along the line running next to the line you just stitched.

Continue to sew along the remaining parallel lines in this same manner: When you have finished sewing one line, rotate the Quilt and sew along the line next to it.
Sew all of the parallel lines on one side of the center line and then sew all of the lines on the other side of the center line in the same manner.

Next, quilt all of the diagonal lines slanting in the other direction in the same way: Start sewing with the center line and alternate directions as you sew along all the parallel lines running to the right and then to the left of this center line.

Trim the batting and Backing along all four sides so that they align with the Quilt Top.

Bind

Use the binding strips you cut from the Binding Fabric to bind the Quilt with double fold binding. For instructions on how to do this, please check out our Making Double Fold Binding and Sewing on Double Fold Binding tutorials. Be sure to use the Hand Quilting Thread for the hand-sewing steps!

Tiny Tile Quilt | Purl Soho