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Jenny Haynes

About Jenny

Jenny is a modern quilt designer and teacher known for her colourful, curvy machine pieced patterns.

Jenny Haynes (née Nilsson) studied Pattern Cutting and Tailoring in her native Stockholm. Soon after, she followed her passion for fabrics and moved to London to study Fashion and Textiles at the London College of Fashion. She went on to develop her own label ‘Papper, Sax, Sten’ (that’s ‘Paper, Scissors, Stone’ in case you’re wondering!), creating award-winning designs that reflect her many different influences. She is based out of Sheffield, now.

Her bespoke quilts and furnishings are recognised for their clean and simple, mid-century modern design. Jenny mixes rich colours with pastels and is not scared of a colour clash. She often uses her trademark curves together with solid fabrics, while remaining faithful to her Scandi’ roots.

Jenny’s work was recognised in Summer 2015 when Jenny was invited by the Swedish Chamber of Commerce, along with 18 other Swedish designers, to be a part of Heal’s Swedish Summer Exhibition. Heal’s have a long history of promoting Swedish design with exhibitions in 1923, 1951 and 1971.

Her quilts and patterns appear regularly in books and magazines, including Thames & Hudson for the V&A and in Patchwork & Quilting: A Maker’s Guide, ‘Designed by teachers and practitioners at the leading edge of today’s craft revival.

Two of her quilts won awards at QuiltCon 2019 in Nashville. QuiltCon is arranged by the Modern Quilt Guild and is the biggest exhibition of modern quilts in the World.

When Jenny isn’t designing her curvy and quirky quilt patterns, she teaches at the V&A as well as giving talks and running workshops for Guilds and textile venues in the UK and abroad. She also offers live online workshops.

https://pappersaxsten.com/

You can watch Jenny demonstrate how to sew no pin curves in this episode of The Makers Studio series.

Signature Technique

Colourful curvy quilt patterns

Top Tips

  • Use a shorter stitch length (1.8) for stitching curves to give your block extra strength and to avoid splitting in the seam.
  • When colours clash a bit it gives your quilt spark.
  • When sewing curves, always start with the smallest curve then work your way up.
  • Your finger is the pin when sewing no pin curves.
  • Always finish all of your piecing before pressing your block. It’s easy to stretch your block out of shape if you press before you are done.
  • Press your seams open for a flat, block print like finish.
  • Use a tailor’s block to help you seams stay flat.
  • Precise and variable quilting designs help to enhance the organic shapes in your quilt.

Videos

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Patterns

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Posts

Old Christmas Cards – what do you do with them?

Christmas cards in a pile ;  what now?  Check them off a list and then recycle?  Well yes but I also check through them for inspiration - while I am still in the Christmas mood and all that Christmas fabric is still looking at me. Here are a couple that I know I will work on: I just love the curly papercut tree and reindeer:   plan is to enlarge and then trace onto Heat N Bond and then just fuse onto a winter background.

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Ipad Cover a great success

I wanted to wish you all a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year and also to share my completed i pad cover with you, which is a gift for my neighbour for Christmas.
I found the instructions easy and the end result looks a lot more complicated than it actually was.  Fabrics found in the Lady Sew and Sew Warehouse in Henley.

Many thanks for the continuing inspiration, I've only been quilting for eighteen months and find your website very helpful for techniques, tips and inspiration.

Best wishes,

Roberta

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Tote-it-all Bag in production

Just to say a big thank you for the tote bag workshop.  I saw it yesterday afternoon and am now the proud owner of six new shopping bags. They were a great way of using up some very odd jelly rolls I bought on line and which had some very odd novelty prints in them.  However made up as bags they look great!

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2023-08-23T09:44:20+00:00
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