December’s Island Batik challenge is to “Select a holiday that holds special meaning for you, such as Halloween, Christmas, Diwali, Thanksgiving, Easter etc. and make a project of any kind.”
Here’s my story:
When we went to Newfoundland in August, my niece and her fiancé graciously took us to the East Coast Quilt Company in St. John’s. As they waited for me, sitting on this fabulous sofa, I told them to look through the book I was buying (The Quilted Stash) to see if there was anything they wanted.


They chose the dark blue tree skirt (photo on the right) … and the pattern was not in the book! No fear, it was early in our trip and I knew I’d be visiting a few more quilt stores. I looked for the pattern, but with no luck. After I got home, I looked on-line and the stores I searched were sold out.
That’s no problem!!! I figured I could use some of the appliqué designs in the book, add a few others and the tree skirt could happen. (As it turned out, I used none of the designs in the book!)
The extra bonus (for me) was that Island Batik’s December challenge was to create something inspired by my chosen holiday!!! The inspiration was Christmas and the dark blue tree skirt.
Elements of the Tree Skirt
The reindeer and the sleigh were cut with the Accuquilt die “Go Sleigh & Snowflakes. ” The trees were cut with the Go! Holiday Medley.


A simple zigzag outlined the sleigh and reindeer, while a stitch with intermittent stars outlined the trees.





I found a free colouring book page of some Jellybean Row Houses (famous in St. John’s) here. I simplified the page and made a row of 5 houses. Here is a couple of pictures of some of the actual Jellybean Row Houses, followed by my 5 houses.




Some of the family ancestors were fishermen. My husband fondly remembers many fishing days in a small dory.
The dory was from a Row by Row from Fibre Lily in 2017. I finished the Row by Row in July ’22 and you can read about it HERE.
Many older houses in Newfoundland are called “Salt Box Houses.” I found a colouring picture of one HERE.


The rugged coast of Newfoundland has many lighthouses! The lighthouse is a simplified and smaller version of one I designed in 2019.


Here is the tree skirt, prior to the applique, with snowflakes I decided to not use. The skirt was spray basted onto black 80/20 Hobbs Batting … and then the appliqué began.

The first picture shows a tree mid-appliqué. The garland was stitched first, and then the outline. The stars were quilted using the smallest “Twinkle” ruler from Silly Moon Quilt Company.


The Tree Skirt
Here it is on the design wall, before we took it for a photo shoot.

The photo shoot was a bit of a bust. We went to a nursery that has tons of trees, but it was hard to get pictures with the trees squashed together. Then we went to a hardware store, and again, it wasn’t easy. Most of the trees had huge cones around them. I have a geranium still blooming and it worked for the centre, as well as the shrub. I refuse to dig out my own Christmas tree until later in the month, so, it will have to wait until it travels across the country and arrives at it’s destination!





Tree Skirt Stats:

Size: 52″ diameter
Fabrics:
All Fabrics were from Island Batik: The tree skirt body was cut out with 18o wedges and was made with “Ravine.” I love the mottled dark blue/navy. The reindeer and trees were from “Celtic Fields.” The sleigh was from a 10″ square from the “Cheers” collection. The rest of the elements were from my Island Batik scrap box. The binding is “Ice” … I had to chuckle at the name of the fabric as it was perfect for the binding and very typical of Newfoundland winters!
Thread: I used a large number of Aurifil Threads
- #2325 (linen): outline reindeer
- #2250 (red): outline sleigh, interior of tree garland, lighthouse door
- #5007 (light grey blue): garland, reindeer harness, stars
- #2840 (loden green): tree outline
- #2692 (black): house and lighthouse definition, lighthouse window
- #2134 (spun gold): lighthouse light
- #2000 (light sand): lighthouse outline
- #5004 (grey smoke): outline houses and windows
- #2309 (silver white): snow
- #6724 (40 wt) (moonshine): binding
- monofilament: quilting
Thank You!
Disclosure: The fabrics, batting, thread and needles were generously supplied by the following companies: Thank you, Island Batik, Aurifil Thread, Hobbs Batting, Schmetz Needles, Accuquilt





Island Batik Ambassadors
Visit the rest of the Ambassadors to see what they are celebrating and their chosen projects!
Brenda Alburl ~ Songbird Designs
Renee Atkinson ~ Pink Tulip Quilting
Pamela Boatright ~ PamelaQuilts
Susan Deshensky ~ Lady Blue Quilts
Brittany Fisher ~ Bobbin with Brittany
Preeti Harris ~ Sew Preeti Quilts
Mania Hatziioannidi ~ Mania for quilts
Reed Johnson ~ Blue Bear Quilts
Victoria Johnson ~ Forever Quilting for You
Randi Jones ~ Randi’s Roost
Connie Kauffman ~ Kauffman Designs
Emily Leachman ~ The Darling Dogwood
Denise Looney ~ Quiltery – For The Love Of Geese
Leah Malasky ~ Quilted Delights
Maryellen McAuliffe ~ Mary Mack Made Mine
Elita Sharpe ~ Busy Needle
Gail Sheppard ~ Quilting Gail. You are here!
Sandra Starley ~ Textile Time Travels
Jennifer Thomas ~ Curlicue Creations
Suzy Webster ~ Websterquilt
Anorina Morris ~ sameliasmum.com
Lisa Pickering ~ Lisa’s Quilting Passion
Sarah Pitcher ~ Pitcher’s Boutique
Claudia Porter ~ Create with Claudia
Lana Russel ~ Lana Quilts
This is really a treasure of a tree skirt! Nice job, Gail…love it!
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Thank you very much! 💙
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It turned out great. Well done!
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Thanks, Anja! It was fun to put the east coast elements on it!
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I’ve never attempted a tree skirt but I do need one! LOL Looks like a fun project.
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This one was beyond my comfort zone, but I had a lot of fun with it! 🙂
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What a lovely tree skirt, I love the fun details!
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Thanks, Frédérique! It was a fun quilt to make! And out of my comfort zone!
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What a beautiful and thoughtful gift! I love all the different elements in your tree skirt and the way you accented it with the specialty stitches.
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Thanks, Jennifer! It was a lot of fun to do! 🙂
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What a great tree skirt! I love how you used a preset embroidery stitch to make the trees so beautiful! Great job and sure to be loved.
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Thanks, Sue! It was fun to use stitches on my machine!
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You did a great job from an inspiration to a project with its own applique and meaning. I love the jellyean row houses, the salt box, dory and lighthouse…all very familiar here in New England, too. I would love that under my tree….maybe for next year!
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Thanks, Kathleen! Yes, most of the elements fit with the East Coast …I can’t wait to see the tree skirt you create! 🙂
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Well that turned out really cute! I love that couch, though!!!
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Yes, the couch is super cute!
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Such a fun tree skirt! Even nicer is that it’s personlized based on your family’s history. Congrats on such a cool finish.
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Thanks Kate! It was fun to make! 🙂
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