In January of 2021, I discovered the 100 Day Project. Since then, I have successfully completed eight of them—including this year’s 100 Day Stitch Book 2025 with Ann Wood. I am counting this project as a Make Nine finish.
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100 Day Stitch Book 2025. |
Slot-and-tab book binding
The 4-page slot-and-tab signatures are finished and the Stitch Book is assembled. The cover (which was not part of the Stitch Book instructions but was added) was embroidered with “100 day Stitch Book” and the year to document the project. Here are few of the inside page spreads, starting with the first page.
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Inside front cover and page 1 of the Stitch Book 2025. |
I think a few of the spreads look very cohesive, especially those that had the same background fabric.
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Two-page spread of the 100 Day Stitch Book 2025. |
As the 100 Day Project progressed, I referenced previously stitched pages and began thinking about side-by-side pages (page spreads). Even though these pages were stitched at different times (not consecutively), the page spread looks intentional.
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Two-page spread of the 100 Day Stitch Book 2025. |
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Two-page spread of the 100 Day Stitch Book 2025. |
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Two-page spread of the 100 Day Stitch Book 2025. |
Here is the last page and the back cover.
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Last page and inside back cover of the 100 Day Stitch Book 2025. |
Things I learned from making the Stitch Book
The assembling of the pages into the slot-and-tab book structure was quite interesting but somewhat challenging. Were I to make another book with the slot-and-tab construction, here are tips and things I would consider:
- Leave more unstitched margins on the page perimeter. The pages with appliquéd fabrics added to the bulk—especially at the gutter—causing a few pages to not lie as flat as they could have.
- I think less pages would make a better, flatter book. I think an 8-page or 12 page book would be good to try. Or a book with a larger page size.
- Thankfully I added 1 inch to the width of the front and back covers. This allowed the covers to extend past the interior pages. Note: the front and back covers actually wrap around and create the spine of the book, so extra fabric is needed.
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View of the slot-and-tab book spine. |
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View of the stitch book spine. |
- For a future book, I would make the “tab” pages with a slightly deeper tab, and the “slot” pages with a slightly larger slot. The initial page assembly of my book was tight and I unpicked a few stitches to accommodate a little bit of “wiggle room.”
- This is a fun scrap buster project. I used four different fabrics I had in my stash for the base pages. With planning, it would be interesting to use the same fabric for all of the pages.
- I would also plan to have front and back covers for the book and incorporate this into the initial design of the book.
A perfect improvisational, stash-busting project
The 100 Day Stitch Book was a good project to use up scraps and random bits of fabric cut-offs. Since this was an “improvisational” themed project, I used scraps specifically from my improv quilts over the years (I’m glad I saved cut-offs from those projects). In addition to scraps from my improv quilts, I incorporated students’ scraps from the “inventory department” of my recent Intro to Improv Quilting class as the Folk School.
I also used random lengths of embroidery floss, yarn, and perle cotton for the improv stitching and enjoyed researching potential stitches from embroidery books in my library.
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Top view of slot-and-tab fabric stitch book. |
Make Nine finish: a Wild Card prompt
My 100 Day Stitch Book is fulfilling one of the Wild Card prompts for Make Nine 2025. It was a great 100 Day Project and I would do it again.
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Make Nine 2025 Wild Card prompt. |
This is the 4th documented completed project for Make Nine 2025.
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Make Nine 2025 tracker. |