
by Mary Kay Mouton
C&T Publishing, Feb. 16, 2009 $27.95
Delivered to book shelves for sale beginning Feb. 16: Mary Kay Mouton's first book for C&T Publishing. It features a new twist on foundation piecing.
The author, originally from Illinois now lives in Milledgeville, Georgia where she is a member of the Lake Oconee Quilt Guild, a local bee group called the Old Capital Stitchers, and the Georgia Quilt Council.
Her quilts have been juried into The Pacific International Quilt Festival, Quilt Odyssey, The Pennsylvania National Quilt Extravaganza, The American Quilter's Society Annual Quilt Show & Contest, The American Quilter's Society Quilt Exposition, The American Sewing Exposition, and Road to

Photos: cover of her book; sampler of some of her quilt blocks pieced using her new technique; 18x18-inch quilt that won first place in the Road to California Quilt Show; book author Mary Kay Mouton; and last a detailed photo of four-basket quilt square.
Mary Kay Mouton in her own words:
It was in the making of a pieced border for one of my art quilts that I fumbled into Flip-Flop Paper Piecing. I was constructing a block featuring a plaid fabric. Because I am nothing if not compulsive, I wanted that plaid to look continuous across the block, to be perfectly matched. And yet, I was tired just thinking of fussy cutting each piece and sewing each so precisely that the plaid would appear undisturbed, though actually broken by other non-plaids pieces in the block.
Suddenly I thought, why not just plop the plaid fabric down on a printed paper foundation. Then insert the other non-plaid fabrics by sewing them from both sides of the foundation! The plaid would look continuous because it would be continuous, and it would be precise because it would be foundation pieced on a printed foundation. By golly, I was on to something here!
Once I performed that first basic Work-Alternately-On-Both-Sides-Of-the-Foundation maneuver, my mind was flooded with one variation after another of what has come to be called Flip-Flop Paper Piecing (so named because the foundation is flipped back & forth, back & forth, flip flop, flip flop, as seams are sewn first on one side of the foundation, and then the other).
Sewing has been a passion since I first became armed and dangerous, needle-wise, at the age of 12. My mother took me to Singers'
I grew up, though, to become a Medical Records Administrator, very practical, very dull, very unsubversive. Next along came marriage, and oh-my-goodness-a-baby-changes-everything. My plans were to go back to work when my babies went off to school, but life intervened. A home-based business using my sewing skills came to my rescue. I made and repaired doll clothes. In my "spare time," mostly at odd moments stolen between the math tutoring and the potato mashing, I developed my only passion outside my family and my cat: quilting.
Quilting is the best of sewing.
(I still mourn over the perfectly executed, striped linen suit that was, shall we say, less than flattering.) I started competition quilting. There is nothing like the thrill of having your quilts accepted into national quilt shows, ribbon won or not.
It doesn't have to fit, and it can
never make you look fat.
My quilts were largely appliqué, and generally nostalgic art with just a bit of piecing thrown in for contrast. But, as I worked with my new technique, I discovered hundreds, even thousands, of blocks could be pieced, each on its own undivided paper foundation. My greatest inspiration came one night, when half-asleep, dreaming of, what else, quilting, I sprang up to consciousness with the realization I could piece an 8-pointed Lemoyne Star, Flip-Flop-style. And once you have a Lemoyne Star, a Mariner's Compass is not far behind.
I developed 13 maneuvers in my piecing system, and submitted them to C&T Publishing, who, bless their little hearts, decided they'd take me in and publish my book. Now anyone can learn to Flip-Flop Paper Piece. Precision sewing no longer requires either exact and careful cutting, or the meticulous stitching of an "accurate" 1/4" seam. Nor does it demand constant measuring, and seam ripping, and resewing as the block is constructed. A little Flip-Flop maneuver here and there will produce precision, painlessly.
And the beauty part is that Flip-Flop Paper Piecing fits any quilting style or genre. The final product can be an innovative swirl of distorted blocks, a pieced landscape, or a reproduction of an antique masterpiece. It's all up to the individual subverter. Flip-Flopping is a technique with the speed and accuracy of traditional foundation piecing but with a range as limitless as our imaginations: There are Flip-Flop circles & Flip-Flop borders, Flip-Flop trees and Flip-Flop Houses, and a sky full of Flip -Flop stars. I love this technique.