The Quilter’s Guide to Liberty Fabrics: Mixing Wiltshire Shadow, Fern & Emily Belle
The Quilter's Guide to Liberty Fabrics: Mixing Wiltshire Shadow, Fern & Emily Belle
Three of the most-loved Liberty prints in the warehouse — and exactly how to pair them so your next quilt looks like it was planned by a professional.
The Fabric Every Quilter Eventually Falls For
Ask any quilter what's on their "one day" list and Liberty fabric comes up almost every time. It's been printed in London since 1875, and that legacy shows in every metre — the prints are finer, the colours sit truer, and the cotton itself behaves differently under the needle.
Liberty's Tana Lawn and Lasenby cotton bases are tightly woven and beautifully smooth, which means crisp points on your patchwork, sharp seams, and prints that line up edge to edge without the warping you sometimes get from cheaper quilting cottons. For English paper piecing, hexagons, or anything with small, fiddly pieces, it's the difference between a quilt that looks handmade and one that looks heirloom.
The shortcut to a designer-looking quilt: pair one Liberty "statement" print — like Wiltshire Shadow or Fern — with a softer tonal print like Emily Belle. The tonal print calms the statement print down and ties the whole top together.
Meet the Prints — and How to Mix Them
Wiltshire Shadow, Fern and Emily Belle are three very different Liberty prints — a moody floral, a fine botanical line-drawing, and a soft tonal bloom. Used together, they cover every role a print needs to play in a quilt top.
| Best Used As | Pairs Beautifully With | |
|---|---|---|
| Wiltshire ShadowA rich, layered floral with deep tonal shading — your statement print. | Feature blocks, borders, and quilt backings where you want the eye to land. | Statement |
| FernFine, intricate leaf linework on a soft ground — adds texture without competing. | Sashing, secondary blocks, and bridging colour between bolder prints. | Texture |
| Emily BelleDelicate botanical outlines — daisies, peonies and cornflowers — over a plain ground. | Backgrounds, binding, and calming the palette down between busier prints. | Tonal |
Use your tonal print (Emily Belle) for roughly 60% of the quilt top — backgrounds and large areas. Bring in your texture print (Fern) for around 30% — sashing and secondary shapes. Then let your statement print (Wiltshire Shadow) take the final 10% as feature blocks or a border. The result reads as planned, not pieced together from leftovers.
Cutting, Pressing & Piecing Liberty Cotton
Liberty's lightweight lawn and Lasenby cotton are a joy to sew once you know a few small adjustments. Here's how to get crisp points and flat seams every time.
What can you make with a Liberty bundle? A little goes a long way with these prints. Even fat quarters and half-metre cuts are enough for projects that put the fabric centre stage.
- English paper-pieced hexagon cushions
- Liberty-bordered lap quilts and table runners
- Patchwork tote linings and zip pouches
- Quilt-as-you-go coasters and mug rugs
- Mixed-print sample squares for your next big project
Build Your Liberty Stash
Our Liberty range moves quickly — these heritage prints are limited each time they come into the warehouse. Here's where to start.



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Ready to Start Your Liberty Quilt?
Wiltshire Shadow, Fern, Emily Belle and the rest of our Liberty range are in stock now — but these heritage prints sell out fast. Order your bundle today and start cutting this weekend.
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