
At the beginning of the year, I decided I wanted to make the Plains and Pine temperature quilt (pictured at the left). My particular flavor of autism loves observing natural and random patterns, so once I found a design I liked, I thought I was ready to roll.
That is... until I realized I needed to figure out what fabrics I was going to use and what my temperature ranges needed to be, and then three weeks into January, I realized that I needed to adjust my ranges since my lowest category/color was getting no love at all, and then I added a bunch of colors, and took a couple away, and reworked my ranges a million times until I finally - FINALLY - think I got it right. I hope.

WHEW. This was a lot more thinking and planning than I bargained for!
As I recorded the highs and lows in the Plains & Pine worksheets each day, I kept wishing that there were room for me to write down the assigned color for each day's high and low temperature. Thus, I knew I needed to use my new knowledge of Adobe InDesign to make exactly the worksheets I kept wishing I had, and I knew that I needed to share them with the world.

Although I am personally following the Plains & Pine pattern, these worksheets will be helpful for ANY temperature quilt that uses both the high and low temperatures for each day of the year.
Because I'm such a magnanimous and humble person (lol) I am providing the worksheets for free! Click here to download the pdf!



