This was a block swap of another kind than the ones where quilters make blocks to exchange. That would be fun. No. No. This was a poor-planning-on-my-part block swap.
In photo #1 you see the block layout I had initially chosen for my "Roman Road" sampler quilt. I knew I did not much like the gold and green block, but at that point, the thought of making another block just wearied me. So, I forged ahead and pieced the whole top with the "iffy" block in place.
Then...and not until then...I saw how that one block threw the whole quilt off balance due to the "weight" of the gold fabric in it, since that was the same fabric in the focal center block, as well as the outer border pieces.
I just could not let it go. So much work had gone into the quilt, and it seemed I should be able to like it at the end of the process. So, the weeks rocked on, and finally I decided to work up a replacement block. First candidate was the disappearing nine patch blue in picture 2. Didn't like it. Had expected to. Was really miffed and somewhat discouraged.
Days passed. Nights, too. What to do...what to do. I liked the "economy block", but could not figure out how to make it the nine and a half unfinished size I needed, and wanted it to finish with the center square on point. Finally, I just drew a design and foundation pieced what became the replacement block (photo #3).
This (replacing a block that has already been pieced and sashed into a quilt top) is not recommended. Not at all. I was fortunate the piece went in fairly smoothly. Don't get in a rush when placing your blocks. The decisions you make then, need to be ones with which you can live (and sleep.)
One would think after all this that I would have sandwiched and finished the quilt by now. Well, it is sandwiched and awaiting my nerve to build up to quilting. It will be the largest quilt I've quilted on my small-throat machine. I'll let you know.