Enlarging an already completed bed quilt.
#14
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Thornton, Colorado
Posts: 1,023
Consider buying a bedspread large enough to go all the way to the floor. Then place any quilt that no longer covers the mattress sides over the bedspread. It is a nice way to enjoy a treasured quilt. In my case, thanks to the mattress which is deeper than the previous mattress along with a 4-inch memory foam topper, I found a king size bedspread perfect for our queen bed. Bedspreads are somewhat difficult to find in stores, and they are more available online. Thin bedspreads are not easy to find, either.
#15
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Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Jeffersonville, In
Posts: 2,621
I just finished doing that. I have been telling people, if someone asks you to enlarge a quilt that is already finished, try really hard to avoid doing that. For me it was more difficult than doing it from scratch. I took the binding off and added blocks all the way around. For me there was a lot of hand work involved and I have a tendency to avoid handwork. I'm just glad it is done and the recipient likes it. I don't have any pictures at the moment.
#16
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Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Grass Lake, MI and Bradenton, FL
Posts: 785
Dina. Thanks for your suggestion but I have a few questions...When you sewed the addition to the quilt was the quilt on the top or the addition? Looks like your binding was the same fabric as your original border. However my binding contrasts with my border. I worry that if my sewing wasn't perfect it would really show. How wide is your hem? I'm thinking of sewing the addition in a six inch tube so that there are no raw edges but worry that would be too much bulk when sewing onto the binding. I love your quilt! You did a great job enlarging it.!
Last edited by janjanq; 07-16-2018 at 05:21 AM.
#17
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,857
You can add additional borders using the 'quilt as you go' techniques (slightly modified). Attach the back border and the front border to the trimmed 'new' edge. If adding 2 borders, I would recommend using one wider piece of batting rather than 2 pieces. Then bind as usual. I used this technique to add two 4" borders to my daughter's lap size quilt and it worked perfectly.
#18
Dina. Thanks for your suggestion but I have a few questions...When you sewed the addition to the quilt was the quilt on the top or the addition? Looks like your binding was the same fabric as your original border. However my binding contrasts with my border. I worry that if my sewing wasn't perfect it would really show. How wide is your hem? I'm thinking of sewing the addition in a six inch tube so that there are no raw edges but worry that would be too much bulk when sewing onto the binding. I love your quilt! You did a great job enlarging it.!
I have taken pictures of both the top and bottom of this quilt, which I will attach after I answer your questions. Perhaps they will help. You may have to squint at the first picture to even see the part of the binding that peeks through.
I made a very small hem, probably 1/2 inch. First I ironed 1/4 inch and then I folded that over and ironed 1/2 inch. It left an easy surface to sew. I made the new border six inches.
I hope this is helpful.
edited....the pictures ended up very close together. The light fabric with the tiny squiggle is the backing of my quilt in the second picture. The first picture is the bottom of the front of the quilt. The second is the back flipped up so you can see what it looks like from the back.
Dina
Last edited by Dina; 07-16-2018 at 09:16 AM.
#19
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Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Grass Lake, MI and Bradenton, FL
Posts: 785
When I added the new border to the binding, I just lined the edges up like I normally sew, right sides together. I sewed a 1/4 inch seam. One wasn't over the other. To do this, I sort of sewed right down the middle of the binding. My binding is the same as the border, so it blended right in, but I don't think it would matter if it was a different color binding. It wouldn't show up much at all.
I have taken pictures of both the top and bottom of this quilt, which I will attach after I answer your questions. Perhaps they will help. You may have to squint at the first picture to even see the part of the binding that peeks through.
I made a very small hem, probably 1/2 inch. First I ironed 1/4 inch and then I folded that over and ironed 1/2 inch. It left an easy surface to sew. I made the new border six inches.
I hope this is helpful.
edited....the pictures ended up very close together. The light fabric with the tiny squiggle is the backing of my quilt in the second picture. The first picture is the bottom of the front of the quilt. The second is the back flipped up so you can see what it looks like from the back.
Dina
I have taken pictures of both the top and bottom of this quilt, which I will attach after I answer your questions. Perhaps they will help. You may have to squint at the first picture to even see the part of the binding that peeks through.
I made a very small hem, probably 1/2 inch. First I ironed 1/4 inch and then I folded that over and ironed 1/2 inch. It left an easy surface to sew. I made the new border six inches.
I hope this is helpful.
edited....the pictures ended up very close together. The light fabric with the tiny squiggle is the backing of my quilt in the second picture. The first picture is the bottom of the front of the quilt. The second is the back flipped up so you can see what it looks like from the back.
Dina
#20
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Grass Lake, MI and Bradenton, FL
Posts: 785
You can add additional borders using the 'quilt as you go' techniques (slightly modified). Attach the back border and the front border to the trimmed 'new' edge. If adding 2 borders, I would recommend using one wider piece of batting rather than 2 pieces. Then bind as usual. I used this technique to add two 4" borders to my daughter's lap size quilt and it worked perfectly.
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