Help me remember: waves?????
#1
Help me remember: waves?????
So I just finished a small lap-sized quilt and thought I’d squared it up...but maybe not. Is that what is causing the small waves in the edges of my quilt? I haven’t washed it yet...maybe that will help flatten it out. It’s not for show, just for love...but I’m curious as to what went wrong And how to remedy it???
Thank you for helping!!!
Thank you for helping!!!
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 07-06-2019 at 09:50 AM. Reason: shouting/all caps
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,539
Usually waves in the border means there is too much fabric in the border. Measure the body of your quilt, cut your border to match ( I leave 1/2 inch extra) and pin the the top and bottom to the quilt edge. Then evenly space pins between the top and bottom easing any extra top along the way.
#4
Super Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: NE Pa.
Posts: 1,738
I measure my border from the top of my quilt to the bottom in the center and cut my length that way. Then I pin it to the side and starting with the center then on either end and work it in if necessary then when I get the sides on I measure side to side from the center and cut my top and bottom border, prevents any waves. when Quilts go to the longarmer to done there biggest complaint is a wavy border
#7
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2015
Posts: 594
Just a thought here: I wonder if the waves are more noticeable when, in sewing the border to the quilt body, the border is on the bottom or the top. I would think that unless your machine has a feed equalizer feature (I forget the proper name--maybe continuous feed?) then the bottom fabric would tend to be pushed through at a greater rate than the top fabric, due to the feed dogs pulling the bottom fabric through. Thus you would tend to get waves on the bottom fabric. Maybe.
I have found a method that works for me, kind of the lazy girl's method. I just cut a length that I know is plenty long, and lay it in place on top of the quilt edge (which has been staystitched at the edge), on a bed or other flat surface. I very gently smooth the two fabrics together, not pulling or easing at all. Just lay one on top of the other, making sure each is flat. Then I pin, every few inches, to make sure there is no stretching on either piece. Maybe every 4 inches. Then sew. Any little stretching that the presser foot or feed dogs create (or natural stretchiness of the fabric that is cut WOF) will be eased in before you get to the next pin. This has worked for me. No waves.
I have found a method that works for me, kind of the lazy girl's method. I just cut a length that I know is plenty long, and lay it in place on top of the quilt edge (which has been staystitched at the edge), on a bed or other flat surface. I very gently smooth the two fabrics together, not pulling or easing at all. Just lay one on top of the other, making sure each is flat. Then I pin, every few inches, to make sure there is no stretching on either piece. Maybe every 4 inches. Then sew. Any little stretching that the presser foot or feed dogs create (or natural stretchiness of the fabric that is cut WOF) will be eased in before you get to the next pin. This has worked for me. No waves.
#9
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 9,563
Need more information.
Does your quilt have borders? Have you sewn on the binding yet? Are the blocks/fabrics at the edge of the quilt cut on the bias?
All of these items will have some effect on wavy borders depending on how you manage them. Please tell us more about your quilt, or maybe post a picture.
Does your quilt have borders? Have you sewn on the binding yet? Are the blocks/fabrics at the edge of the quilt cut on the bias?
All of these items will have some effect on wavy borders depending on how you manage them. Please tell us more about your quilt, or maybe post a picture.
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