Matching corners
#11
Originally Posted by kraftykimberly
Dont know if the trick I use is "legal" but a alot times I will put in 3-4 stitches at each joint I want to match and then go back and sew the entire seam. That way I can nudge and fudge along the way but still have my corners matching. That many any sense?
#12
Banned
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Keene, New Hampshire
Posts: 4,211
Originally Posted by kraftykimberly
Dont know if the trick I use is "legal" but a alot times I will put in 3-4 stitches at each joint I want to match and then go back and sew the entire seam. That way I can nudge and fudge along the way but still have my corners matching. That many any sense?
#16
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Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: new york state
Posts: 10,312
Originally Posted by kraftykimberly
Dont know if the trick I use is "legal" but a alot times I will put in 3-4 stitches at each joint I want to match and then go back and sew the entire seam. That way I can nudge and fudge along the way but still have my corners matching. That many any sense?
#18
I have posted this before ... I think it was even a tut ... but can't find it now. so here it is again:
Sew each border on stopping ¼” from corner edge. Turn quilt Right Side Up [facing you] on an ironing surface. Put one border edge over the other. Work with this top border to form a miter from the inside corner of the border [where it stopped ¼” from edge] to the outermost edge of the border. The top folded under border ‘tail’ should after turning be right on top of the lower most border ‘tail’. Pin tails that are visible. Press well with Best Press. Then gently pin a bit away from the pressed line on the inner side of the press to keep in alignment. Sew right on the pressing line from that ¼” seam stop to the edge making sure that the quilt body is folded out of the way … or you can sew from the outside in …. It doesn’t matter as long as you have pinned it. Backstitch at the end where the quilt body is. After sewing check for appearance again before trimming.
This is the easiest way to do it. If the borders aren’t perfect a ‘fudge factor ‘ can be worked into the miter and it will still look great.
If you have multiple borders treat them as one unit but matching as you form the miter on the ironing surface.
All rotary rulers have 45° angle lines on them. This is all you need to successfully miter the corners when you are adding borders to a quilt top.
Hope this helps.
ali
Sew each border on stopping ¼” from corner edge. Turn quilt Right Side Up [facing you] on an ironing surface. Put one border edge over the other. Work with this top border to form a miter from the inside corner of the border [where it stopped ¼” from edge] to the outermost edge of the border. The top folded under border ‘tail’ should after turning be right on top of the lower most border ‘tail’. Pin tails that are visible. Press well with Best Press. Then gently pin a bit away from the pressed line on the inner side of the press to keep in alignment. Sew right on the pressing line from that ¼” seam stop to the edge making sure that the quilt body is folded out of the way … or you can sew from the outside in …. It doesn’t matter as long as you have pinned it. Backstitch at the end where the quilt body is. After sewing check for appearance again before trimming.
This is the easiest way to do it. If the borders aren’t perfect a ‘fudge factor ‘ can be worked into the miter and it will still look great.
If you have multiple borders treat them as one unit but matching as you form the miter on the ironing surface.
All rotary rulers have 45° angle lines on them. This is all you need to successfully miter the corners when you are adding borders to a quilt top.
Hope this helps.
ali
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