Sashing help please!
#11
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: in my stash mostly
Posts: 882
You could go back and take up the seams to get them to fit. Sometimes it just a matter of your seam going off the quarter inch at the end of the line of stitching. I am really bad about this and am trying to stay aware when I finish a seam. It's the easiest way I found to do it.
delma
delma
#13
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Valley of the sun, AZ
Posts: 1,070
It looks like your blocks may have some bias edges which can cause them to stretch. Take it apart, starch and iron your blocks, check to make sure they all measure the same before trying to re-sash. When doing sashes you need to pin well and ease in any extra fabric so that the blocks all line up with the pre-determined length of the long sashing pieces. When ripping out long stretches of sewing, I like to cut one side of the bobbin sewing thread (use a ripper or pointed snips) every 3 to 4 stitches. This allows me to pull the whole top thread and it will come right apart.
#16
Here's my method for lining up sashing strips, assuming the blocks are somewhat uniform.
Sew the first row together. Sew the long line of sashing underneath that row. Turn it over. Using a ruler and pencil, extend each block's seam lines by *marking* that long line of sashing. Basically these are virtual seam lines in the long sashing strip.
Sew the next row together. When sewing this row to the long sashing strip, first match each seam line to each sashing mark and pin. When you sew this row on to the sashing strip, ease or stretch as necessary to keep those pins lined up.
Believe me, this method works and it's easy to do.
Sew the first row together. Sew the long line of sashing underneath that row. Turn it over. Using a ruler and pencil, extend each block's seam lines by *marking* that long line of sashing. Basically these are virtual seam lines in the long sashing strip.
Sew the next row together. When sewing this row to the long sashing strip, first match each seam line to each sashing mark and pin. When you sew this row on to the sashing strip, ease or stretch as necessary to keep those pins lined up.
Believe me, this method works and it's easy to do.
#17
Had this problem on one of the first quilts I made ... I quickly became quite a "cover up" artist ... created small hearts in a contrasting color and hand sewed them over the wonky intersections. LOL Process solved the issue and the quilt looked o.k.
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