SITD Quilting
#1
SITD Quilting
I have heard that SITD quilting can weaken seams and maybe not make the quilt last as long as an overall quilting pattern or a quarter inch from the seam outline quilting pattern. Any ideas or experiences?
#3
Power Poster
Join Date: May 2008
Location: MN
Posts: 24,660
I have two couch quilts that are mostly quilted with stitch in the ditch quilting. The bindings are badly frayed on both of them. But there is no wear showing on the seams or by the quilting.
The thread i used was Coats and Clark cotton covered polyester dual duty thread.
The thread i used was Coats and Clark cotton covered polyester dual duty thread.
#5
I can't see how SITD could weaken the seam since the stitches actually go in the ditch, which is beside the seam, and not through the stitches in the seam. My quilts that were quilted that way are doing fine.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: California
Posts: 1,987
If you were to iron your seams open and kept a perfect SITD you wouldn't be actually quilting since you would just be going over the threads. But if you iron to one side you're stitching over the seam allowance. I like to iron to the side and the quilt very close to the ditch but not actually into the ditch. I find my wobbles don't show that way. They do if I try to keep in the ditch.
#8
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 15,639
That statement only makes sense when the seams are pressed open. In that case there really isn't even a ditch to stitch in. Quilting 1/4" in from each side would do the job.
When the seam is pressed to the side. there is no reason for a seam to be weakened.
When the seam is pressed to the side. there is no reason for a seam to be weakened.
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