Unbelievable find - next steps
#11
If you are using money, time, and effort to finish this quilt-- why have repaired holes in it? You can't magically make that fabric whole again. If you applique over it, it will just be a bandage. If you replace it, it could look like normal patch work, where a person used scraps of fabric that didn't exactly match. That's okay, it's often done! I'd choose a red that looks similar and it would be a satisfactory solution.
The border is your choice, use your own preference. Besides cutting the edge straight then sewing on the border strip, or appliqueing the top over the border strip, you can also use the method where you face the hexies. Here's a tutorial if you haven't seen that way yet. http://faeriesandfibres.blogspot.com...uilt-with.html
The border is your choice, use your own preference. Besides cutting the edge straight then sewing on the border strip, or appliqueing the top over the border strip, you can also use the method where you face the hexies. Here's a tutorial if you haven't seen that way yet. http://faeriesandfibres.blogspot.com...uilt-with.html
#13
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Asheville, previously Lake Vermilion, Tarpon Springs, Duluth, St Paul, Soudan
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I would remove the damaged pieces and replace them. As to the edges—if two edges have already been trimmed to straight (the sides), then trim the other two straight so that they match.
#16
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Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Lake Stevens, WA
Posts: 1,914
Applique replacement pieces over the torn ones. I've heard that a quilt is dated from the newest fabric, and that worn patches should remain to confirm that it has been mended.
I finished off an apple-core quilt by laying the border under the edges and stitching down a narrow bias strip, so Gay's suggestion of folding under hexagon edges sounds good to me.
I finished off an apple-core quilt by laying the border under the edges and stitching down a narrow bias strip, so Gay's suggestion of folding under hexagon edges sounds good to me.
#17
Those few pieces would be easy to just remove and replace with similar fabric. IMHO, I don't think it has to be a perfect match. repairs are part of the history of the quilt.
You can cut the bottom and top edges to be straight also, just like the sides. As far as the fraying edge, I would use a strip of light weight iron on interfacing around the edge, maybe about two inches wide. Then finish with border/s of your choosing. The interfacing will not interfere with finishing.
What a great find. I love to do this kind of work on found treasures. Keep us posted as you progress with this project.
peace
You can cut the bottom and top edges to be straight also, just like the sides. As far as the fraying edge, I would use a strip of light weight iron on interfacing around the edge, maybe about two inches wide. Then finish with border/s of your choosing. The interfacing will not interfere with finishing.
What a great find. I love to do this kind of work on found treasures. Keep us posted as you progress with this project.
peace
#18
Happy to see this post. I have a GFG that my husband's grandmother or great grandmother (he doesn't know for sure which) pieced. I was wondering how I might finish it. Now I have some suggestions on how to go about it. Thanks.
#19
I've done this before, I appliqued over the damaged hexi with a hexi of similar color, I did not use a border but I just put binding on it, you can trim the frayed edges and put a white binding on them.
#20
Have done a wall hanging this way & I like it. Now I think I will do the throw size pieces that I have done all by hand the same way. Then I will have the problem of how to quilt them. THANK YOU for sharing this idea.
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11-06-2009 05:01 AM