what do u do that would bring the quilt police?
#282
this thread still makes me laugh. i have read and re-read the comments and i am still laughing and saying to myself "yep, i do that" or "oh good idea" love the hammering trick to get the bumps out and I find myself saying to my perfect quilting friends "if you can't see it from a galloping horse, who cares" and they ignore me and then mull the thought in their head and we laugh and laugh and they admit "you know, you are right".
#284
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: kansas
Posts: 6,407
Too funny on this thread! I made 3 quilts in a row with lots of points--or at least there were suppose to be! I called them my "no points" series--one if officially labeled "Points?! Points!? We don't need no stinking points!" Steam is my friend--to get blocks into shape and also to get rid of excess on the quilting frame. And just bought a new, neon orange, plastic 3lb mallet to get those seam bumps that just did not get "nested" right flatter.
Since I don't do big quilt shows, I want to spend my time on exploring all the types of quilts I'm curious about instead of just sewing,ripping, sewing, ripping on the same quilt!
Also--check out some of the improvised piecing in modern quilts--they even want you to ignore the rulers! How fun is that!
Since I don't do big quilt shows, I want to spend my time on exploring all the types of quilts I'm curious about instead of just sewing,ripping, sewing, ripping on the same quilt!
Also--check out some of the improvised piecing in modern quilts--they even want you to ignore the rulers! How fun is that!
#285
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2015
Location: Va.
Posts: 5,753
Sharpie Marker when seams don't match up??? Nope, I have never done that...., but I have used a Pigma Micron....
and agressive ironing on starch soaked fabric for blocks that came out too small, or out of square
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and agressive ironing on starch soaked fabric for blocks that came out too small, or out of square
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#286
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Vancouver Island, Beautiful BC
Posts: 2,090
Oh this is an old thread, but as it has come up again here goes.
I am making a 60 degree triangle quilt for a very good friend's baby. Lots and lots of points. Do they match? Maybe a couple... There also is one seam that the fabric was short on one side, so the seam is barely catching a thread on one side. Time for an applique!
I will be using the machine for the binding, this quilt should gets lots of washing, it will need to be as secure as possible. My hand stitching would not stand up to weekly washing.
I am making a 60 degree triangle quilt for a very good friend's baby. Lots and lots of points. Do they match? Maybe a couple... There also is one seam that the fabric was short on one side, so the seam is barely catching a thread on one side. Time for an applique!
I will be using the machine for the binding, this quilt should gets lots of washing, it will need to be as secure as possible. My hand stitching would not stand up to weekly washing.
#288
Power Poster
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Southern California
Posts: 19,127
PLEASE, don't use a Sharpie. I have done this for decades using Micron Pigma pens. I occasional use a rotary cutter towards me but I am very careful and use a 28mm blade. I don't always iron my fabric because I don't wash it but I don't end up with bowed strips. And yes, I am trying to get better at changing a needle when it is dull. Breaking a needle is hard on your machine.
#289
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,018
Oh, I too cringed reading all these "old" posts......I'm sorry, I may be insulting some with what I'm going to post now but...in my mind I cannot justify doing this by just eyeball cutting, skimping on seam allowances, covering a mistake with an appliqué, or whatever....just to get it done.....I feel I have invested too much time, $$$, know-how to just slap something together and give it to someone or keep, and if it's not the best I can do, oh well! I am not a perfectionist by any means, but I do have limits in what I let slide. Ah, having said all that....I don't pre wash...if I think there might be a bleed, I'll do the hot water in cup test....and no starch..not a spit of it or soak til cardboard....and I do not wash/dry anything after I finish it.....as it is being worked on it is not being dragged around a dirty place with grimmy hands, so no need...so now I leave the confessional! .....and ducking the slings and arrows!
#290
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2013
Posts: 9,299
When I was selecting fabrics for my first big quilt, the Quilt Police at the LQS informed me most emphatically that I could not mix prints with cream backgrounds with those that were white. I just said "Hmm, really?" , then bought what I wanted. Every scrappy quilt since then has both white and off-white fabrics.
I wonder how many of us rebels are second born?
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