Botched border remedy?
#21
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Flagstaff, Arizona
Posts: 9,475
Your quilt is very pretty and I am sorry you are so disappointed. I think you must have had something else in mind and maybe the quilter did not understand or the instructions from you were not clear enough to the quilter. I hope that over time you learn to like it.
#22
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2019
Posts: 12
Thank you for trying to make me feel better about the quilt. I felt the dark green design detracted from the beauty of the blocks, which are very intricately embroidered by my late aunt. If the bottom can be cut off and rebound I could probably live with it, not love it. I may ask her if she would mind redoing that for me. Maybe I am just too OCD or something...
#23
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Alberta, Canada
Posts: 1,055
It really doesn’t matter how many people like the quilt...you don’t. I agree with you that the different border size is bothersome. If it were me, I would take the binding off and cut the wider the same size as the narrow one plus a seam allowance and then reattach the binding.
If you can live with the dark green that would be the easiest fix. If you really can’t then you have a lot of deconstruction to do. It is fixable if you want to do the work or get someone else to do it depending on your budget. The embroidery is lovely and you should be able to show case it the way that you choose.
If you can live with the dark green that would be the easiest fix. If you really can’t then you have a lot of deconstruction to do. It is fixable if you want to do the work or get someone else to do it depending on your budget. The embroidery is lovely and you should be able to show case it the way that you choose.
#24
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Greater Peoria, IL -- just moved!
Posts: 6,182
It's hard when we have a vision of something and we don't quite reach it. It's one of the ways I score my projects, sometimes a close but not quite is worse than a complete miss. While you aren't appreciating the "checkerboard" effect and you were expecting a lattice setting the two are so radically different that maybe you can grow to appreciate the difference.
And there are some things that are just going to bug us, for me the border difference is something I can live with because the only time I will really notice it is when I fold the quilt up. But I have some tiny little piddling things that annoy me in some of my projects and even when I point them out, other people don't see what I'm talking about.
I think you are just a bit too close to the project right now. Put it away in a closet for about 3 months and try not to think about it and then pull it out. If you still hate it and will never use it, then change it or give it or do something. Also think about if you had never seen it and if your aunt showed you the top because it is how she ended up having it done -- would you love it then or still hate it? lol, you are allowed to still hate it, just a question to ask yourself.
And there are some things that are just going to bug us, for me the border difference is something I can live with because the only time I will really notice it is when I fold the quilt up. But I have some tiny little piddling things that annoy me in some of my projects and even when I point them out, other people don't see what I'm talking about.
I think you are just a bit too close to the project right now. Put it away in a closet for about 3 months and try not to think about it and then pull it out. If you still hate it and will never use it, then change it or give it or do something. Also think about if you had never seen it and if your aunt showed you the top because it is how she ended up having it done -- would you love it then or still hate it? lol, you are allowed to still hate it, just a question to ask yourself.
#25
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2019
Posts: 12
Do you think she would take offense if I ask her to cut off the bottom and redo the trim. I am not a quilter. I just like to embroider blocks for children’s quilts. Is there a reason a quilter would make the border wider on the bottom than the top or was it a mistake?
#28
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: South Puget Sound, Wa. State
Posts: 2,462
I think the quilt is lovely.
As for the borders not being the same size, there is a school of thought that the bottom border be wider than the top. It is most like matting a picture. It looks most pleasing when the bottom is wider.
I realize this doesn't help you but again, your quilt is lovely.
Kirsten
As for the borders not being the same size, there is a school of thought that the bottom border be wider than the top. It is most like matting a picture. It looks most pleasing when the bottom is wider.
I realize this doesn't help you but again, your quilt is lovely.
Kirsten
#30
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2012
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Posts: 2,530
To answer your question, yes. The bottom can be trimmed and rebound. What is important is that you wanted a quilt that honored the beautiful work your late aunt did. Have the adjustment made to get closer to what you originally had in mind.
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