eBay quilt - Just shaking my head
#1
eBay quilt - Just shaking my head
This will be picture heavy as I still can't believe my own eyes. My question is should I continue, how, or just throw it away!! I bought a top on eBay before I started quilting, I thought it was beautiful. When I started quilting, I put it away. I am now between projects so I thought I would pull it out and work on it. I did notice a LOT of points were not that well executed. So I thought I would take it apart and re-do the points. Something I have had to do with my own quilts when points didn't match. No big deal. Holy Cow!! Not only do the points not match, they aren't even cut. I know you are saying, "What is she talking about?" My defense, look at the pictures!
This is the rows, you can see the points in the centers don't match.
Closer view of the points
If you can see the black lines, that was how it was pieced, in a "L" shape??
This is with the sashing pinned back
Can you see where the pieces are connected? Who would do this??
Should I cut it apart and re-piece in the traditional way or just chunk the whole thing, call it a lessson in paying attention while on eBay or what??????
This is the rows, you can see the points in the centers don't match.
Closer view of the points
If you can see the black lines, that was how it was pieced, in a "L" shape??
This is with the sashing pinned back
Can you see where the pieces are connected? Who would do this??
Should I cut it apart and re-piece in the traditional way or just chunk the whole thing, call it a lessson in paying attention while on eBay or what??????
#3
Power Poster
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Northern Michigan
Posts: 12,861
I would say to the question (who would do this?) .... Someone who is new to quilting, is trying to learn on her own, figuring it out as she went along, doing the best she could to figure it out.... Kudos to her for trying so hard to figure out how to do something on her own! I would not have started taking it apart, I would quilt it as is, perhaps using it as a quilting practice piece and keep it as a utility quilt, maybe as my next * picnic quilt*
#4
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,538
It looks like it has good seam allowances so I would piece it into a top as is and quilt it up. It will still keep someone warm even if the points are off. HOWEVER since you have one block apart, test it for bleeding. If it is a bleeder, I wouldn't waste any more time on it.
#5
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: So Plymouth, NY
Posts: 2,502
I agree with Tartan completely. Reds are notorious for bleeding. It would be a total waste of your time and an even bigger stressor on your part if you haven't ascertained that the red remains colorfast. Good luck with whatever you decide to do.
#8
Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Posts: 55
You thought it was beautiful when you bought it. It's not now. Your first mistake was taking it apart and trying to make it be something it never was going to be. At this point, why spend time gnashing your teeth? Either stitch it back up as is, or use the pieces to make potholders.
Last edited by QuiltnNan; 10-21-2014 at 03:13 AM. Reason: remove unfriendly verbiage
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Jeffersonville, In
Posts: 2,621
I would say to the question (who would do this?) .... Someone who is new to quilting, is trying to learn on her own, figuring it out as she went along, doing the best she could to figure it out.... Kudos to her for trying so hard to figure out how to do something on her own! I would not have started taking it apart, I would quilt it as is, perhaps using it as a quilting practice piece and keep it as a utility quilt, maybe as my next * picnic quilt*
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