How do you begin to start cutting your fabrics - say a two yard piece?
#1
I am self taught quilter from reading books and watching quilting show. This is what I try to do.
Wash and dry the fabric. Iron it and spray starch on it. Fold it in half with the selvages on each side, trying to find the 'straight of grain'. Level the bottoms then fold back to where there is a folded side and the other is the twin selvage side then begin the cuts.
Do you cut a two yard piece into a small unit; do you cut your borders first if they are to be from the same fabric swatch?
Just curious to see how others work it and I do realize that each choice is unique to each person.
Thanks in advance for your replies.
Wash and dry the fabric. Iron it and spray starch on it. Fold it in half with the selvages on each side, trying to find the 'straight of grain'. Level the bottoms then fold back to where there is a folded side and the other is the twin selvage side then begin the cuts.
Do you cut a two yard piece into a small unit; do you cut your borders first if they are to be from the same fabric swatch?
Just curious to see how others work it and I do realize that each choice is unique to each person.
Thanks in advance for your replies.
#2
I'm self-taught, too. I cut the largest pieces first -- NOT the border. I save the borders until the end, whether it's the same fabric as in the pieces or different. Then I cut the borders, that way I'm assured I'll have enough. And call me crazy, but I always buy more fabric than they say you need for a pattern......because I was burned once, ran short of one of the fabrics and never did find it again (that was before I discovered this forum!! :lol: ).
#3
I cut my borders last only because when the piecing is finished I may decide to place alternate borders or patchwork borders on the quilt. I now purchase more material than what the pattern calls for only so I do not run out of any color and find the store has no more. I prep my fabric similar to how you do.
#4
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Sleepy Hollow, NY
Posts: 4,727
i typically base my decision on whether i want the border to be one piece or not. if it needs to be one strips the borders are the first thing that i cut.
the quilts for myself, i don't mind if i have to join 2 strips together in order to achieve a length long enough for the border.
the quilts that i sell or enter in competitions, i never join 2 strips together to achieve the length unless its a pieced border and a design element.
the quilts for myself, i don't mind if i have to join 2 strips together in order to achieve a length long enough for the border.
the quilts that i sell or enter in competitions, i never join 2 strips together to achieve the length unless its a pieced border and a design element.
#5
For me it depends on the fabric. If I am using a large print that I don't want to have to match, I will cut the borders lengthwise first, then cut the remaining pieces out of what's left. I always work it out on paper first so that I know what cuts I am making. I usually buy extra fabric, so I don't often have a problem with running out. Once when I did run short, what I did was to put a coordinating square in the corners of the quilt. It looked planned, so no one knew I screwed up but me!
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: California
Posts: 3,502
I don't usually have the border fabric in the quilt so I buy that seperately. I like striped or floral borders. I do the same... wash, dry, starch and iron, fold and even up the ends and grain then cut strips for the size of the pieces.
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