Marking problem
#31
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,018
Let your used piece of hand soap set put for a few days...it will get hard...easier to handle. Once knew a man who worked for DIAL soap....told us to unwrap our hand soaps after purchase and store that way. The soap hardens and lasts longer. Cannot be sold that way - sanitary reasons. Have been doing that for years myself.....
#32
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 1,664
I use wash away interfacing and draw my quilting design on it then use either small safety pins or a little glue stick to secure it. When finished just throw in machine and it disappears. I am a hand quilter and have used this technique on a full size wedding quilt that had many colors and worked great. This is the only way I do my marking now regardless of size. The only thing to be away of is do not use any kind of a pen that has moisture in it as it will make the stabilizer disappear. I buy the stabilizer at Joanns when I have a 50% or more coupon or when it goes on sale at 50% off.
#34
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 1,664
I usually use some kind of a pen as I am afraid the graphite in the pencil will stain the quilt. I know some people use pencil to mark but I guess I am just paranoid. You can use anything as long as there is not any moisture in it like the crayola marking pens, they have too much moisture and it will desolve the interfacing, I know the hard way.
#35
I use wash away interfacing and draw my quilting design on it then use either small safety pins or a little glue stick to secure it. When finished just throw in machine and it disappears. I am a hand quilter and have used this technique on a full size wedding quilt that had many colors and worked great. This is the only way I do my marking now regardless of size. The only thing to be away of is do not use any kind of a pen that has moisture in it as it will make the stabilizer disappear. I buy the stabilizer at Joanns when I have a 50% or more coupon or when it goes on sale at 50% off.
#38
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Spring Lake, Michigan
Posts: 978
I tried marking my quilt borders with every quilting marker that I had. Nothing worked. So, out of frustration, I grabbed colored pencils left over from the kids' backpacks. I first made sure that the color would come out, but the colors worked fine for me and I can see what I am quilting.
#39
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
Wash-away stabilizer is sold in a variety of ways -- yardage, precut paper sizes, etc. Here is a link to the different options available for it on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_no...solvy+washaway
Sulky makes the Solvy brand of washaway stabilizer. Vilene I think is more common in the U.K. But any brand that is water soluble will work.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_no...solvy+washaway
Sulky makes the Solvy brand of washaway stabilizer. Vilene I think is more common in the U.K. But any brand that is water soluble will work.
#40
If you are machine quilting, you could make tissue paper patterns to stitch through. (There is a product called Golden Thread paper that you can stitch through also.) With tissue paper, cut several squares the size of your block, draw the pattern on one square, stack up your squares and pin the corners, stitch over the drawn pattern with the machine needle without thread, take the pins out of the squares and you will have several copies to pin on the sandwich and stitch the pattern. Carefully tear away the tissue when finished.
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