Needs advice
#1
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Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Flemington, Missouri
Posts: 20
I have a quilt that is reversible, but the blocks on the opposite side does not match up and it is only sewn around the edges and I would like to take it apart to make two matching quilts but I'm not sure how to go about it. I would like some advice about doing it.
#4
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Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: South East Idaho
Posts: 124
I understand what you might be going through...
I knew a lady (Kathy) who wasn't very happy with how her quilt had been quilted (the machine quilter just hadn't done what Kathy had in mind), It was a quilt she put in soooo very many hours in cross stitching and she really wanted to be proud of her work- the machine quilting that was done at first just made Kathy cry... so when she found out I could help her- she was thrilled. She brought it to me and I unpicked it all for her- and quilted it just like she wanted- it was VERY worth it for her, to unpick it and have it re-done- right!
So I say- if you are really unhappy with it- UN-PICK it! sure it might take you longer to get done, but if it means a little "elbow-grease" now and a big smile and two beautiful quilts later - I say un-pick it!
I would rather this than never finishing it and hiding it in the back of a closet-
I knew a lady (Kathy) who wasn't very happy with how her quilt had been quilted (the machine quilter just hadn't done what Kathy had in mind), It was a quilt she put in soooo very many hours in cross stitching and she really wanted to be proud of her work- the machine quilting that was done at first just made Kathy cry... so when she found out I could help her- she was thrilled. She brought it to me and I unpicked it all for her- and quilted it just like she wanted- it was VERY worth it for her, to unpick it and have it re-done- right!
So I say- if you are really unhappy with it- UN-PICK it! sure it might take you longer to get done, but if it means a little "elbow-grease" now and a big smile and two beautiful quilts later - I say un-pick it!
I would rather this than never finishing it and hiding it in the back of a closet-
#6
Elaine, That should be fairly easy to un-pick. I am currently making a T shirt quilt for a client. They decided rather than making it more than king size that I should make it double sided. I am facing the same problem with the blocks on the front not lining up with the blocks on the back. I am going to try quilting each side onto a flannel sheet and then enveloping the sides together after each is quilted turning it, stitching around the edge and tying or tacking it enough to make the two sides stay together. Since there are at least 50 shirts involved I don't know how else to do it and still include them all.
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