Printed Interfacing
#4
I've used the interfacing printed with the squares. It is actually quite easy to use. I used it in a watercolor project and somewhere down in my quilt room is another one neatly folded up with a ton of blue squares pinned all over it. I thought I would do the background for an underwater scene using the two inch squares. It's really easy to use. You simply get all your pieces where you want them and then iron them in place. Getting the design from your design board to the ironing board can sometimes be a fun adventure. I found I needed to make sure everything was very secure or my pieces went flying all over the place. :roll:
The printed interfacing works very well but the finished quilt is NOT going to be one you want to do any hand quilting with!! It does add a rather thick layer and until it is washed there is the glue from it that is holding the pieces onto the interfacing, making it even harder for hand quilters, which is why machine or long arm quilting is recommended. Also, you can't be too rough with the pieces before they're ironed into place or they might come off. I hope that helps.
~Tiffany
The printed interfacing works very well but the finished quilt is NOT going to be one you want to do any hand quilting with!! It does add a rather thick layer and until it is washed there is the glue from it that is holding the pieces onto the interfacing, making it even harder for hand quilters, which is why machine or long arm quilting is recommended. Also, you can't be too rough with the pieces before they're ironed into place or they might come off. I hope that helps.
~Tiffany
#5
I saw it demo'd recently. Let's say you have all your squares down; you pinch the interfacing so that the fabric is right sides together (it's pre-perforated) and you sew a quarter inch from the edge of the interfacing. You do this in parallel rows for the whole sheet. Then, you go back and clip all the intersections so you can pinch the rows going in the other direction. You sew all those quarter inch seams.
I think in the demo she removed the interfacing at this point (which would mean you could hand sew) but I'm not positive about this (and it would be a lot of picking away the interfacing).
Hope that helps.
I think in the demo she removed the interfacing at this point (which would mean you could hand sew) but I'm not positive about this (and it would be a lot of picking away the interfacing).
Hope that helps.
#6
I've used the grid and it was just fine, but I did machine quilt it for a wallhanging.
I have seen the double wedding ring & robbing peter to pay paul interfacing in a demo but have never used it myself. http://www.quiltsmart.com/ check out the quiltsmart101 for more info.
I have seen the double wedding ring & robbing peter to pay paul interfacing in a demo but have never used it myself. http://www.quiltsmart.com/ check out the quiltsmart101 for more info.
#7
I haven't heard of a method where you picked away all the interfacing. I would imagine, much like paper piecing, that would get somewhat tedious. Perhaps a wash-away type of interfacing would work for hand quilters. Do they even make a wash away type of interfacing?
~Tiffany
~Tiffany
#10
I think this is the product that Eleanor Burns used when she did a show making quilts using a cross-stitch pattern. Each little square represented a stitch from the pattern. It was an interesting concept, although the book she got the idea from was from the 30's. The wall hanging she did was beautiful.
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