Question about using hankies for quilt.
#1
Question about using hankies for quilt.
A friend gave me quite a large stack of her mothers hand embroidered handkerchiefs, and some pretty cotton material. she asked me to make her a quilt as a keepsake, as her mother passed on. My question is this. The handkerchiefs while in good condition and very pretty... are very thin. would it be good to use a stabilizer fabric (maybe an iron on) on the back of them before attempting to put them in a quilt? I don't want to ruin them, but I also don't want to make the quilt so delicate she cant display it either. Thank you for your help.
Linda
Linda
#2
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Bosque County, Texas
Posts: 2,709
A stabilizer or an iron on interfacing would be my choice. I have seen a quilt where the handies were folded into a fan shape and appliqued onto a block. Under the fan was appliqued a ribbon bow and streamers. What do your friend's hankies look like? Are they all white with delicate embroidery in the corner? Lace insets in the corners? Are they the same sizes? My mother carried a very fancy hanky when she got married, I carried the same hanky when I got married, my daughter and granddaughter carried the same hanky when they got married. It was the "something old" I think my GD had it stuck in the waistband of her panties! LOL! If your friend has children she might want to keep one special one out for something like weddings and not put them all in the quilt. Just a suggestion.
#3
I have a couple of the hankies that my Grandma made & used. I was planning on folding them like butterflies & appliqué ing them on to a quilt. They are very thin also & if I were using them more like a block in the quilt they would need something to make them more durable. I'm not sure I'd want to iron anything on to them. I don't know the answer so I'll be looking here for suggestions.
#5
All the hankies are old. Once white, now a little yellow with age. Some have crochet edges, some have her initials. Others have flowers embroidered on them. The basic colors with few exceptions are green, pink, and blue...all on white. The material she gave me is also vintage... tiny pick flowers on white, tiny blue flowers on eggshell, and green leaves on cream. I think she thought if we went with pure white it would make the hankies look dingy. She soaked them and washed them herself. You can tell they are clean, but old. She wanted me to use the hankies as blocks with the colored material in between. They are so delicate and the material is heavy cotton. I would be willing to sew a white material to the back of them... I just thought something like a shirt interfacing would work better. Please keep mulling this over for me and help me decide. By the way, she kept 3 of the nice ones out to give to her sons wife if he marries, and her two nieces if they marry. Thanks for all your help... going to look up Hankie Pankey... hope I dont get some porn site. LOL
#6
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Southern Indiana
Posts: 5,052
My sister did a hanky quilt. I think the pattern was a Crabapple Hill Design. There were embroidered Tea Pots sitting on the hankies that were folded into triangles, they looked like tableclothes, it was beautiful!
#7
There is also a butterfly block that you can make from folding the hankie. A very 1930s style quilt. I love this block but have never collected enough hankies to make on of my own.
Book: Memory Quilts in the Making
Edited by: Rhonda Richards
Oxmoor House publishing & Leisure Arts, Inc. 1999
Pattern: Flutterbys
I hope you can find a picture of it. A very cool quilt.
peace
It is perfectly ok to iron lightweight interfacing onto the back of these little beauties.
You can whiten them with Orvis soap or oxiclean but NO NO NO Bleach.
Book: Memory Quilts in the Making
Edited by: Rhonda Richards
Oxmoor House publishing & Leisure Arts, Inc. 1999
Pattern: Flutterbys
I hope you can find a picture of it. A very cool quilt.
peace
It is perfectly ok to iron lightweight interfacing onto the back of these little beauties.
You can whiten them with Orvis soap or oxiclean but NO NO NO Bleach.
Last edited by ube quilting; 01-22-2013 at 04:15 PM.
#8
Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 132
I made a hankie quilt by hand stitching each hankie to a white block then put sashing between the rows. I knotted in the center and each corner or each hankie to hold it in place, it is very pretty. The blocks were white and sashing is light green.
Jothesewer
Jothesewer
#9
There is also a butterfly block that you can make from folding the hankie. A very 1930s style quilt. I love this block but have never collected enough hankies to make on of my own.
Book: Memory Quilts in the Making
Edited by: Rhonda Richards
Oxmoor House publishing & Leisure Arts, Inc. 1999
Pattern: Flutterbys
I hope you can find a picture of it. A very cool quilt.
peace
It is perfectly ok to iron lightweight interfacing onto the back of these little beauties.
You can whiten them with Orvis soap or oxiclean but NO NO NO Bleach.
Book: Memory Quilts in the Making
Edited by: Rhonda Richards
Oxmoor House publishing & Leisure Arts, Inc. 1999
Pattern: Flutterbys
I hope you can find a picture of it. A very cool quilt.
peace
It is perfectly ok to iron lightweight interfacing onto the back of these little beauties.
You can whiten them with Orvis soap or oxiclean but NO NO NO Bleach.
#10
LMB, if you haven't checked it out, go to littlebitofheaven's post about her beautiful hanky quilt, including a pattern by Moda. This is the pattern I'll be using for my mom's hankies.
http://www.quiltingboard.com/tutoria...n-t199207.html
http://www.quiltingboard.com/tutoria...n-t199207.html
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