Question on width of binding......
#1
Junior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 101
Question on width of binding......
I am making a sample for our quilt club and the directions from the patterns are not specific. My little wallhanging is 8" x 22". What width should I cut my binding strips? The pattern just says that you need 1/4 yard for binding but doesn't tell you what width to cut the strips.
I think my usual 2 1/2" would make way too wide of a binding for such a little quilt. Opinions, please.....
I think my usual 2 1/2" would make way too wide of a binding for such a little quilt. Opinions, please.....
#2
I would want 1/4" binding for the little quilt. I would cut it at just a smidge over 1.5" for a double fold binding. The "smidge" is to allow for the width of the quilt as the binding goes around it, so allow for a bigger smidge if the batting is thicker.
#3
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Sturbridge, Ma
Posts: 3,992
The width of the cut binding has a direct relation to the width of the seam. A good guide to start with is cut the binding 6 x the width of the seam allowance (this is for a double fold binding) No this doesn't always work depending on the depth of the batting.
Also, the width of the binding also depends on if you have to maintain a 1/4" for seams on the quilt top. If no outside seams then the binding can be wider. But it a choise and how the finished product will look.
As an example I use 3/8" seam allowances and cut the binding 2 1/4 or 2 1/2" depending on the batting.
The binding should be full and seam even and consistent. Suggest you start with a 1.5" and try a short section and see if this will give you the look you want. If too tight then make the cut binding a bit larger.
Also, the width of the binding also depends on if you have to maintain a 1/4" for seams on the quilt top. If no outside seams then the binding can be wider. But it a choise and how the finished product will look.
As an example I use 3/8" seam allowances and cut the binding 2 1/4 or 2 1/2" depending on the batting.
The binding should be full and seam even and consistent. Suggest you start with a 1.5" and try a short section and see if this will give you the look you want. If too tight then make the cut binding a bit larger.
#4
Or do a knife edge or bring the backing to the front on a small quilt sample. I usually use a 2" wide binding on small quilts. On mini quilts I do either of the other two methods for less bulk on a tiny quilt.
peace
EDIT: on small quilts I don't usually do double fold binding either, just single fold.
peace
EDIT: on small quilts I don't usually do double fold binding either, just single fold.
Last edited by ube quilting; 01-21-2013 at 02:52 PM.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Anchorage, AK
Posts: 1,398
Variation on what Holice said - the rule of thumb taught me by my first quilt teacher is for a hand finished binding, multiply the finished binding width (seam allowance) by 7 to get the width to cut your strips for folded binding. different concept - neither one is wrong - so try both to see which works best for you. Since I always finish my bindings by machine, I multiply by 7 and add a quarter inch to give me that tad extra for machining.
The width of the cut binding has a direct relation to the width of the seam. A good guide to start with is cut the binding 6 x the width of the seam allowance (this is for a double fold binding) No this doesn't always work depending on the depth of the batting.
Also, the width of the binding also depends on if you have to maintain a 1/4" for seams on the quilt top. If no outside seams then the binding can be wider. But it a choise and how the finished product will look.
As an example I use 3/8" seam allowances and cut the binding 2 1/4 or 2 1/2" depending on the batting.
The binding should be full and seam even and consistent. Suggest you start with a 1.5" and try a short section and see if this will give you the look you want. If too tight then make the cut binding a bit larger.
Also, the width of the binding also depends on if you have to maintain a 1/4" for seams on the quilt top. If no outside seams then the binding can be wider. But it a choise and how the finished product will look.
As an example I use 3/8" seam allowances and cut the binding 2 1/4 or 2 1/2" depending on the batting.
The binding should be full and seam even and consistent. Suggest you start with a 1.5" and try a short section and see if this will give you the look you want. If too tight then make the cut binding a bit larger.
#8
I am making a sample for our quilt club and the directions from the patterns are not specific. My little wallhanging is 8" x 22". What width should I cut my binding strips? The pattern just says that you need 1/4 yard for binding but doesn't tell you what width to cut the strips.
I think my usual 2 1/2" would make way too wide of a binding for such a little quilt. Opinions, please.....
I think my usual 2 1/2" would make way too wide of a binding for such a little quilt. Opinions, please.....
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#9
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Woburn, MA
Posts: 711
I usually cut 2 1/2" for larger quilts and 2 1/4" for wall hanging. When sewing binding to quilt, sew ~1/3 in from edge (not 1/4"). One third in binding, one third for back and one third for front side of binding.
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Thornton, Colorado
Posts: 1,023
Same as Donnamarie, I use 2.5 inch strips for some lap quilts, larger quilts, especially flannel ones and 2.25 inch strips for small wall hangings, thin quilts, table runners, etc. I am a tad conused...do you mean one third the width of the strip (not 1/3 inch) ?
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