Repairing fabric
#1
I have an old Grandmother's Flower Garden, one of the fabrics has shattered. How can I repair it? I thought about inserting fusible seaming strips behind the fabric. The fabric is intact, and it appears if I repaired it this way you would never know it had shattered. But I would have to fuse it to the batting. In addition, it may not stop the shatter from continuting beyond the stitching. I don't want to replace the original hexs, they were fussy cut from feed sacks and I love the fabric.
Should I fuse the entire hex or just the area that needs repair? Or should I repair it in another way?
I use the quilt on my bed. It is hand laundered about once a year just prior to storing it.
Should I fuse the entire hex or just the area that needs repair? Or should I repair it in another way?
I use the quilt on my bed. It is hand laundered about once a year just prior to storing it.
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Perth, Western Australia
Posts: 10,357
I am no expert, but the idea of using fusible on something so fragile could be fraught with difficulty. Would it be possible to apply a layer of organza (or similar fine fabric) over the top and applique it over the top of the damaged bits. It would be fiddly but wouldn't detract too much from the original.
Maybe if you had a spare room the quilt could go on a bed there...it sounds as if it is quite precious to you and it may last a little longer if not in constant use.
Maybe if you had a spare room the quilt could go on a bed there...it sounds as if it is quite precious to you and it may last a little longer if not in constant use.
#4
I'd put a little piece of lightweight pellon under it, the hex fused to the pellon , not the batting. If there is space to do it, I'd make the pellon a bit larger than the hex. I used this method in a quuilt I had. And I'd stop using the quilt, put it on a nice quilt rack for display!
#5
Originally Posted by earthwalker
I am no expert, but the idea of using fusible on something so fragile could be fraught with difficulty. Would it be possible to apply a layer of organza (or similar fine fabric) over the top and applique it over the top of the damaged bits. It would be fiddly but wouldn't detract too much from the original.
Maybe if you had a spare room the quilt could go on a bed there...it sounds as if it is quite precious to you and it may last a little longer if not in constant use.
Maybe if you had a spare room the quilt could go on a bed there...it sounds as if it is quite precious to you and it may last a little longer if not in constant use.
#7
Thanks, I think I'll try the over lay first, if I don't like it I'll have to replace it. I got feed sack fabric of the same era to repair a yo yo that I can use.
You all are right I should only use it for display. It was my favorite quilt, and only one fabric shattered, the rest seem strong.
You all are right I should only use it for display. It was my favorite quilt, and only one fabric shattered, the rest seem strong.
#9
Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Posts: 78
If you decide to replace the worn out fabric,I have some squares I can send you that is original to that era from some unfinished blocks,let me know and I will be glad to send those out to you. I think I have enough of the same fabric if you want to do them all in identical fabric.
#10
I had my grandmothers quilted bed coat do that. It was an area about 3" in diam. I took lite fusible and fused it to white cotton, then took the paper off, clipped a few threads and slid it under the bad area using needles to smooth it and get it in place, then fused it to the back of the bad fabric, re-sitched the 1" slit. You can't tell it unless you
feel it and its a little crisper. I have washed twice but dry it on a hanger.
feel it and its a little crisper. I have washed twice but dry it on a hanger.
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