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Old July 17th 03, 03:41 AM
Megan Vest
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If you still wanted to do a 1/4" seam allowance, you could shorten your
stitch length which would add more durability.
Megan

"Meghan" wrote in message
...
Hi, as an on-again-off-again lurker this is the first place I thought to

ask
when I had a question.

My son's toddler quilt was my second quilt and though it had no triangles,
only squares and rectangles, it had *lots* of seams and pieces. Now that

he's
about to turn three he's really grown attached to the quilt and has

started to
drag it around the house with him. That just tickles me pink. But, a

couple
of the seams that came out a little short in seam allowance when I was

piecing
the top have opened. I tacked them with fusible web for now and I'm more
careful about washing and drying it - washing on cold/gentle and hanging

to
dry now instead of tumble drying. I expect it will eventually be worn out

but
I'm trying to prolong it!

So here's the question that long-winded story is leading up to. My

daughter
is now 10 months old and I'm starting on her toddler quilt (her newborn

quilt
can be seen he
http://www.quilterscache.com/images1...tarflowerA.jpg). I'm using

the
Butterfly paper piecing pattern from Quilter's Cache. Now that I've done
three practice butterflies I'm ready to start the whole quilt. What I'm
wondering though, is since I'm paper piecing and the seams are marked on

the
paper, I can trim the fabric so the allowance is more than 1/4" if I want

to
since the paper acts as my guide and the block size won't really change.

Is
there any reason, other than a little more bulk, to NOT make the

allowances a
little bigger, say, 3/8"? I was thinking it might make it a little more
durable since I expect the quilt to take a lot of abuse, and I can be a

little
more relaxed about washing it.

Opinions please? Thanks!

Meghan



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