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#1
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I am soooo frustrated. I'm making a quilt. Square in a square. Inner
border. Outer border with mitered corners. I just finished putting the outside border on and laid it flat on the carpeting. The square in a square part is "bunchy"... looks like there's excess there and doesn't lay perfectly flat. It's like the inner border is too small. I measured across the middle when measuring for the inner border. I thought it might be the mitered corners. I took those out - no difference. Could I have stretched the middle? How? When ironing? I'm not going to be quilting this project. I'm passing it off to another mom to quilt and then we're donating it. I'm embarrassed to give it to her. Is there any way I can correct this at this point? -- Gina in IL http://community.webshots.com/user/dgelias |
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#2
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Ironing could do it. I have a block with "bubbles" and think it's from
ironing rather than pressing. Could you wash the top and then press the seams to get it looking correct? -- Mary http://community.webshots.com/user/mardor1948 "Eli" wrote in message ... I am soooo frustrated. I'm making a quilt. Square in a square. Inner border. Outer border with mitered corners. I just finished putting the outside border on and laid it flat on the carpeting. The square in a square part is "bunchy"... looks like there's excess there and doesn't lay perfectly flat. It's like the inner border is too small. I measured across the middle when measuring for the inner border. I thought it might be the mitered corners. I took those out - no difference. Could I have stretched the middle? How? When ironing? I'm not going to be quilting this project. I'm passing it off to another mom to quilt and then we're donating it. I'm embarrassed to give it to her. Is there any way I can correct this at this point? -- Gina in IL http://community.webshots.com/user/dgelias |
#3
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Okay now I'm getting confused. What's the difference between ironing and
pressing? -- Sharon From Melbourne Australia (Queen of Down Under) http://www.geocities.com/shazrules/index.html "Mary in Oregon" wrote in message ... Ironing could do it. I have a block with "bubbles" and think it's from ironing rather than pressing. Could you wash the top and then press the seams to get it looking correct? -- Mary http://community.webshots.com/user/mardor1948 "Eli" wrote in message ... I am soooo frustrated. I'm making a quilt. Square in a square. Inner border. Outer border with mitered corners. I just finished putting the outside border on and laid it flat on the carpeting. The square in a square part is "bunchy"... looks like there's excess there and doesn't lay perfectly flat. It's like the inner border is too small. I measured across the middle when measuring for the inner border. I thought it might be the mitered corners. I took those out - no difference. Could I have stretched the middle? How? When ironing? I'm not going to be quilting this project. I'm passing it off to another mom to quilt and then we're donating it. I'm embarrassed to give it to her. Is there any way I can correct this at this point? -- Gina in IL http://community.webshots.com/user/dgelias |
#4
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ironing is a back and forth motion with the iron... pressing is holding the
iron in place while it steams a seam. Moving the iron pushes and pulls the fabric. Clear as mud?? -- Mary http://community.webshots.com/user/mardor1948 "Sharon Harper" wrote in message ... Okay now I'm getting confused. What's the difference between ironing and pressing? -- Sharon From Melbourne Australia (Queen of Down Under) http://www.geocities.com/shazrules/index.html "Mary in Oregon" wrote in message ... Ironing could do it. I have a block with "bubbles" and think it's from ironing rather than pressing. Could you wash the top and then press the seams to get it looking correct? -- Mary http://community.webshots.com/user/mardor1948 "Eli" wrote in message ... I am soooo frustrated. I'm making a quilt. Square in a square. Inner border. Outer border with mitered corners. I just finished putting the outside border on and laid it flat on the carpeting. The square in a square part is "bunchy"... looks like there's excess there and doesn't lay perfectly flat. It's like the inner border is too small. I measured across the middle when measuring for the inner border. I thought it might be the mitered corners. I took those out - no difference. Could I have stretched the middle? How? When ironing? I'm not going to be quilting this project. I'm passing it off to another mom to quilt and then we're donating it. I'm embarrassed to give it to her. Is there any way I can correct this at this point? -- Gina in IL http://community.webshots.com/user/dgelias |
#5
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I thought maybe I was overreacting because it was late last night but it
looks worse this morning... I really think it's un-quiltable. The woman who's quilting it has a long arm and if it won't lay flat, can she quilt it? I could cry. It's too late to start another quilt and I've already invested tons of time and $ in this one... Gina in IL "Mary in Oregon" wrote in message ... Ironing could do it. I have a block with "bubbles" and think it's from ironing rather than pressing. Could you wash the top and then press the seams to get it looking correct? -- Mary http://community.webshots.com/user/mardor1948 "Eli" wrote in message ... I am soooo frustrated. I'm making a quilt. Square in a square. Inner border. Outer border with mitered corners. I just finished putting the outside border on and laid it flat on the carpeting. The square in a square part is "bunchy"... looks like there's excess there and doesn't lay perfectly flat. It's like the inner border is too small. I measured across the middle when measuring for the inner border. I thought it might be the mitered corners. I took those out - no difference. Could I have stretched the middle? How? When ironing? I'm not going to be quilting this project. I'm passing it off to another mom to quilt and then we're donating it. I'm embarrassed to give it to her. Is there any way I can correct this at this point? -- Gina in IL http://community.webshots.com/user/dgelias |
#6
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Eli wrote:
I thought maybe I was overreacting because it was late last night but it looks worse this morning... I really think it's un-quiltable. The woman who's quilting it has a long arm and if it won't lay flat, can she quilt it? I could cry. It's too late to start another quilt and I've already invested tons of time and $ in this one... Your quilt can be quilted. Pin baste the heck out it. Put the pins 2 inches apart over the worst of the poofy parts. Even one inch apart. Now machine quilt it normally. That means first dividing it into sections by quilting long lines that transverse the whole quilt, then going back to quilt more heavily within the sections. The very worst that will happen to a misshapen, poofy quilt that won't lie flat is that you'll get tiny pin tucks on the surface of the quilt. That's not the end of the world. I suggest Warm & Natural batting. I had far more trouble with poofy and pin tucks the one time I used a polyester batt. --Lia |
#7
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![]() "Eli" wrote in message ... I thought maybe I was overreacting because it was late last night but it looks worse this morning... I really think it's un-quiltable. The woman who's quilting it has a long arm and if it won't lay flat, can she quilt it? I could cry. It's too late to start another quilt and I've already invested Ask the longarmer if she can quilt it. Believe me, we all see "double D cup" quilts on a regular basis, and can often perform minor miracles. She'll be able to tell you if this top is in the minor miracle category or if it needs a major miracle. Depending on her experience, she also might be able to recommend some fixes -- unfortunately, we can't see it and tug on it here and there, so it's a bit harder for us to tell you. As to future quilts, IMHO the key to a flat quilt is keeping it flat all along the way. Measure and cut accurately. Sew accurately. Press accurately. And check for flatness all along the way -- each time you sew two pieces together and press them, look at how they are laying on the ironing board. If there's a bobble, deal with it right then. It sounds like you measured your borders, which is really great. So many of my customers make a beautifully flat quilt into one that has edges like an amusement park ride because they are sure they don't need to measure. But one extra step you might want to take is to measure not just the middle, but measure in three places. I'd still use the middle measurement, but if the measurements are quite a bit off from each other, you'll know you have a problem. Good luck! |
#8
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I called the quilter and I'm going to see her tomorrow. She was very
reassuring and I feel better (slightly). I'm going to put it away and not get it out or think about it. I really think it must have been when I joined the rows together. I must have ironed instead of pressed. Thanks all for the advice - hopefully she will think it's okay enough to quilt. Gina in IL "Kathy Applebaum" wrote in message om... "Eli" wrote in message ... I thought maybe I was overreacting because it was late last night but it looks worse this morning... I really think it's un-quiltable. The woman who's quilting it has a long arm and if it won't lay flat, can she quilt it? I could cry. It's too late to start another quilt and I've already invested Ask the longarmer if she can quilt it. Believe me, we all see "double D cup" quilts on a regular basis, and can often perform minor miracles. She'll be able to tell you if this top is in the minor miracle category or if it needs a major miracle. Depending on her experience, she also might be able to recommend some fixes -- unfortunately, we can't see it and tug on it here and there, so it's a bit harder for us to tell you. As to future quilts, IMHO the key to a flat quilt is keeping it flat all along the way. Measure and cut accurately. Sew accurately. Press accurately. And check for flatness all along the way -- each time you sew two pieces together and press them, look at how they are laying on the ironing board. If there's a bobble, deal with it right then. It sounds like you measured your borders, which is really great. So many of my customers make a beautifully flat quilt into one that has edges like an amusement park ride because they are sure they don't need to measure. But one extra step you might want to take is to measure not just the middle, but measure in three places. I'd still use the middle measurement, but if the measurements are quite a bit off from each other, you'll know you have a problem. Good luck! |
#9
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Absolutely! Thankx
-- Sharon From Melbourne Australia (Queen of Down Under) http://www.geocities.com/shazrules/index.html "Mary in Oregon" wrote in message ... ironing is a back and forth motion with the iron... pressing is holding the iron in place while it steams a seam. Moving the iron pushes and pulls the fabric. Clear as mud?? -- Mary http://community.webshots.com/user/mardor1948 "Sharon Harper" wrote in message ... Okay now I'm getting confused. What's the difference between ironing and pressing? -- Sharon From Melbourne Australia (Queen of Down Under) http://www.geocities.com/shazrules/index.html "Mary in Oregon" wrote in message ... Ironing could do it. I have a block with "bubbles" and think it's from ironing rather than pressing. Could you wash the top and then press the seams to get it looking correct? -- Mary http://community.webshots.com/user/mardor1948 "Eli" wrote in message ... I am soooo frustrated. I'm making a quilt. Square in a square. Inner border. Outer border with mitered corners. I just finished putting the outside border on and laid it flat on the carpeting. The square in a square part is "bunchy"... looks like there's excess there and doesn't lay perfectly flat. It's like the inner border is too small. I measured across the middle when measuring for the inner border. I thought it might be the mitered corners. I took those out - no difference. Could I have stretched the middle? How? When ironing? I'm not going to be quilting this project. I'm passing it off to another mom to quilt and then we're donating it. I'm embarrassed to give it to her. Is there any way I can correct this at this point? -- Gina in IL http://community.webshots.com/user/dgelias |
#10
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Eli:
Perhaps the problem lies in how you attached the first border. It is important to place the quilt center on a flat surface so it is fully supported, then layer the border on it so it is also fully supported. THEN you pin. You do not drape it across your lap and flop the border over it and stick in pins. BTDT ... it is not the way to do it! So, perhaps you need to unstitch the first border, gently press the center and the border, and proceed as I instructed. It just might work. The Queen HAS Spoken! PAT in VA/USA Eli wrote: I am soooo frustrated. I'm making a quilt. Square in a square. Inner border. Outer border with mitered corners. I just finished putting the outside border on and laid it flat on the carpeting. The square in a square part is "bunchy"... looks like there's excess there and doesn't lay perfectly flat. It's like the inner border is too small. I measured across the middle when measuring for the inner border. I thought it might be the mitered corners. I took those out - no difference. Could I have stretched the middle? How? When ironing? I'm not going to be quilting this project. I'm passing it off to another mom to quilt and then we're donating it. I'm embarrassed to give it to her. Is there any way I can correct this at this point? |
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