Preparing a shirt for quilting
#1
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-RoRYvLbQnE. I found this video useful. I read somewhere to remove the buttons. Is that necessary?
#2
You can have dimension on your quilt tops such as buttons or pockets. When it is quilted it will just be an area you go around.
and be sure if you have a Long Armer do the quilting to tell them to go around pockets or buttons.
Have fun with these quilts. I have made several and totally love it. It is quite a memory quilt.
and be sure if you have a Long Armer do the quilting to tell them to go around pockets or buttons.
Have fun with these quilts. I have made several and totally love it. It is quite a memory quilt.
#7
i made a memory quilt years ago for a friend of mine's mom.. before i really knew how to quilt..
it was all her father's different dress shirts & ties that he wore to work every day.. i cut off the buttons of each shirt, put each set in a ziploc sandwich bag with a scrap of the shirt. we sewed them back onto the shirts in the right spots when it was finished.. that was a really wonky quilt, cause the fabrics were such different weights.. but her mom loved it. and that was the point.
it was all her father's different dress shirts & ties that he wore to work every day.. i cut off the buttons of each shirt, put each set in a ziploc sandwich bag with a scrap of the shirt. we sewed them back onto the shirts in the right spots when it was finished.. that was a really wonky quilt, cause the fabrics were such different weights.. but her mom loved it. and that was the point.
#8
My daughter had one of her Grandpa's shirts and asked me to put some of the fabric in her vintage quilt that I am repairing. He was a large man so there is plenty of material. I made a pillow cover and used the button strip for the way to put the pillow form in. Once the form is in, you just button it back up. I stitched the backing close to the opening.
#9
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Somewhere in Time
Posts: 2,697
After I buy them, I wash and dry them, then I rip them apart using my seam ripper. Very fast work while watching TV. Then I press. My goal is to get as much fabric per shirt as I possibly can, even what is in the seam allowance. I rip the yoke leaving the label in tact. Some of the labels are almost works of art and add dimension the quilt. This is a good way to add some interesting plaids to my stash. I have also purchased some lovely Hawaiian prints for my stash. At my local Goodwill shirts are $2.50, however, when I purchase Large, X-Large, 4X, or Tall shirts, I can get between 2 and 3 yards of fabric.
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: eastern Oklahoma
Posts: 1,873
In the past a few of us had been useing recycled jeans to make quilts One lady told me to leave the pockets on them. Imagine the quilt for a child and he or she could keep a toy in a quilt pocket. Its an endless possiabilities. Marvel
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
QuiltingGrannie
General Chit-Chat (non-quilting talk)
10
04-15-2010 08:31 PM