Before I knew the difference between ironing and pressing I....
#1
Junior Member
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Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Australia
Posts: 116
Washed and ironed every piece of fabric I own, do you think they will still be okay to use? Or have I stretched them? Please tell me I haven't wrecked them - I have 5 years worth :( I was having nightmares about it last night!!
#8
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Join Date: Jun 2011
Posts: 294
Originally Posted by beebs
Washed and ironed every piece of fabric I own, do you think they will still be okay to use? Or have I stretched them? Please tell me I haven't wrecked them - I have 5 years worth :( I was having nightmares about it last night!!
If you're really worried, take an average piece of fabric from your stash. Draw around it on a sheet of paper. Then let it rest in a nice lukewarm bath for a while, take it out and let it dry. When it is dry, *PRESS* it.
Then lay it down in the original outline and see if it has changed in any significant way. If it hasn't, then you are probably fine. If it has changed significantly, well, then you will have some decisions to make.
Not all distortion is a disaster. If you rarely to never use bias cuts, if you tend to quilt fairly closely, if most of your fabrics don't have strong vertical or horizontal lines (stripes, plaids, border prints), then some distortion won't make one bit of difference.
If you do have lots of stripes, plaids and border prints that look wiggly when they shouldn't, if you like to do a lot with triangles and/or off grain cuts, if you don't quilt fairly closely, then it might be worth it to wet and press your fabrics. Might be easier to do if you do it by project rather than tackling your whole stash at once.
#9
There are no quilt police. Small pieces of cut fabric are important to keep the size when pressing. ANYTHING with a bias edge will stretch. If your in doubt which is the bias edge, hold the fabric selvage to selvage and try to stretch. Then try to stretch the other direction at a 90 degree angle. It will stretch more. Now try to stretch it from corner to corner - there is your bias. This is the most important sewn seam to PRESS never iron. As others have said, as long as you square you fabric and cut correctly you should be ok. I also use 'sizing' when using the iron. It gives a little more stability. Good luck.
#10
The only time I would worry is if I have stretched the printed design out of alignment on the fabric. If the stripes are wavy, outlines on the blocks are distorted, then I know I was to aggressive with the iron :D:D:D
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