Do you stabilize your applique?
#1
Do you stabilize your applique?
When you are stitching appliques by machine do you put a thin stablizer under the bottom fabric? I have been told that putting tissue paper under it helps?
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,538
I find that the fusible is usually enough for stabilizing the fabric. If I am doing a dense satin stitch however, I will sometimes put a tear away under the background fabric to prevent tunneling.
#3
I'm told regular paper works ok but I have also heard newspaper is really good. Sometimes if you call a local paper they will sell the end of a roll if it's not enough for the print run. I haven't tried to get any of that but I may have to call and ask the local paper
#4
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
I heavily starch my background fabric yardage before cutting when doing machine applique. This works for me for either invisible machine applique (a la Harriet Hargrave) and also for satin stitch applique. If you do not stabilize your background fabric in some way, chances are it will stretch and distort while you stitch around the applique and the resulting piece will be ruffled and uneven. I like starch because it washes out later and leaves the applique soft.
For starch I mix a 1:1 solution of Sta Flo liquid laundry starch and water, "paint" this onto the background fabric using a large wall painting brush (my kitchen island works well for this), wait a minute or two to make sure the solution penetrates the fibers, toss in my dryer, and iron with steam. All this is done *before* I cut my background pieces (and I usually cut them an inch bigger just in case, although typically the background fabric does not draw up when I use starch).
My favorite machine method is freezer paper applique. I use Elmer's white paste instead of a glue stick to turn the edges under. After the entire quilt is applique, I turn to the back and trim the background fabric to 1/2" or so underneath the appliques. Then I use a small brush to apply water to all the applique edges (softens the paste) and remove all the freezer paper. This is the fastest and most efficient way I have found to handle a lot of machine applique for a quilt top.
For starch I mix a 1:1 solution of Sta Flo liquid laundry starch and water, "paint" this onto the background fabric using a large wall painting brush (my kitchen island works well for this), wait a minute or two to make sure the solution penetrates the fibers, toss in my dryer, and iron with steam. All this is done *before* I cut my background pieces (and I usually cut them an inch bigger just in case, although typically the background fabric does not draw up when I use starch).
My favorite machine method is freezer paper applique. I use Elmer's white paste instead of a glue stick to turn the edges under. After the entire quilt is applique, I turn to the back and trim the background fabric to 1/2" or so underneath the appliques. Then I use a small brush to apply water to all the applique edges (softens the paste) and remove all the freezer paper. This is the fastest and most efficient way I have found to handle a lot of machine applique for a quilt top.
#6
Until the fabric colour bleeds. That's always my fear with the water soluble stuff.
#9
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,312
I use "stitch and tear" for a stabilizer . I never used to use a stabilizer thinking I was doing just fine without, but the stabilizer really made a difference. When it comes to a tear away stabilizer .. my thoughts are the stiffer the better.
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Norfolk, VA
Posts: 5,397
If I'm doing hand applique, I don't but then I also like doing the reverse applique, if its on the machine I would use it. The kind of stablizer would depend on the design, the density and the fabric. I can't see tissue paper holding up well enough under machine stitching to do any good. You didn't say machine or hand so I addressed both.
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