Quilting with velvet
#1
Quilting with velvet
My dear sister has requested a quilt in velvet - nothing fancy, random squares and rectangles. I am going to foundation piece it. A few accent pieces of brocade.
Being a thrift store queen, she provided me with a pile of fabric to use, some of it was clothes that I took apart. I notice some of it is stretchy.
Any hints or tips on working with this? Anyone make a quilt with all velvet before? Thanks.
Being a thrift store queen, she provided me with a pile of fabric to use, some of it was clothes that I took apart. I notice some of it is stretchy.
Any hints or tips on working with this? Anyone make a quilt with all velvet before? Thanks.
#2
Not yet! But it's in the plan...someday...
I would foundation piece the stretchy velvet, but if it is the heavier drapery/upholstery velvet, I see no need.
You need to be aware of the fact that velvet has a directional sheen. Because of this, two pieces from the same fabric will look different if they are not both placed facing the same direction (upside down/right side up). This is not always an issue in a quilt, but can be very much a problem in something like a dress or a cape.
Can't wait to see your finished project! Sounds like it will be gorgeous.
I would foundation piece the stretchy velvet, but if it is the heavier drapery/upholstery velvet, I see no need.
You need to be aware of the fact that velvet has a directional sheen. Because of this, two pieces from the same fabric will look different if they are not both placed facing the same direction (upside down/right side up). This is not always an issue in a quilt, but can be very much a problem in something like a dress or a cape.
Can't wait to see your finished project! Sounds like it will be gorgeous.
#3
My dear sister has requested a quilt in velvet - nothing fancy, random squares and rectangles. I am going to foundation piece it. A few accent pieces of brocade.
Being a thrift store queen, she provided me with a pile of fabric to use, some of it was clothes that I took apart. I notice some of it is stretchy.
Any hints or tips on working with this? Anyone make a quilt with all velvet before? Thanks.
Being a thrift store queen, she provided me with a pile of fabric to use, some of it was clothes that I took apart. I notice some of it is stretchy.
Any hints or tips on working with this? Anyone make a quilt with all velvet before? Thanks.
I think I'd leave the velvety stretch stuff out. Or maybe save it for binding. or applique after backing it with some iron-on interfacing.
#4
Not yet! But it's in the plan...someday...
I would foundation piece the stretchy velvet, but if it is the heavier drapery/upholstery velvet, I see no need.
You need to be aware of the fact that velvet has a directional sheen. Because of this, two pieces from the same fabric will look different if they are not both placed facing the same direction (upside down/right side up). This is not always an issue in a quilt, but can be very much a problem in something like a dress or a cape.
Can't wait to see your finished project! Sounds like it will be gorgeous.
I would foundation piece the stretchy velvet, but if it is the heavier drapery/upholstery velvet, I see no need.
You need to be aware of the fact that velvet has a directional sheen. Because of this, two pieces from the same fabric will look different if they are not both placed facing the same direction (upside down/right side up). This is not always an issue in a quilt, but can be very much a problem in something like a dress or a cape.
Can't wait to see your finished project! Sounds like it will be gorgeous.
the different naps in the velvet seem like they'd be a blessing if the quilt is more on the "crazy" quilt side.
#5
#6
Better test first! The fluff often reacts badly to heat necessary to attach the fusible.
OH, just came to me. How about buying some light weight interfacing--non fusible--and carefully pinning a chunk of the stretch stuff to it, then do a sparse meandering quilting stitch over the whole thing to act as a stabilizer and then cut to fit your pattern. You might have to do it do additional quilting over it when completing the quilt.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,312
Most velvets if you remove stitches it will leave a permanent mark/hole where the stitches were.
#8
Power Poster
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Northern Michigan
Posts: 12,861
i have used some stretchy velvets in the past- best to use a stablizer- or foundation- it helps keep the stretch controlled. no reason to not use it- you just have to not stretch it as you are sewing- or you will have ripples. my darling sister tried to use a stretch velvet as a final border on her first quilt- boy did she have a time! it was more of a ruffle- once we took it back off & added a fusable stablizer it worked ok...and i got to be the recipient of her first quilt!
#9
@@ Stupid me, I forgot what a mess a hot iron could make to the nap of any sort of velvet. Not good to use fusible interfacing. Unless you don't mind the secondary pattern a hot iron would make.
#10
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 4,688
I used to press velvet on a nail board -- or a real fluffy towel. The only thing worse than pressing velvet is washing it (what a mess). What I would probably do in this case is see if I could use 505 to spray baste the velvet to a light weight interfacing (spray the interfacing not the velvet). I seem to remember there are several kinds of velvet -- some are synthetic, some are cotton. There was a gal who used to be on some of the craft shows who would iron acetate velvet on stamps -- the result is pretty impressive because the velvet is flattened only where the high parts of the stamp touch the velvet.
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