The Secret to Pieced Backings
#21
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Tulsa, Ok
Posts: 4,582
Those are some beautiful backs!! Thanks Jeanne S. for all the pictures. So here's a question - with piecing on the front and the back, do you find the quilting more difficult because of all the thickness at the seams? I only FMQ and I have troubles with the front seams sometimes (if I go too fast, I skip stitches) but since I only have seams in the front I can see them coming and plan for it. If they were hidden on the back I would not be expecting them. Am I the only one with this issue?
#22
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Sonoma County, CA
Posts: 4,299
These are some great quilt backs!
I deliberately piece mine sometimes, but other times I just want to be done with it and use a wide backing piece.
Some of these quilts posted here makes me want to spend more time on the backs now, though!
I deliberately piece mine sometimes, but other times I just want to be done with it and use a wide backing piece.
Some of these quilts posted here makes me want to spend more time on the backs now, though!
#23
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Victorian Sweatshop Forum
Posts: 1,271
#28
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Posts: 1,029
I do mostly throw size (bigger than lap but smaller/shorter than twin). Usually 4 yards of regular width material is enough to cover the short side (2 yds = 72 inches) and 40* 2 is enough to cover the length... However, I hate having just a plain seam so I often insert pieces/blocks or strips. Most of the time they end up somewhere around the middle unless I plan when layering. My backing is usually wider than my front by a good few inches so I try to align a seam from the top with the seams on the bottom on both sides. It actually gets it pretty darn straight. I don't often take pics of the back, so I don't really have any examples to show.
On my last quilt which was King-sized, my 108 inch wide fabric shrunk a good 6+ inches and was too small. In that case I pieced a width of a different material and ran it across the top of the quilt. What's great is this now allows for a pretty "turn down" effect on our bed. It was a "mistake" that turned out great and I am tempted to do it for any bedquilts that I do in the future!
On my last quilt which was King-sized, my 108 inch wide fabric shrunk a good 6+ inches and was too small. In that case I pieced a width of a different material and ran it across the top of the quilt. What's great is this now allows for a pretty "turn down" effect on our bed. It was a "mistake" that turned out great and I am tempted to do it for any bedquilts that I do in the future!
#30
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 1,225
Sharon,
I have not gotten the hang of FMQ yet, so I only quilt with my walking foot, and that curvy line was just done freestyle or 'eyeballing' it with my walking foot. I sew the first curvy line in the middle of the quilt, then work my way across with similar lines keeping an eye on the distance from the first line. No pattern, and I don't take the time to mark my quilts either. So the result is not exact, but 'close enough' for me. ;o) I actually find curvy lines easier than straight lines, as the variances are not quite as noticeable when the lines curve.
I have not gotten the hang of FMQ yet, so I only quilt with my walking foot, and that curvy line was just done freestyle or 'eyeballing' it with my walking foot. I sew the first curvy line in the middle of the quilt, then work my way across with similar lines keeping an eye on the distance from the first line. No pattern, and I don't take the time to mark my quilts either. So the result is not exact, but 'close enough' for me. ;o) I actually find curvy lines easier than straight lines, as the variances are not quite as noticeable when the lines curve.
I have not found a rhythm with FMQ either. Once I finish a couple quilts I'm working on, I'm going to try again. I got Leah Day's download on quilting basics and FMQ and have been watching that.
Thank you.
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