Your take on Piecing with Interfacing?
#1
Super Member
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Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Gulf Coast, FL
Posts: 1,420
A friend of mine loaned me a book (Quick Watercolor Quilt's by Dina Pappas) for the section on piecing with interfacing. Where you lay out all your fabric square adhere them to gridded interfacing and then sewing it all together. First does it really work like they say? And second, it seems a little like "cheating", of course it's not because there's no right way to quilt, still I just don't know about this techinque, any opinions?
#3
i got this book and made one. i loved the method for a change of pace.
it was easy and fun to piece it together for the effect you want to achieve.
i had mine machine quilted. i don't think it could be easily hand quilted.
all in all i enjoyed doing it and someday i will make another.
i say go for it.
it was easy and fun to piece it together for the effect you want to achieve.
i had mine machine quilted. i don't think it could be easily hand quilted.
all in all i enjoyed doing it and someday i will make another.
i say go for it.
#4
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Montana
Posts: 683
I love this technique- in fact am working on a quilt right now using the fusible interfacing. Basically using 4 x 4 inch blocks and 2 inch sashings and doing a nine patch on 20 inch pieces of fusible interfacing. When I get it done, I'll post a picture to show you. To me its just another method to quilt and its perfectly legal. Go for it :):):)
#5
I love this method too. It takes a little time to maneuver the individual squares onto the fusible interfacing and the larger the desired size of the quilt, the larger the interfacing, but it is so much faster than piecing the individual squares together one by one. I have made three quilts using this method and would definitely do it again.
#7
I was just watching America Quilts Creatively and they were showing how to make a Lone Star Quilt using the interfacing. They used it like paper piecing and after each piece was sewn on they fused it down in place. Once each strip was complete, you fold the interfacing and stitched on the line to connect the strips. The diamonds and points were all perfect. Then instead of setting in the corner blocks, they pieced triangles to each diamond block and when you sewed all the pieces together you could not tell that it was not pieced in the regular way.
#8
I used the Quiltsmart interfacing to do my Lone Star throw, and was so impressed that I bought the kit for the Broken Lone Star quilt. It is easy once you get the hang of it. I liked working with rectangles of fabric instead of stretchy diamonds, and its easy to get into a rhythm of glue, stitch, flip and fuse. The interfacing does add a bit of weight, but it is really thin and I really don't notice it on the finished throw (even when I free-motion quilted it.) I posted the throw here: http://www.quiltingboard.com/posts/list/5650.page
I have a couple more of the kits, but haven't done them yet. I'm definitely a fan of the method tho!
I have a couple more of the kits, but haven't done them yet. I'm definitely a fan of the method tho!
#10
Originally Posted by Cathy M
I love this technique- in fact am working on a quilt right now using the fusible interfacing. Basically using 4 x 4 inch blocks and 2 inch sashings and doing a nine patch on 20 inch pieces of fusible interfacing. When I get it done, I'll post a picture to show you. To me its just another method to quilt and its perfectly legal. Go for it :):):)
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