think I am ready to throw this quilt out the window!
#1
think I am ready to throw this quilt out the window!
Last year I made a quilt..and gave it to a dear friend. I loved the pattern so much so I decided to make myself one. Only much bigger. OMG!!! You will never believe the problems I have had. I made several blocks wrong...okay..fixed those. Then after putting all the borders on..it was ten inches longer on one side than the other. Went to my LQS and they pointed out that I didn't measure the sides. (True, enough). So I took off all three borders and started again. Well...it still has a couple of extra inches..because I couldn't fit in on with tucks, otherwise. Finally got it done. whew!! Then one night I took it down to the dining hall in my bldg. and ever so quietly...scooted three long tables together..and proceeded to glue everything together with Elmer's school glue and my iron. Have done this many times before. Works wonderfully. But evidently you are supposed to start quilting right away. I let it sit about two weeks. Yep! The glue had slipped and dried several very large wrinkle into the fabric. I actually screamed. Now I have to take it to a commercial laundry and wash the glue out so I can do it all over again. (BTW...honey...don't close that window.)
#4
First....LOVE your signature.
Second...remember the saying ....."that which does not kill us makes us stronger"......
and i second Tartan....can you just dampen the wrinkled section (and a pathway to it from the edge) and let that dry and re-glue??
GOOD LUCK !!! Don't let that dang quilt beatcha !!!!
Second...remember the saying ....."that which does not kill us makes us stronger"......
and i second Tartan....can you just dampen the wrinkled section (and a pathway to it from the edge) and let that dry and re-glue??
GOOD LUCK !!! Don't let that dang quilt beatcha !!!!
#5
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Tulsa, Ok
Posts: 4,582
So sorry for your frustrations on this one! Would it help to set it aside awhile and work on something else? Or if by now you have decided you don't like this pattern that much after all, cut it up for other scrappy quilts.
#9
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Heart of Colorado's majestic mountains!
Posts: 6,026
Don't let one bad experience discourage you. Probably you see by now that using a pattern as it is presented by the designer is one thing and changing it is quite another. As for getting the layers apart after using Elmer's school glue I would soak those areas in a shallow pan of water and gently loosen them and re-glue them. I would be afraid that putting it in a commercial size washer would destroy the integrity of all the layers-especially the batting. Relegating it to the UFO pile only postpones doing what needs to be done.
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