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  • Woven fusible vs. unwoven fusible

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    Old 02-04-2010, 02:29 PM
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    Can someone please tell me what the difference is between the two fusibles and when I would want to use one and not the other?

    Thanks so much.

    Fran
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    Old 02-04-2010, 05:53 PM
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    Not sure, but I think woven fusibles are heavier and more often used in tailoring and dressmaking. Non-woven fusibles are the kind most often used by quilters -- Wonder Under, Steam-a-Seam, etc.

    There is one other type I know of, fusible tricot. This is a knit fusible -- one of the best choices for making a t-shirt quilt because the t-shirt fabric remains pliable and the fusible doesn't make it too stiff or heavy. T-shirt fabric is knit, so using a knit fusible with it makes sense.
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    Old 02-05-2010, 08:03 AM
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    Thanks for the info! I'm going to be making a quilt out of kimono silk remnants (probably a crazy quilt) and I think the tricot that you were talking about is what I should use to back the silk with to make it easier to work with. It's a much lighter-weight fusible.
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    Old 02-05-2010, 09:22 AM
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    woven has a grainline, nonwoven does not
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    Old 02-05-2010, 09:35 AM
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    Originally Posted by Frolfsen
    Thanks for the info! I'm going to be making a quilt out of kimono silk remnants (probably a crazy quilt) and I think the tricot that you were talking about is what I should use to back the silk with to make it easier to work with. It's a much lighter-weight fusible.
    Yes, I think so. Check on the kind of needle you should use with silk to make sure it doesn't snag the silk, and practice sewing on a few fused scraps to make sure everything is going to work for you before commiting your good kimono remnants to the process!
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