Originally Posted by
vintagemotif
Heehee....Okay Nancy knows from the last mini TOGA at Cathy's home that I'm a person that thinks outside the box and has the attitude of it looks good enough to me.
I'm enjoying this conversation on threads. Sometimes I just love to tests the waters or push that box, as I'm presently doing by experimenting with a thread for use in quilting.
I pieced the quilt I'm presently working on with the proper thread for the piece work. But, when it came time to match the right color grey thread to the fabric, all I could find is the Gutermann Toldi-Lock which is that thin thread you are talking about. I know it may not hold up in the quilting. I hemmed and hawed over should I use this or not, and my stupidity took over and won. Yes, I could have gone with a different color thread, but that was not the look I wanted. So, now I'm using this thread in my quilting. I'm running straight lines with two lines being about an 1/4 inch apart. This is a lap size quilt that will be used during the winter holidays only.
I figure worse comes to worse and the thread doesn't hold, I'll just re-quilt the dang thing.
Somewhere in any quilt's life the fabric and thread wears down and breaks, and then repairs need to be done or the quilt gets shelved away.
I don't want it to be next winter that I'm repairing this quilt; but if so, I'll let you all know.

Ok Monica always playing the devil's advocate! HeHeHeHe!
If you are quilting with serger thread every 1/4", I can't see your quilt ever falling apart! That is like double sewing everything! Even if you were doing stippling really tight - it seems to me the thin threads would be fine!
My problem is that I know women who just can't throw thread away and used 'very' old thread to make a quilt top only to have the thread dissolve when the quilt was washed! What heart break! After, I found this out on my next trip to see my parents, I went through my Mother's old thread and threw it all away. I bought her all new thread colors because she just couldn't throw anything away! The problem with the very cheap thread made out of thread scraps is that it is usually so fuzzy that it just causes trouble when you try to put it through your machines.
You go for it GIRL!
Nancy