Another binding discussion
#1
Another binding discussion
This week I bound 8 bed runners. I wanted to try Donna Jordan’s method that she demos on YouTube. It worked pretty well for me! I sewed onto the front, wrapped around, then stitched in the ditch on the front and hoped it caught the binding on the back. And it did 99% of the time. I think I may be switching to this method. The only thing I struggled with was the binding coming out different widths on different parts of the quilt. I think part of it was the huge amount of bulk in my quilts (stabilized knit shirts with flannel back). Would you consider this a success? I hope you can see how the binding on the back gets wider and narrower, and the stitching line seems to be closer to the edge and then further away. Any advice for this (that doesn’t involve hand stitching)?
#2
Power Poster
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,535
The uneven binding size on the back when stitching from the front and sometimes missing the edge is why I use Charisma’s quick machine binding with flange. I think you did the best you could with what you had.
#7
Power Poster
Join Date: May 2008
Location: MN
Posts: 24,646
Have you tried gluing the binding to the back before stitching it from the front? That way you would know where it was before you started sewing ?
I have not tried it - but I think someone told me that is how she does it.
I have not tried it - but I think someone told me that is how she does it.
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: The Deep South near Cajun Country, USA
Posts: 5,433
I bind my quilts the way you did. I find the Clover clips helpful because they have the little measuring marks on them. Helps keep me straight. Yours does look very good. I probably would do them by hand if they were exceptionally beautiful, but for quilts that are going to be used and washed, I think this is a sturdier finish.
#9
Here are the steps to binding my quilts
This is how I finish my quilts, using the front extended to fold back. It's a little tedious, but I use a decorative stitch, sometimes metellic thread!
This is how I finish my quilts, using the front extended to fold back. It's a little tedious, but I use a decorative stitch, sometimes metellic thread!
#10
I have not tried to do a machine binding from the front as you describe. I have tried the fanged binding and that worked alright as long as I was very very careful. For me the most accurate binding is where I sew front sides together of quilt to binding, turn it over to the back and stitch it by hand. It never fails. It takes a bit, a lot of a bit, longer to finish but never fails. A 2 1/2" strip on the bias works everytime.