Anyone tried this?
#101
Originally Posted by Rose_P
Originally Posted by Farm Quilter
Another way to accomplish your goal is to draw your design once, put it on top of 5-6 layers of tissue and sew your design with your DSM without thread, just an old needle. You can use your original design many times before it falls apart. Using a copier to make several of your original is an option too, before you start "sewing" your design, just to make sure you have enough copies. I've done that with Golden Thread Papers and then used them on my longarm. They tear away easily.
#102
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 158
Originally Posted by rb.
I'm wondering... I've watched my SIL trace patterns onto tissue paper, use spray adhesive to attach them to a quilt, then machine quilt. I'm wondering if the spray adhesive could be used to fix the tissue paper to a piece of printer paper, and sent through the printer to print patterns from a computer. If it worked it sure would be faster. Anyone ever try it? If the papers try to split upon entry maybe folding the printer paper over at the leading edge, with a tight crease?
#105
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Northern California mountains
Posts: 12,538
I don't get that catalog, but many companies carry a product to prepare fabric for printing. My head is not working today, or I would tell you the brand. (CRS) It works beautifully for me. It may, however, depend in part on the brand of ink you are using. HP ink works well.
#106
Originally Posted by sewingsuz
Please tell me what is chalk pounce? I have seen coments about this a couple of times.
That will tell you all about it. :thumbup: I only use the white...got burned on a blue chalk marker before, but it wasn't pounce.
#107
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Camarillo, CA
Posts: 4,598
Originally Posted by quiltsRfun
I tried this with newsprint paper. Tore off pretty easily and the paper will go through the printer.
#108
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Snohomish WA
Posts: 884
Okay, here comes a dumb question from a rookie:
WHAT are you talking about, please??? Is this for paper piecing or sticking these papers to fabric to sew over the top of them, then removing them?
Sorry; everyone but me seems to know exactly what this is about, and I'd love to learn more but don't have a clue
(blushing)
Thanks.
WHAT are you talking about, please??? Is this for paper piecing or sticking these papers to fabric to sew over the top of them, then removing them?
Sorry; everyone but me seems to know exactly what this is about, and I'd love to learn more but don't have a clue
(blushing)
Thanks.
#109
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Northern California mountains
Posts: 12,538
2 things being talked about here.
A ponce is a bag of chalk, which is a traditional way to transfer a pattern through a template that has holes in it. It may be used for applique or quilting patterns.
There are several different things you can do with a printer to assist in quilting. You can print or copy a pattern, such as a paper piecing pattern. Light weight paper works best for this because it tears off easily. Many people print their quilting patterns, sewing through the paper, and again, tearing it off when they are done.
What I was talking about is a product called BubbleJet. You wash your fabric, soak it in the BubbleJet liquid, hang it to dry, iron it to a piece of freezer paper, trim to 8.5x11, and print directly on the fabric, thus creating anything from a label to a cloth picture of your grandmother to use in your quilt. Be sure to check the permanence of your ink before you put a quilt together this way.
Where I live, there is a T shirt company that will take your photos and print them on your good quality cloth. I'm told it is more stable than BubbleJet printing, but it leaves a plastic feel to the fabric.
There are also a variety of rather pricey pruducts on the market which are fabric pieces (on freezer paper) already prepared for your printer. They vary a lot in cost, stability and fabric quality. Some can't be washed at all.
A ponce is a bag of chalk, which is a traditional way to transfer a pattern through a template that has holes in it. It may be used for applique or quilting patterns.
There are several different things you can do with a printer to assist in quilting. You can print or copy a pattern, such as a paper piecing pattern. Light weight paper works best for this because it tears off easily. Many people print their quilting patterns, sewing through the paper, and again, tearing it off when they are done.
What I was talking about is a product called BubbleJet. You wash your fabric, soak it in the BubbleJet liquid, hang it to dry, iron it to a piece of freezer paper, trim to 8.5x11, and print directly on the fabric, thus creating anything from a label to a cloth picture of your grandmother to use in your quilt. Be sure to check the permanence of your ink before you put a quilt together this way.
Where I live, there is a T shirt company that will take your photos and print them on your good quality cloth. I'm told it is more stable than BubbleJet printing, but it leaves a plastic feel to the fabric.
There are also a variety of rather pricey pruducts on the market which are fabric pieces (on freezer paper) already prepared for your printer. They vary a lot in cost, stability and fabric quality. Some can't be washed at all.
#110
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Snohomish WA
Posts: 884
Thank you for all your input; that was very kind of you.
I just couldn't imagine what Press & Seal wrap could have to do with sewing! (So it can be printed on & then laid onto fabric & sewed through...??)
Another new aspect of this wonderful addiction to be explored.
I just couldn't imagine what Press & Seal wrap could have to do with sewing! (So it can be printed on & then laid onto fabric & sewed through...??)
Another new aspect of this wonderful addiction to be explored.
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