Is this Cheating...
#241
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 1,918
I have never done it that way or thought of being able to do it, but it is a great idea! I will have to try it. Don't listen to your mom, like someone said, "She is miserable" and wants people around her to be miserable also. Get above it and enjoy your quilt making. I have tied some quilts and they are just so cozy looking. You should try stitch in the ditch on your machine, it is not hard. Enjoy your quilting you are doing a good job and are a very good person and don't let anyone tell you different.
#242
It is definitely not cheating. It is a completely acceptable way to bind any quilt project. The only time I don't do it is if I want to change the color/fabric of the binding. On the Downey Quilts for Kids, they suggest this method to alleviate one more area that can get caught on equipment or frayed by the laundry. Sorry to hear your mom has a "mean voice" you are so familiar with. Bad mommy!
#243
Junior Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Central Missouri
Posts: 150
{Deanna},
Without speaking to your Mom's problems I will tell you something. If you are putting love into your quilts, that love will come back to you. Don't let anyone make you feel bad about how you do what you do, because you are doing your best with what you have, and that is virtue.
My church has a sewing day every month, and we "sew" comforters for "burn-outs"; people in a several-county wide area who have lost their homes in fires. We use pretty sheets for the fronts and backs, and batting in between. Then six or eight of us tie the comforters with yarn or floss, and another one folds under the edges of top and bottom and machine stitches around the edges.
It's not "quilting". But guess what? We get a LOT more of them done, and the need is so great. The people at the local American Red Cross office do not criticize our work, or tell us that we are "cheating". They are so thankful. They tell us stories about the people who have received these comforters, and how much they mean to them. That's love.
Prayers are coming your way (and Mom's too).
Without speaking to your Mom's problems I will tell you something. If you are putting love into your quilts, that love will come back to you. Don't let anyone make you feel bad about how you do what you do, because you are doing your best with what you have, and that is virtue.
My church has a sewing day every month, and we "sew" comforters for "burn-outs"; people in a several-county wide area who have lost their homes in fires. We use pretty sheets for the fronts and backs, and batting in between. Then six or eight of us tie the comforters with yarn or floss, and another one folds under the edges of top and bottom and machine stitches around the edges.
It's not "quilting". But guess what? We get a LOT more of them done, and the need is so great. The people at the local American Red Cross office do not criticize our work, or tell us that we are "cheating". They are so thankful. They tell us stories about the people who have received these comforters, and how much they mean to them. That's love.
Prayers are coming your way (and Mom's too).
#245
We are not sitting in little desks, waiting for a teacher to "grade" our efforts. No one will go to the principal's office if they don't do things the approved way. THere is no "cheating" in quilting. There are various methods, all of which work, and the method that best fits your project/time/money is the method you should use.
My first quilt was tied and the backing was brought to the front for binding. Those are the kind of quilts I grew up with, and I have many fond memories of them. I still do the backing as binding thing once in awhile, and will probably tie another quilt or two, although it is no longer my preferred method.
My first quilt was tied and the backing was brought to the front for binding. Those are the kind of quilts I grew up with, and I have many fond memories of them. I still do the backing as binding thing once in awhile, and will probably tie another quilt or two, although it is no longer my preferred method.
#248
I wouldn't pay your mother any mind. Some people just cannot be happy for someone - because they for whatever reason are not happy themselves. Every method you are using to accomplish your quilts are one of several methods any one of us on here could employ to finish a quilt, all without machine sewing. If sewing/quilting makes you happy - and your methods are in line with working with what you have for the time being, and it makes you happy being able to complete the quilt - she has ZERO business telling you what you should and should not do.
(IMHO) - Unless you are borrowing any sort of money from her to buy your supplies etc, or are starving any children you may have to support your quilting habit (which I'm sure isn't likely the case) you're a big girl that can do what she pleases with her income and quilt in whatsoever manner she sees fit. As for your mother - she has not a single iota of say in how you spend your personal income (whatever its source). Who made her the quilting police?!? Furthermore - If she herself has any experience quilting, and has personally owns a sewing machine, then perhaps she should be offerring you some time on her machine, or offering to do it for you. However, on the flip side - if she doesn't have any quilting/sewing experience, but is instead basing her opinions and regurgitating what she knows from reading a book/magazine/or simply buying or being gifted a quilt, then she doesn't need to contribute commentary on a subject she knows nothing about. Sorry, I don't pull any punches. ;)
Explosive blessings, abundance and inspiration to you all!
- The Creative Seamstress
(IMHO) - Unless you are borrowing any sort of money from her to buy your supplies etc, or are starving any children you may have to support your quilting habit (which I'm sure isn't likely the case) you're a big girl that can do what she pleases with her income and quilt in whatsoever manner she sees fit. As for your mother - she has not a single iota of say in how you spend your personal income (whatever its source). Who made her the quilting police?!? Furthermore - If she herself has any experience quilting, and has personally owns a sewing machine, then perhaps she should be offerring you some time on her machine, or offering to do it for you. However, on the flip side - if she doesn't have any quilting/sewing experience, but is instead basing her opinions and regurgitating what she knows from reading a book/magazine/or simply buying or being gifted a quilt, then she doesn't need to contribute commentary on a subject she knows nothing about. Sorry, I don't pull any punches. ;)
Explosive blessings, abundance and inspiration to you all!
- The Creative Seamstress
#249
Deanna,
Please read the beautiful piece under your signature:
There comes a time in life, when you walk away from all the drama and people who create it. You surround yourself with people who make you laugh, forget the bad, and focus on the good. So, love the people who treat you right. Think good thoughts for the ones who don't. Life is too short to be anything but happy. Falling down is part of LIFE...Getting back up is LIVING...
Please read the beautiful piece under your signature:
There comes a time in life, when you walk away from all the drama and people who create it. You surround yourself with people who make you laugh, forget the bad, and focus on the good. So, love the people who treat you right. Think good thoughts for the ones who don't. Life is too short to be anything but happy. Falling down is part of LIFE...Getting back up is LIVING...
#250
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Alabama
Posts: 179
It is perfectly ok to finish your quilt that way-that is how my grandmother taught me and I tend to like it-gives a more tailored look- unless the quilt calls for a fancier binding. Moms tend to get on our nerves-we just need to try to remember what bothered us so we do not turn around and do it to our own children one day. As we so often hear "there are no official quilt police, just self-proclaimed ones". Your quilt is your own work of art and you can finish anyway you wish1"
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