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Design wall question

Design wall question

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Old 03-14-2013, 05:38 AM
  #21  
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My "wall" is a flannel backed table cloth suspended from the closet doors.

The downside is that it must be removed nightly as my husbands clothes are behind the doors, but I have a large cardboard tube so I can roll it up until I'm ready to work again. {Note to self - roll more carefully next quilt so that I don't have to repress all the blocks again.}

Once the quilt is pieced together, I can then hang it from the hangars without the table cloth for things like auditioning borders or photographing it. I've also used the closet doors to support a quilt that I basted with water soluble thread to "unbaste" it with a spray bottle as I had too many crimps and creases in the back after the initial basting.

I wish I had room for a more permanent/durable wall, but recently inherited quite a few oil paintings, one of which will take up the wall I had originally designated as a design wall. But that wall would have been much harder to work on as I needed to place a table and shelving along it anyway.

I'm quite happy with this set up. Much more so than when I laid the table cloth on our bed (risk of Corgis settling on it). Floor was never an option due to lack of open space and Corgi wrestling matches.

Cheers, K
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Old 03-14-2013, 05:41 AM
  #22  
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Originally Posted by mom-6 View Post
I currently am using the super cheapie flannel backed tablecloth. Would like to upgrade to the foam insulation board as the tablecloth does not hang very evenly.
I have a super cheapie table cloth and now a heavier duty table cloth. Definitely prefer the heavier duty one. My cheapie is crumpled due to folding storage. Steam might help it (if I had a steamer), but there is a melted spot from where the iron accidentally hit it, so I can't just press it flat again...

Cheers, K
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Old 03-14-2013, 05:51 AM
  #23  
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Mine is 7 feet wide and 7 feet tall - used two pieces of flannel that I stitched together. Made a pocket in the top and the bottom and put a 7 foot of 1"x2" board in each pocket. DH attached 3 - 88 cent nickel robe hooks (curved) that we'd found at Lowes at the top to set the board on. I made an opening in the center of the flannel at the top (for the hook). Works wonderfully well, and all total we spent maybe $7 for everything (had the flannel for years). Holds it nice and firm and I just lift it out of the hooks at the top if I need to move it. Love my design wall!
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Old 03-14-2013, 06:15 AM
  #24  
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The insulation board works great. I don't have mine attached to the way so I can move it around if I need to because it usually stands in front of a floor to ceiling cabinet I have supplies in.
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Old 03-14-2013, 03:32 PM
  #25  
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Ladies, when you say fleece, do you mean something like the polyester "blizzard" fleece they have at Joanns? I believe it's 60" wide. Hadn't thought about using that...the fabric will stick to it OK?

I'm in an apartment and am thinking of making something like Debbe's with a pocket at top and bottom for weight and stability which I could hang from my fabric shelves. I could also wash it and not have it shrink up. I don't have much wall space/floor space either, and instead of corgi's, I have min-pins. :-)

I've been off this week for spring break and should have assembled my Bonnie Hunter Easy Street, but it's pretty big and I just didn't want to deal with it. This may be the motivation I need to get it together.
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Old 03-14-2013, 09:33 PM
  #26  
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Originally Posted by sewplease View Post
Ladies, when you say fleece, do you mean something like the polyester "blizzard" fleece they have at Joanns? I believe it's 60" wide. Hadn't thought about using that...the fabric will stick to it OK?

I'm in an apartment and am thinking of making something like Debbe's with a pocket at top and bottom for weight and stability which I could hang from my fabric shelves. I could also wash it and not have it shrink up. I don't have much wall space/floor space either, and instead of corgi's, I have min-pins. :-)

I've been off this week for spring break and should have assembled my Bonnie Hunter Easy Street, but it's pretty big and I just didn't want to deal with it. This may be the motivation I need to get it together.
The fleece I purchased at Hancock Fabrics is Fireside Anti-pill fleece in white. It is 'thicker' than flannel or felt and it reminds me of what would be used for fleece jackets. It is soft and the heavier weight-ed loft of it holds the weight of layered fabrics very well. Today I finished a 9-block nine patch '2x2' wall hanging complete with batting. (I don't have a pic of it yet.) There is some weight to it as it is the wall hanging that has one of the 9-patch squares hanging off the wall hanging (holding the binding from the edge of the wall hanging), complete with stuffed arms, legs, and little plastic Ken doll shoes. I call it 'Hang In There' but don't know the actual title of the wall hanging. I stuck it up on the fleece without pins, smoothed it out, and it has not budged from that spot.
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Old 03-14-2013, 09:50 PM
  #27  
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Originally Posted by NanaCsews2 View Post
The fleece I purchased at Hancock Fabrics is Fireside Anti-pill fleece in white. It is 'thicker' than flannel or felt and it reminds me of what would be used for fleece jackets. It is soft and the heavier weight-ed loft of it holds the weight of layered fabrics very well.
Thank you so much for this information! Your wall hanging sounds very cool - please post a picture for us if you can! :-)
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Old 03-15-2013, 12:43 AM
  #28  
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You can buy vinyl with a nice plush backing at Joann's on bolts. I'm going to try the binder clips hanging from small nails or Command hooks.
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Old 03-15-2013, 06:05 AM
  #29  
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Did you know that foam backed vinyl makes a perfect ironing surface? Press on the foam side. It works like the Steady Betty. I have the Steady Betty and made a foam backed vinyl covered board to make a giant size one. The Steady Betty is better quality but the foam backed vinyl does great.
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Old 03-15-2013, 06:35 AM
  #30  
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I got a large piece of cardboard from an appliance store (free) covered it with white flannel and lean it against a wall. I can use pins in it, or slide it out of the way under a bed, or behind a door. Works great.
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