Go Back  Quiltingboard Forums >
  • Main
  • Hand Quilters Batting >
  • Hand Quilters Batting

  • Hand Quilters Batting

    Thread Tools
     
    Old 02-13-2010, 03:56 AM
      #11  
    Junior Member
    Thread Starter
     
    Join Date: May 2009
    Location: West Virginia
    Posts: 166
    Default

    I thank you all. I have never tried the Warm & Natural, so I think that it will be my next purchase. I noticed on their site that there is also a White & Natural. I'm guessing that this is because of the color, one white and one off-white. I use a LOT of white in my quilts so I don't know if the off-white would change the white in the tops. Thanks again, Pam
    Pam in WV is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 01:35 PM
      #12  
    Power Poster
     
    Join Date: Dec 2008
    Location: Western Wisconsin
    Posts: 12,930
    Default

    Not all hand quilters like Warm n Natural. It is needlepunched through a scrim. It is a tougher to push a needle through scrim. Quilters Dream cotton batting is needlepunched, but not through a scrim, so it is easier to needle.
    Prism99 is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 02:40 PM
      #13  
    Super Member
     
    maryb119's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Dec 2009
    Location: Iowa
    Posts: 8,128
    Default

    I find that Warm and Natural gets softer and easier to stitch after it has been preshrunk
    maryb119 is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 04:25 PM
      #14  
    Senior Member
     
    grammypatty7's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Feb 2010
    Location: FL/formerly IL
    Posts: 699
    Default

    Batting for hand quilting: I use and have used since I started quilted 46 plus years ago, Soft n Crafty hight or low loft polyester batting which is made by Fairfield and sold at JoAnn's in a bag. The quilts I did (see my avatar) are just as beautiful today as the day I made them. As a hand quilter who does NOT use a hoop or frame, I love my quilts to have a poof or puff to them and NOT be flat and this batting gives that to me. I have tried using a hoop and it caused havoc with my arms and shoulders. I now pin baste and then hand baste 2 - 3 inches apart top to bottom and cross wise and this works well but does take time but the reward is that I can take my works in progress with me to work on anywhere - quilt chapter meetings and a Happy Stitchers group that allows anything that uses a needed.

    The ladies in my quilt chapter highly tout the warm and natural as THE BEST and that's all that they will use but they are machine quilters. At a recent guild meeting, the speaker is both a machine and hand quilter and she says warm and natural for machine quilting and the polyester battings for hand quilting which really surprised me.

    My children and grandchildren tell me they love to cuddle up with their grammy quilts.
    grammypatty7 is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 05:12 PM
      #15  
    Google Goddess
     
    Join Date: May 2009
    Location: Central Indiana (USA)
    Posts: 30,181
    Default

    Wow,

    How many different kinds of batting is there?

    Karen
    craftybear is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 06:06 PM
      #16  
    Senior Member
     
    grammypatty7's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Feb 2010
    Location: FL/formerly IL
    Posts: 699
    Default

    Karen,
    There are many battings available and at a variety of costs. The ladies in my quilt chapter really frowned on my using the polyester but that's what I started with years ago and still prefer today but then, I've not tested any others. Why change if the results I get are what I want. The ladies in my quilt chapter are testing all of the new ones out and love the bamboo and there is another new fiber out. When I started my first quilt 46 years ago, we couldn't find quilt batting anywhere. We even drove to nearby Peoria, IL and they had no clue how I could get my hands on quilt batting and I was told to use a blanket for the inside of my quilt. Tried that and that's why it took me 38 years to complete the quilt that's in my avatar. The blanket showed through and it was the ugliest quilt on the planet. Eventually through a snail catalogues it was possible to order a variety of quilt supplies as quilting once again became more popular but back then in rural, small town IL, quilt supplies were hard to find. I can see why the machine quilters prefer the cotton batting as it does lie flatter and for those who do free motion, that's better than the puffy polyester. The day I went for my free class on the Pfaff, I took a section I'd prepared for the teacher to use and I quickly noticed that the puffiness was a problem for her but even so, she made my Pfaff sit up and take notice - of course she should as it's her job. Next time you go fabric shopping, check out the different battings available. It's truly amazing. At Joann's, in addition to the variety they sell on rolls by the yard that have to be cut, in another location are bins full of several other battings including some with adhesive that you place between the fabric and press so you don't have to baste. I believe that isn't recommended for hand quilting but could be wrong on that but for some reason, that sticks in my mind.

    If you don't live near a quilt shop, got to JoAnn's online and do a search for batting and see what comes up. I've never lived close enough to quilt shops to use them. I used to buy at kmart way back when and later at walmart but the walmart closest to me no longer carries fabrics so it's JoAnn's. There are a 3 quilt shops with in an hour of me but I avoid driving outside of The Villages - too much traffic.
    grammypatty7 is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 06:12 PM
      #17  
    Google Goddess
     
    Join Date: May 2009
    Location: Central Indiana (USA)
    Posts: 30,181
    Default

    Hi Grammypatty7,

    Thanks again for all of the information on batting. I sure appreciate it.

    Happy Quilting!

    Karen
    craftybear is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 07:53 PM
      #18  
    Junior Member
     
    Join Date: Dec 2009
    Location: Preston, CT.
    Posts: 162
    Default

    Since I retired I have been going through my material and I have around 62 yards of wool.. what to do with.. I used it to make skirts and Suit Jackets, dresses. Don't need much of them now that I'am home.. Any ideas anyone...
    connecticut quilter is offline  
    Old 02-13-2010, 09:25 PM
      #19  
    Senior Member
     
    dlf0122quilting's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jul 2007
    Location: Sun City, CA
    Posts: 487
    Default

    I like the Quilters Dream. It is soft and very flexible and needles nicely. You might ask some of your quilting friends to save you some scraps of different battings they use and just make little sandwiches to practice on before you make that commitment on a large quilt and then you are stuck with something that may not be easy to hand quilt.
    dlf0122quilting is offline  
    Old 02-14-2010, 06:04 AM
      #20  
    Super Member
     
    cyniree's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jan 2009
    Location: Kansas
    Posts: 1,065
    Default

    Hi Pam,

    I use Warm and Natural. But I think it would really depend on the project you are doing. Some time you may want a fluffier look.

    Cindy in Kansas
    cyniree is offline  
    Related Topics
    Thread
    Thread Starter
    Forum
    Replies
    Last Post
    teddysmom
    Main
    13
    10-08-2012 05:29 PM
    teddysmom
    Main
    2
    07-08-2012 03:44 AM
    just_the_scraps_m'am
    Main
    0
    06-24-2010 08:00 AM

    Posting Rules
    You may not post new threads
    You may not post replies
    You may not post attachments
    You may not edit your posts

    BB code is On
    Smilies are On
    [IMG] code is On
    HTML code is On
    Trackbacks are Off
    Pingbacks are Off
    Refbacks are Off



    FREE Quilting Newsletter