No Batting in Quilt
#43
I have 2 quilts that were made as Summer quilts. They were pieced by my Grandmother and never quilted. Very thin material and they were meant to not have batting. However, when I had them quilted we decided to put in a very light batting and back. They probably weigh about 1/3 of a regular quilt.
#45
I'm new to quilting and have only made 2 quilts, one of them with flannel as the batting. I agree with others...this is a wonderful board and I have learned so much...the good ideas seem to keep coming. Thanks everyone!
#46
Both of my grandmothers made quilts and neither of them used batting, not sure if there was even such a thing in their time. My mom said they either used a sheet in the middle or recycled an old blanket. I love a quilt with no batting and a cotton sheet on the back, so cool in the summer and I am not a person who likes much weight to my blankets.
#47
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Oregon
Posts: 3,369
I remember reading about the different kinds of batting used before commercial batting was available or affordable. I can't imagine using milkweed (the fluffy white part of the seeds). What a lot of work! We've got it awfully good, don't we?
#48
I am so happy that I began reading this forum. I have one quilt top completed and another almost ready to go. They are both for a California king size bed and are so heavy even w/o batting or backing. I am going to make "Summer Quilts" with them. Thanks for the question and all the great answers.
#49
Originally Posted by teddysmom
I was at an auction today and saw several quilts that had no batting--could see through white backing and saw back of quilt top. I thought all quilts were supposed to have a batting--thus the sandwich. What's the rule?
#50
I made one with no batting, as I wanted it for a Summer Quilt. I really like it!
A friend did her long-arm for me. She said she thought it would have been better for machine quilting to have used a very light batting. She showed me several places that were hard for her to machine quilt, and she "goofed."
She said there is a light-weight batting on the market now for just that purpose. I haven't seen it, but she said you can get it at JoAnn's.
I made another one with a very light-weight blanket and it was fine. Either way for me. Also batting gets expensive.
Mariah
A friend did her long-arm for me. She said she thought it would have been better for machine quilting to have used a very light batting. She showed me several places that were hard for her to machine quilt, and she "goofed."
She said there is a light-weight batting on the market now for just that purpose. I haven't seen it, but she said you can get it at JoAnn's.
I made another one with a very light-weight blanket and it was fine. Either way for me. Also batting gets expensive.
Mariah
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