Pieced border help
#21
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: Pikesville, MD
Posts: 720
A while back I posted a way to calculate the size of the coping strips needed when the border is a bit larger than what you need: Calculate Coping Strip SIze For Pieced Borders
This can simplify the process, so you don't need to recalculate the measurements for the border.
This can simplify the process, so you don't need to recalculate the measurements for the border.
#22
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Greater Peoria, IL -- just moved!
Posts: 6,098
That's a great tutorial/post Carol45! Motivates me to start working on the text for one I'll be making once my current project is just a tiny bit further along. In my case it's about determing the length needed for striped fabric sashing in a diagonally set quilt. That sounds pretty specific but it's about determining your required Linear Inches which is a basic thing you need to do to figure out how much yardage you need, especially when you are working with scraps of fabric and not just easy WoF.
Not Battleaxe's problem but I think it is a huge step for most starting quilters to go away from kits and other people's patterns to their own. I think for someone like me who started before the rotary revolution and really before kits and certainly precuts, it's a bit easier to see a heap of random bits of fabric and figure out something to do with it than it is for someone who started more recently.
I'm lucky that I have Electric Quilt, but I am out of licenses to reinstall so it is on my "other" computer and I have no printer capability. It's easy, quick and fun to draw out the basics in EQ, but I've also gone back to my graph paper pad. It's a way I can quilt in bed while watching tv!
Not Battleaxe's problem but I think it is a huge step for most starting quilters to go away from kits and other people's patterns to their own. I think for someone like me who started before the rotary revolution and really before kits and certainly precuts, it's a bit easier to see a heap of random bits of fabric and figure out something to do with it than it is for someone who started more recently.
I'm lucky that I have Electric Quilt, but I am out of licenses to reinstall so it is on my "other" computer and I have no printer capability. It's easy, quick and fun to draw out the basics in EQ, but I've also gone back to my graph paper pad. It's a way I can quilt in bed while watching tv!
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
craftybear
Links and Resources
1
02-16-2011 12:10 AM
craftybear
Links and Resources
11
02-10-2011 06:57 PM