Pressing Seams to the side or open???
#42
Originally Posted by PaperPrincess
I think it's a situation of the proper technique for the proper job. If you are doing straight seams that will meet, pressing to one side to 'lock' the seam when they meet works well. Pressing open or twirling intersections reduces bulk on pinwheels, stars etc.
As far as the long arm quilters, the only thing I've heard is to always press the backing seams open, not necessarily all the piecing seams.
Here's a good tutorial on pressing on this board:
http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-149984-1.htm
As far as the long arm quilters, the only thing I've heard is to always press the backing seams open, not necessarily all the piecing seams.
Here's a good tutorial on pressing on this board:
http://www.quiltingboard.com/t-149984-1.htm
#43
It just depends on the pattern that you are working on. I normally will press to one side. One of the biggest reasons for doing that from what I have heard before is that with open seams you may get bearding from the batting coming through. Also when doing SID you want to do that on the low side close to the seam and you don't have a low side with seams pressed open. Right now I am working on Eleanor Burns day and night pattern and you use both pressed to the side and open. The reason for pressing open some of the seams is so that when you put the whole star block together it helps for get the middle where all the seams meet up to lay flat and form a pinwheel like center for the seams.
#44
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,312
I am that lady that the LongArm quilter refered to... I have made many many quilts in my 40+ years of sewing and quilting.
I press my seams open because I like a flat block. In all my years I have not had the seam fail because of it. I tried the press to the dark ..( after an severe encounter with a quilt police) but all to often it resulted in more seams with 4 layers of fabric , where it was impossible to press to the dark and not have this intersection of quadruple layers.... not the flat block I intended.... so I press open..... all the time! When I do quilt my own and use stitch in the ditch ... I also stitch right on the seam , having it open makes it easier to land that stitch right on the seam line.
As for stress on a seam .. I have done my own little lab experiment and sewed a seam on scrap fabric with the same thread for both and pressed both ways ... and tugged directly on the seam ..... guess what ... no difference.
Pressing to the dark , was favored by handquilters, so when they quilted on the light side there were not as many layers to stitch through. Many of the older hand quilted quilts had alot of echo quilting so it was much easier to stitch around the lighter background fabric to make the darker shape have more definition.
As for bearding.. that was an issue prior to bonded fibers and the use of scrim in battings. Bearding can happen through the fabric , not only just the seam.
Each quilter finds what works for them and appeals to their desired outcome. Find what works for you and makes you satisfied and proud you are a quilter.
I press my seams open because I like a flat block. In all my years I have not had the seam fail because of it. I tried the press to the dark ..( after an severe encounter with a quilt police) but all to often it resulted in more seams with 4 layers of fabric , where it was impossible to press to the dark and not have this intersection of quadruple layers.... not the flat block I intended.... so I press open..... all the time! When I do quilt my own and use stitch in the ditch ... I also stitch right on the seam , having it open makes it easier to land that stitch right on the seam line.
As for stress on a seam .. I have done my own little lab experiment and sewed a seam on scrap fabric with the same thread for both and pressed both ways ... and tugged directly on the seam ..... guess what ... no difference.
Pressing to the dark , was favored by handquilters, so when they quilted on the light side there were not as many layers to stitch through. Many of the older hand quilted quilts had alot of echo quilting so it was much easier to stitch around the lighter background fabric to make the darker shape have more definition.
As for bearding.. that was an issue prior to bonded fibers and the use of scrim in battings. Bearding can happen through the fabric , not only just the seam.
Each quilter finds what works for them and appeals to their desired outcome. Find what works for you and makes you satisfied and proud you are a quilter.
#45
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Daytona Beach Shores, FL
Posts: 2,352
pressing open is fine for most quilts but if you do stitch in the ditch, you can actually break the thread and weaken the seam. I love patterns that tell you which way to press so there isn't any bulk in the seams but so often I change things up and it doesn't always work.
#46
Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Bakersfield, CA
Posts: 52
It's a matter of choice. Most of the time I don't open the seam to press, however I have tried a pattern that called for press seam open and it was very helpful. I am a long armer and it does not bother my long arm at all.
#47
"Seam strength ... is it such an issue now, with most of us machine stitching, with modern threads/fabrics and our ability to adjust stitch length? Perhaps it was more so when the quilts were hand stitched?"
I have been sewing clothing for 40 years, and not once have I ever pressed a seam allowance to one side to make the seam stronger.
I press seams open on about 90% of my quilts.
I have been sewing clothing for 40 years, and not once have I ever pressed a seam allowance to one side to make the seam stronger.
I press seams open on about 90% of my quilts.
#49
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Utah
Posts: 1,197
Originally Posted by GwynR
The way it was explained to me was if pressed open and a couple of stitches pop open you can see the batting and it unravels fast, when pressed to the side if they pop open they don't ravel open as fast and you don't see the batting. I did just do a strip quilt and my MIL pressed the seams open. I left the end to end seams because they are so short but repressed all the long seams to the side.
#50
I think it is a matter of preference...if a lot of quilting is to be done on the quilt then a lot of the open seams will be sewn over again, and I would think that would hold it ok. Now, maybe a quilt that was going to be used/washed a lot would benefit from the seams to the side. There are no quilt police in my sewing room so depending on how I feel the day I sew/piece my quilt could experience a little of both!
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