Prism99 |
02-16-2010 04:29 PM |
I would just use one or two layers of flannel to bind the quilt, leaving the edges free to fray.
Here's how I would go about doing this. I'd cut maybe a 5-inch or 6-inch strip of flannel. I'd spray starch the inside and iron a fold into it. (The spray starch will sort of glue the layers together.) At this point you could cut the fold if you want, or else leave it and cut after the binding is on the quilt.
I'd fold this doubled layer of flannel strip in half and then unfold it, so the crease tells me where the center of it is.
Note: Adjust the size of the binding strips as needed. I would probably want to bind this kind of quilt with the sewing a half-inch from the edge. Add whatever length you want to that for the fraying effect.
Also, I'm assuming you want fraying on both sides of the quilt. If you just want the fraying on one side, I would lay the binding out flat and sew it on to the wrong side of the quilt through the center fold half-an-inch from the quilt edge. Then I would wrap the flannel to the top side of the quilt and topstitch through both layers, using the stitching from the wrong side as a guide for placing the topstitching. (This would be a good place to use a decorative stitch.) That would leave all the raw edges to be frayed on one side of the quilt.
At this point I would enclose the quilt edge with the binding (aligning the quilt edge with the fold in the binding) and sew it on from the top, perhaps using a decorative stitch. I would then cut the edges of the binding just as if they were exposed seams, so these edges would rag in the washer and dryer.
Instead of using a single layer of flannel folded, you could iron two different flannels together (or even three) to have a more varied color in the frayed binding edge. If doing this, I would spray starch the layers together before cutting. This would keep the layers together and also prevent them from stretching out of shape when you sew the binding on.
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