I have had problems in the past with my boarder having ruffles. Sometimes only a little or on one side. Sometimes all around. Sometimes I can "pin" them out. But other times not.
What causes this to happen? |
Usually the border is slightly larger than the quilt. Measure the quilt across the middle and both ends. Take the average and cut the border that length. Then carefully pin to the border to the quilt.
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are you cutting your border strips across the width of the fabric? that's the "stretchy" direction. it uses less fabric, but takes a more careful approach if you don't want the quilt to wave at you.
first (and others may disagree) i highly recommend you starch the bejeezers out of your border fabric before you cut. the stiffer the better. second, get out those straight pins. pin at least every inch. i'm a great believer in overkill, so i pin every half inch. third, if you have one, use a walking foot to stich the border down. it all but eliminates the "creep" of the underside while you're sewing. i have better results when i stitch mine with the border underneath. others report that things go better for them if they do it the other way 'round. try it both ways so you can decide which works best for you. |
I agree with Patrice. Pinning a lot seems to help me. If I don't that quilt will be waving at me. I don't starch but I can see why it would help too.
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Something I saw on TV yesterday was this woman that was blocking a quilt. She used water to do it. What if you spray your border with water. It needs to be really wet and then try to ease it up in the areas that are needed and let it dry flat until dry? It might make the material go back to its original shape.
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I like the walking foot tip. I am going to try that.
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the fabric stretches. all of the above are great tips! I have taken to using my walking foot for ALL border and binding sewing. Amma enlightened me on "glue basting" for binding. I wonder.... how well that would work for borders. hmmm??? I will have to try it.
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For the first borders I also measure in three places - I lay the top out flat and then measure both sides about six inches from the edge and down the center and take an average of the three measurements.
Then I cut a strip several inches longer than that (I'm a cautious type) on the lengthwise grain of fabric (If I have enough and/or the design "works") I divide the border strip as illustrated. I also divide the quilt edge the same way. Then I match up the points. Then if one side needs a little bit of easing, it's distributed fairly evenly. Border division [ATTACH=CONFIG]51501[/ATTACH] |
if it's too wavy it's probably too long, I would take it off, remeasure then use the above suggestions, it's a pain I know but it feels sooo good when you get it right and it looks better.
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Thank you for all the great tips. Now I understand why it does this. I have also found if I am very careful about squaring up the corners I don't get ruffles. I love this place. I get the best information and idea.
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Learn and live - - - -
Most of us learned a better way by doing something bass-ackwards at least once |
If you're quilting on a frame--by machine or hand, and it starts waving on you after you quilt the center, you need to pin or baste the borders as you quilt the center.
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thank you all for the tips. God bless. Penny
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be sure both sides are the same length and both ends are the same length. If the wave is different on the sides, it sounds like they are not the same. You cannot measure the side to cut your borders. This is not an accurate measurement due to possible bias and stretch of the blocks.
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Another tip is when you sew the borders on have the border fabric on top and the quilt on the bottom.
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I measure from top to bottom across the middle of the quilt and cut the border that size, Then I find the middle of the border strip, pin it on the side in the middle of the quilt, then pin both ends. Carefully continue to pin the sides on. You may have to ease it in. Then measure for top and bottom borders by measureing thru the middle of the quilt again. This should prevent any ruffling on the sides.
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I learned how to get perfect straight flat borders without measuring from the pro Hollis Turnbow. Use two strips of adding machine tape. Pin one end to the edge of the quilt in the middle and then cut to length, do the same with the sides through the middle. Mark the tape which is which and then cut the fabric the length of the tape. I rarely have the border match the quilt edge exactly but they always lay flat.
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we learn from each other,thanks for all of the comments
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Boy isn't that the truth.....The best lessons are after you have really messed up!!
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I follow the rule where I measure the quilt top across the center and cut the border to that measurement. Then I fold the top and the border into quarters and pin one to the other on those points. Any size deviation can be distributed along the edge. I have yet to have a ruffle.
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Another thing you can do if the borders are a little wavy, is to add an extra layer of batting under the borders. It usually doesn't show after the border is quilted. But the best of course is to make sure you measure and then be careful to not strech the border when you are sewing it on. I only allow 1/4" extra on my border length and if I'm setting it with cornerstones I cut it exact.
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