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teacherbailey 06-26-2011 11:54 AM

Thanks for reminding me about tearing! My grandmother did it but I'm more the precise measuring and rotary cutting generation of quilters. We haven't been taught to tear!

JUNEC 06-26-2011 11:59 AM


Originally Posted by feffertim
good tip, I needed to know that

Ditto - great tip to know

JUNEC 06-26-2011 12:02 PM


Originally Posted by Mona Marie

Originally Posted by AlienQuilter
I went to Paducah once for the quilt show. Shopped at the Quilt in a Day tent. They tore the fabric and gave a little extra to make up for it. Would be a good workout if you had to tear fabric all day.

When I was a kid, not only did we tear fabric, we also used razor blades instead of seam rippers. Never owned a seam ripper until I was an adult.

I used a razor up to the time went to high school and they required a seam ripper.

OMG - if I had to use a razor blade instead of a seam zipper - my fingers would be stubs & I would be soaking them to remove the stains.

TexasSunshine 06-26-2011 01:36 PM

I had forgotten about using a razor blade to rip seams out until AlienQuilter just mentioned it. My mother used one.

andifar 06-26-2011 02:23 PM

:thumbup:

mojo11 06-26-2011 04:03 PM

It took me awhile, but I finally figured that tearing my borders lengthwise was was earier than trying to fold and cut. Some of us take longer to learn. LOL

cheryl rearick 06-26-2011 04:28 PM

I remember we use to tear fabric all the time. Sewing teacher in school taught us. lol I can see her now, grabing that material and giving it the one two three.

AlienQuilter 06-26-2011 05:55 PM

There were times when I needed a bunch of skinny quarters and I wished they had torn the fabric to get the straight of grain. I really needed to make 2 1/2" strips width of fabric, but the elbows were so bad, I could only get the strips half-width, which meant they were on the bias, which isn't good.

With good fabric, tearing only distorts the edge. It helps you with folding the fabric and you can always trim off the little bit that's distorted.

Panels are notorious for being wonky. I used one recently. It had cute little kittens that, at a glance, were squares, but when I measured, they were 1/8" taller than they were wide. I wound up choosing the shoe-fly pattern with the kitten block in the center. Made my side pieces the same size as the sides of the kitten blocks.

You just need to make your own judgement call on when it's right to tear (when you really need the straight of grain) and when it's better to cut (like when there's a directional pattern on the fabric).

Happy quilting!

About the safety of using those razor blades. I never cut myself on them even though I was just a kid. The only time I have cut myself is with my rotary cutter. That's when I realized that I was a quilter because all I cared about was not getting blood on the fabric!

Grandma Mary 06-26-2011 07:23 PM

Wow, that's so smart! I am glad I read this topic.

Grandma Mary 06-26-2011 07:24 PM

Wow, Scissor Queen. That sounds so much easier than anything I tried when I did my first quilt! I am glad I read this topic. :thumbup:

stitchntimesewing 06-27-2011 02:52 AM

Yes I agree with Scissor Queen. Snip and tear,works for me.

MissQuilter 06-27-2011 07:26 AM

I may tear down some, but I usually lay the backing out, add batting, then top..... and THEN trim the rest of the backing down to the size I want. I have made an unfortunate mistake before, and try to avoid making the same mistake again!

blisterful 06-27-2011 07:32 AM

Tearing is great advice. It's what my "momma" did!

TonnieLoree 06-27-2011 08:01 AM


Originally Posted by canuckninepatch

Originally Posted by annesthreads

Originally Posted by annesthreads

Originally Posted by hobo2000
Scissor Queen is right. Tearing saves time and gives you the straight grain and solves your space problem.

Thankyou both! - will take a deep breath and try this.

OK - have done it and I now have a nice piece of fabric for my backing, with a good margin all round. And I've learned something: the person who taught me always cut, even if it involved complicated folding - which I can never figure out. Tearing will be a great help.

The way I understand it is that the ONLY time you tear is for a backing. Correct??? C9P

No. I tear strips for strip piecing as well. ;)

annesthreads 06-27-2011 08:10 AM

What a great thread this has been - really interesting discussion. I'm so glad I asked the question. I learn so much on here.

Veronica 06-27-2011 08:30 AM


Originally Posted by annesthreads
What a great thread this has been - really interesting discussion. I'm so glad I asked the question. I learn so much on here.

I'm glad you asked, because I learned a lot also.
Thanks everyone. :)

Pieceful Quilter 06-27-2011 04:02 PM


Originally Posted by Scissor Queen
Measure off about 80 inches along the selvedge and snip it and tear it. Yes you'll get strings and fraying but it will be straight and on grain. Do the same for the other direction and give yourself about 6 inches extra.

Perfectly said!!

moedersaar 07-03-2011 01:14 PM

every day I learn something new I needed this,I have the same problem as Anne's thank you ladies

mtnative 07-03-2011 04:45 PM

I am glad for this question and answer. I forget that tearing is possible. Thanks to all.

Pickles 07-03-2011 06:15 PM

Thats how I do it sip and tear, best way to go, if it was good
enough for my mom it's good enough for me. :D


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