Originally Posted by Peckish
(Post 6400050)
Same here. Both products will be located very close to each other, and parchment is an inexpensive and easily found replacement for a Teflon applique sheet.
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Originally Posted by QuiltE
(Post 6400060)
Glad I am not the only one using parchment ... besides I have it all the time for baking!
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Originally Posted by Peckish
(Post 6400115)
Yep! I have one roll in my kitchen, one roll in my sewing room, and 2 in the closet as backups! :D
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Parchment paper from the grocery store for baking is the greatest for a pressing sheet I have found and you can throw it away when you use it a lot, one piece goes a long way usually. I don't care for all of my other pressing sheets I have bought for this.
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....to protect the iron from goo.......for pressing cloth in insructions. This would be something you lay on top of fabric pieces that are ready to be fused to another piece of fab or to make a larger pieced of something to later be fused..and then lay down pressing cloth then iron on top of this. I use an old kitchen cloth towel, but that suggestion of parchment paper also sounds good. Some fusible appliqué also say "damp" pressing cloth for final fusing, which is why I use cloth kitchen towel but any piece of cotton muslin would do..
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Originally Posted by Prism99
(Post 6399959)
I buy both freezer paper and parchment paper at Walmart. I use parchment paper in place of an applique pressing sheet for fusible; works fine.
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