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How to avoid wavy borders
This wall hanging has been a nightmare. First my back bleed red to front. Then ripply border. I eliminated border but still wavy. I know it is caused by my quilting but how to I avoid it next time? How do I add a photo
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I square up as I go and take a couple of measurements on my borders. I pin, pin, pin my borders on, being careful not to stretch the tops edges and distribute any discrepancies between the border and the top between the pins. Ease in any fullness as I stitch the borders on. Also if you do a lot of machine quilting on the bias of the top, that can stretch it as well. If you are adding more then one border, sew the borders together before adding them to the top.,
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Just make certain the border are the same length on opposite sides. It sounds easy, but it's not. If there is too much border, long may they wave. Of course if it was a quilt instead a wall hanging, I would just say, throw it on the floor. Which is where mine seem to end up. They are seldom folded. I have helped wall hangings straighten by hanging a rod on the bottom also. It "pulls" it down by adding weight and keeping it semi flat.
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Press your top as flat as possible.
Measure the width in 3 different places, keeping away from the edges. Write down each measurement and add them together then divide by 3, that is your average and that will be the size border to cut. Repeat this same step for the length of the quilt. Pin from the center out. Cut length of fabric when possible, this helps avoid the dreaded bias. Starch is also your friend. |
What technique did you use to add the borders?
I stay-stitch around the quilt edges before quilting and then press. I also stay-stitch and press all borders before adding them to the quilt. Sometimes I mark along the quilt edge in quarters and the borders in quarters. Match the marks on each and pin together. |
I have the quilt on top of the border strip to sew not the border on top of the quilt. The foot acts like a plow on the top fabric pushing it ahead. I don't need my border strip being pushed longer. This works for me. I don't measure I sew on the border strip then cut to size. If I have any wave it is easily taken up in the miter corners.
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Donna Jordan has a great YouTube video on making borders and how to ensure they don't turn out wavy. She recommends measuring the border not on the edge, but closer to the center of the quilt. Here's the link to the YouTube:
(2) HELP!! Borders??? EASIEST FANCY BORDERS FOR ANY QUILT!!! - YouTube |
It sounds as if the problem is after you quilt it?
quilting often skews the quilt, which is part of the reason your backing and batting are larger than the top before quilting. After quilting you square up the quilt then stay stitch all the way around the quilted sandwich about 1/8” before adding the binding. or, is it just the borders, before quilting? |
Natalie Earnheart has a wonderful video (Missouri Star Quilt Company, or YouTube) where she explains how to square up a quilt when trimming the edges before binding. It has helped me to have less wavy edges on my quilts. Apparently I wasn't trimming things correctly and that was creating some of the problem.
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I never measure the sides of the quilt - I lay the border fabric down the center of the quilt and cut it to that measurement. Then pin it on and sew it. No wavy borders! https://cdn.quiltingboard.com/images/smilies/smile.png
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When I have a many pieced flimsy, I usually stay stitch all around it before adding the borders especially if there are any biased edges, then I usually use a walking foot to add the borders on. These also seems to help, I think the weight of the top pulls those edges and walking foot helps feed the border and the top evenly
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if it's caused by the quilting it may be because the density of your quilting varies across the quilt. One way to help with that is to first do some stitching in the ditch (around the center part of quilt where it meets borders, etc. so that it serves as basting to hold it all in place. And make sure that you distribute your quilting density equality too.
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You asked how to upload a photo and this is how I make it work. There are other ways too and if you are using you phone, this method may not work.How to upload a photo to the Quilt Board.
1. Write message 2. Click "Go Advanced" 3. In the box labeled Additional Options click "Manage Attachments" 4. Click "Browse" and locate your photo wherever you saved it on your computer. 5. Find the photo you wish to post click save and then upload. *** This seems to be where folks stumble. The little box with the "Browse" button needs to be expanded so you can see the "Upload" button. It is on the far right and hidden until you expand the box. 6. Preview Post and make changes if you wish or add an additional photo. 7. Click "Submit Reply". **** I save my photos in a quilt photos file by year, but I also keep a second copy in a file where the photos have been resized to "medium". It this format will allow you to post to the QB. It seems there are multiple ways to do this and it all depends on your computer and software preferences. Hope this helps. It took me way too long to figure this out when the QB made changes but now it seems to work well for me. Hope it will work for you too. It is always fun to post a photo of an accomplishment but particularly when asking for assistance on a quilting quandary like wavy edges. https://cdn.quiltingboard.com/images/smilies/wink.png |
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