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Map Quilts
I am planning to make a world map quilt for my granddaughter. She wants to be able to mark places she has been (or hopes to go). I have a pattern I can manipulate for size, but will either be a wall hanging or throw. I would love to use silk, but have read that it ravels, so am looking for other luxury fabrics that would work with raw edge applique. Any suggestions?
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felted wool?
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Due to their tight weave and the way they are processed, batiks fray less then cottons in raw edge applique.
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Not sure about fabrics for raw edge other that cotton and the felted wool mentioned above. Would you consider adding little charms of cars, boats, planes, trees, etc?
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Some slippery fabrics like satins could have FrayCheck or something similar applied to the edges to stop fraying. Don't know what it would be like to sew through, though.
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All good ideas! I like batiks, but not always happy with depth of color. Is there a particular type?
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I have purchased some buttons in the shape of hearts, stars, etc. Where might I look for charms?
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You can always use a woven fusible (if they still make it) and fuse it onto the back of any washable silky fabric. I would turn under the 1/4 seam allowance.
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It would be interesting if you could get different fabrics that in some way represent the different countries and or continents. Of course it will be trickier for smaller countries, bit for the larger countries it would be be neat.
One of my future quilts will be a map of Canada. I will collect different fabrics to represent each province and territory. |
here is a free pattern with instructions below it. It is for the US bet you can extrapolate the concept to the world.
https://www.fabric.com/creativity-he..._-us_map_quilt |
There is a wonderful product by RNK Distributing called "Quilters Select Fabric Prep". It is their new quilting products line endorsed by Alex Anderson. This is a feather weight fabric that fuses to the back of your fabric that adds a light support to the fabric to help relieve distortion, raveling, puckering and runs. (I am typing it right off the package). It is NOT a stableizer in the sense that you would use it in embroidery, but it supports your fabrics without adding bulk.
I fused it to the back of some silky fabric to add support before I cut it out. The item was to be embroidered, so I did use the appropriate stableizer and the jacket turned out beautiful. It was not stiff, but retained its softness and drape. This can also be fused to the back of your finished machine embroidery to keep the "itchies" from little bellies when you embroider those dreaded baby onesies. Or any other itchy labels/seams/etc. |
Originally Posted by cpriceb
(Post 7630198)
I have purchased some buttons in the shape of hearts, stars, etc. Where might I look for charms?
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"Home Sew" catalog has lots of charms for sale and I bought lots at quilt shows.
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I love the idea of batiks. The varied patterns would be perfect to represent the topography and color variations of a map
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Would the silks still ravel if you use a thin type heat and bond? Someone on this board was saying that there is a thinner, lighter adhesive that is out now. I can't remember what the name of it was.
Just my opinion, but wouldn't this quilt work out better as a wall-hanging rather that a throw quilt? It would be easier to see and you wouldn't have to worry about cleaning it so much, and the threat of unraveling the countries would be almost not existent. And who want to unravel a country? LOL |
What a great quilt that will be. Here's a place that sells tons of charms for low prices.
http://www.jewelrysupply.com/charm.html# |
Originally Posted by Bneighbor
(Post 7630674)
There is a wonderful product by RNK Distributing called "Quilters Select Fabric Prep". It is their new quilting products line endorsed by Alex Anderson. This is a feather weight fabric that fuses to the back of your fabric that adds a light support to the fabric to help relieve distortion, raveling, puckering and runs. (I am typing it right off the package). It is NOT a stableizer in the sense that you would use it in embroidery, but it supports your fabrics without adding bulk.
I fused it to the back of some silky fabric to add support before I cut it out. The item was to be embroidered, so I did use the appropriate stableizer and the jacket turned out beautiful. It was not stiff, but retained its softness and drape. This can also be fused to the back of your finished machine embroidery to keep the "itchies" from little bellies when you embroider those dreaded baby onesies. Or any other itchy labels/seams/etc. |
I was web searching today for panels & I ran across this that might interest you.
https://www.fabric.com/buy/dc-193/mu...ap-world-multi |
Originally Posted by pandamommy
(Post 7632173)
Would this work for stablizing t shirts for a quilt? or would a light weight iron on stablizer be better?
I use most of the RNK/Floriani products and find them to be excellent. There are videos on their website about every one of their stabilizer/toppers/batting. Also on their new line of quilting products endorsed by Alex Anderson. (Love the bamboo batting and the wool batting) |
If it's going to be a wallhanging, silks or other "luxury" fabrics would be okay. If it's for a throw, probably not. they often don't wash as well as cotton. How does she want to "mark" the places?
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I have purchased some small star/heart/etc. shaped buttons. Am open to any other suggestions.
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