Quiltingboard Forums

Quiltingboard Forums (https://www.quiltingboard.com/)
-   Main (https://www.quiltingboard.com/main-f1/)
-   -   Mitred borders (https://www.quiltingboard.com/main-f1/mitred-borders-t87389.html)

Carol B 01-03-2011 02:02 PM

Can someone give me some help please. I am making a queen size quilt for my son and his wife and I want to mitre the borders, however I haven't done this before. Is there a good web site that I can go to that will give me easy to understand instructions or maybe even a video link? I have looked in my few quilting books but they only add them as squared borders and I think the mitred borders look so much better!

KathyAire 01-03-2011 02:05 PM

Try this.
http://www.5min.com/Video/How-to-Add...uilt-114942242

If that doesn't help, look to the right and see the other videos.

You have to look at 15-30 seconds of stupid ads, first.

erstan947 01-03-2011 02:14 PM

Also go to the SEARCH at the top of this page. Click on SEARCH then enter mitered borders and you will find tutorial there.

Carol B 01-03-2011 02:16 PM

Thanks so much. I just took a look and it makes sense!! I'm going to give it a go with some scraps and if that works I'll use it on the larger quilt. Thanks also for getting back to me so quickly...all the way to South Australia!!

davidwent 01-03-2011 02:17 PM

you tube has a bunch too
David

tjradj 01-03-2011 02:30 PM

Are you using plain or patterned fabric?
Plain is easier.
One trick to make the miter work on patterned fabric is to use a mirror to see what it will look like first.
Take a strip of the fabric you're going to use, and place a straight edged mirror on the fabric at a 45'angle.
You'll see in the mirror what the corner will look like if you cut the fabric at that point. You can move the mirror along the strip of fabric until you see the result you want. Then cut the fabric longer than that point by at least as wide as the border is.
When you have the second strip of fabric, fold the end UNDER at a 45 ' angle facing out. Press it there. Then place it on top of the other piece until the corner looks like you want it to. Pin the underneath layers together and unfold the top layer. Sew along the pressed line.

Carol B 01-03-2011 02:40 PM

What a great tip. Thanks heaps.

Carol B 01-03-2011 02:43 PM

I keep forgetting to use the search area on this site. It actually has answers to all things quitling. What a goose!! I will make a new years resolution to look here first before I ask any more questions in the future!! Thanks for pointing me in the most obvious direction.

AliKat 01-03-2011 02:51 PM

That video is OK if you have a relatively small project.

However, if you have a larger project you will need to know how to piece each border so it is long enough. I couldn't easily find a video on the web, so please excuse the wordiness below.

If you have a single border or parts of multiple borders that need to be longer that what you can cut from the fabric then you sew each individual border separately so that each one is long enough to use. I join on the diagonal as it is more pleasing to the eye and doesn’t draw the eye away from the actual quilt design. This is done by having the 2 pieces at 90 degrees from each other with some overlap extending, and then sewing from where these tails meet on the outside corner - it looks like a diagonal seam. [A picture is at: www.quiltville.com/borderhints ]

If you are using side-by-side mitered borders in your quilt, sew all of the strips for each side together lengthwise, once each strip is long enough, plus more than needed for the ends to meet and even have some extra 'tail extending on both ends of each side. Add each multi-border unit to the quilt one side at a time. Sew each border to the quilt up to 1/4" from the corner edge. Thus, if you have multiple borders you will treat the finished sewed borders as single units.

Borders are easier to match at quilt corners when you press seam allowances between the strips in side borders in the opposite direction of the seam allowances in top and bottom border units. The seam allowances will butt into each other nicely for a perfect match.

Once borders are sewn onto the quilt, turn quilt Right Side Up [facing you] on an ironing surface. Put one border edge over the other. Work with this top border to form a miter [45 degrees – you can do this by folding the top border so that the tail match with the other border’s tail] from the inside corner of the border [where it stopped ¼” from edge] to the outermost edge of the border. The top folded under border ‘tail’ should after turning be right on top of the lower most border ‘tail’. Pin tails that are visible. Press well with Best Press. Then gently pin a bit away from the pressed line on the inner side of the press to keep in alignment. Sew right on the pressing line from that ¼” seam stop to the edge making sure that the quilt body is folded out of the way. Backstitch at the end where the quilt body is. After sewing check for appearance again before trimming. Trim tails away leaving 1/4" seam allowance.

This is the easiest way to do it. If the borders aren’t perfect a ‘fudge factor ‘ can be worked into the miter and it will still look great.

Hope this helps.

ali

AtHomeSewing 01-03-2011 03:10 PM

Thanks for all the information, I was just wondering about this earlier today! (:


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:48 PM.