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lindayu 05-19-2021 10:34 AM

Need help with Quilt too small seam allowances
 
I received some antique quilt piecing for a flower garden quilt I have posted about previously. As it turns out, the quilt piecing was sewed entirely with a running stitch and 1/8 inch seam allowances! I am worried the quilt will fall apart once it's done.

Short of taking apart the many dozens of prebuilt flowers, what can I do to help make sure this quilt can last?

lindayu 05-19-2021 10:34 AM

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachmen...0823.NIGHT.jpg

Iceblossom 05-19-2021 11:41 AM

While it will need to be treated with care, I think you are ok, the edges seem to be very nice and stable without a lot of ravelling.

Back in the day when/before I started, very little was said about seam allowance. Mostly they were eyeballed, you had a template that was the size of the piece you wanted and you rough cut the seams around your drawn lines, or you cut the pieces with whatever seam you chose and eyeballed the seam.

I remember looking for guidance and not finding much -- I remember one book did say that depending on the fineness of weave of the fabric, quilts could be made with down to 1/16th!! I don't come from a quilting background/family and I used 1/2" seam allowance until I got my first rotary ruler in the 80s. 1/4" just seemed so impossibly small coming from clothing and 7/8ths.

toverly 05-19-2021 12:03 PM

This may not be a popular thing to do but if it were me. I would back the quilt with a fusible interfacing. It would help stabilize not only small seams but those running stitches. At least I would do this instead of taking them apart.

QuiltE 05-19-2021 03:12 PM


Originally Posted by lindayu (Post 8484993)
........with a running stitch and 1/8 inch seam allowances!.......

Toverly has a good idea.

Another thought ... if you are thinking of machine quilting rather than hand quilting,
you may want to stitch "out of the ditch" on both sides of all the seams.
Both sides, so that you are sure to grab the fabric in the seam allowance.
It will need to be both, since the seams will be flipping different directions.
A lot of work, but it would conquer your fears.

Another option would be stippling, so that the seams will be well stitched.



Jingle 05-19-2021 03:59 PM

I am with QuiltE, Quilt it with stippling and it should hold up nicely.

Quiltwoman44 05-19-2021 04:44 PM

most fusible battings are not permanent. it is meant to be washed out. but quilt it well and it should last a good time. Very pretty.

Tartan 05-19-2021 05:22 PM

If you get it quilted closely it should be fine. Jamie Walen quilts many antique tops with a layer of fabric behind the top and lots of quilting on his longarm. Lorena from Lorena’s Quilting long armed a wonderful hand pieced Grandmother Flower Garden on her Lorena’s Quilting YouTube site.

lindayu 05-20-2021 09:34 AM

Thank you for all of the advice!

Things I read to try:
  • Try a fusible backing
  • Stippling
  • Stitching in the ditch

An extra question: is stitching in the ditch a method of stippling? they seem quite similar

Is the stitching in the image stitching the ditch or stippling? I quite like what they did and I think it would reinforce the seamshttps://i.pinimg.com/600x315/a0/e6/0...506a4acebe.jpg

Onebyone 05-20-2021 10:56 AM

I would stabilize it with Misty Fuse and use a Swiss Batiste for the backing for the Misty Fuse. Then sandwich with batting and backing and quilt. Mistyfuse is a gossamer fusible that virtually disappears when ironed onto fabric and doesn’t change the hand of the cloth. It is permanent, will not wash out.

FYI: A multi national prize winning quilter told me this is how she backs all her quilt tops for entering in shows.


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