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LAF2019 05-29-2020 06:45 PM

Is this possible?
 
First off, I need to make it known that I am not afraid of Y seams or partial seams. now, that doesn't mean I'm great at it, but i don't necessarily avoid them.
That being said, is there such a thing as a W seam??
I am making a quilt with "W" edges (or even more mountains a valleys). is it possible to sew those into a matching "M" background fabric? the fabric I am using for my "W" piece (picture a diamond with the top corner jaggedly chopped off) has a pattern/style to it that will lose its effect if I have to cut multiple little diamonds and piece each individually with the background. I want to use just one piece of the fabric.
I know most will say i should applique instead of piece it, and I may end up having to do that, , the question still stands.... I can piece deep curves together, can I piece sharp points???
Thanks!

Tartan 05-29-2020 07:57 PM

With Y seams, if you mark the 1/4 inch seam corners and stop exactly at the mark and then sew the next seam, you can get a nice Y seam. I would think you could do the same with a W . Good luck

quiltingshorttimer 05-29-2020 08:28 PM

easiest way to do that would be to paper piece it. I've never designed my own paper piecing patterns, but know that some do.

bearisgray 05-29-2020 10:05 PM

Try piecing that design by hand. If that works, then - perhaps - you could figure out a way that those pieces could be machine pieced.

dunster 05-30-2020 05:10 AM

I agree with Tartan. You could theoretically piece a whole quilt using zigzag strips. It wouldn't be easy, but the result would be astonishing.

Iceblossom 05-30-2020 05:43 AM

In the old days many quilters did resolve this by basically applique combined with folding. That is, you start with a long strip and then you cut down to your seam line at the bottom of each Vs and fold the sides to make the triangle points. The weak point is there at the bottom and fairly easy to reinforce with hand stitching or I used to group with one lady that did the most fantastic machine applique with tiny nylon thread and invisible to me stitches.

My last project was just a small simple baby quilt but I chose to do LeMoyne stars and set in both the square corners and the triangle sides because I felt I could use some practice with those Y-seams. And I did! But I'll go back to avoiding them for awhile again.

I also do origami as a hobby and so do a lot of folding... How big are these points? I wouldn't want to do tiny but I can almost visualize the movements to do what you want. Think of how mitered corners work but that you'd be working from the underside with the outside flipped out instead going around the corner. I know, that is more obscure than a lot of my comments and partly because I don't quite have it yet, but I think it would be doable with say a 3" triangle for the length of a border might stress me but would be doable. Once you had it down, it would probably be worth posting a youtube video on how to do!

juliasb 05-30-2020 07:14 AM

I too agree with tartan. There is no reason that you couldn't do this I would start with making a sample piece and setting in the pieces to the sample alternating pieces just to see if everything fits correctly.

Barb in Louisiana 05-30-2020 07:31 AM

Is this picture what you are trying to accomplish? https://4.bp.blogspot.com/-FTuaiT4-B...0/IMG_0849.JPG
If yes, you can cut your pieces with this ruler, turning it back and forth to cut each piece. https://www.quiltinaday.com/shoponli...t-in-a-Day/708 It will only work if your fabrics go out to the edge. Won't work if the inner or outer points are floating

LAF2019 05-30-2020 08:14 AM

1 Attachment(s)
I have spent all morning testing out the modified Y technique, like Tartan recommended. it shows potential, but I am still getting those ugly pleats at the top corners. more testing is needed.... how do I avoid those? are my seam allowances too wide or too narrow that leads to that pleat?

Barb - my points will be floating. the picture below is my test piece, but imagine the purple extends much larger and the beige is the background that would encompass the purple on all sides.

EasyPeezy 05-30-2020 02:16 PM

If it was me I would try to make it with a triangle ruler similar to what
Barb posted but cut the cream pieces bigger to make the points float.

Barb in Louisiana 05-30-2020 07:59 PM

Okay.... that is what they call a Deep Vee in clothing sewing. It's mostly used on necklines. This may give you some tips. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4R54KCmQMps
She is sewing a standard 5/8" seam used in home sewing for clothing. You would do a 1/4" seam. Hope this helps some. I watched it and it said use seam sealant. That makes a hard edge. I wouldn't do that. You won't be turning the piece all the way, but sewing an insert in. I'll look for another video.

Jennifer23 05-30-2020 08:41 PM


Originally Posted by LAF2019 (Post 8389368)
I have spent all morning testing out the modified Y technique, like Tartan recommended. it shows potential, but I am still getting those ugly pleats at the top corners. more testing is needed.... how do I avoid those? are my seam allowances too wide or too narrow that leads to that pleat?

Barb - my points will be floating. the picture below is my test piece, but imagine the purple extends much larger and the beige is the background that would encompass the purple on all sides.

If I understand correctly, you don't want to seam the main fabric (purple, in your example).

Can you seam the background (cream) fabric? It would probably be easier to cut your zigzag edge on the purple and fit in triangles of cream than to have two zigzag strips and try to fit them together.

platyhiker 05-31-2020 05:09 PM

To get the white fabric to lie flat, it needs to be trimmed *very* close to the seam in the area near the mountain summit. In Barb's video link, around 3:45 the video shows how it bunches without trimming and then shows how to trim it. For a quilt, I would not want to have the material trimmed so close to the seam. I think Jennifer23's suggestion to consider using smaller pieces of the cream is a good one - it would make it possible to get seams that lie flat without trimming.

cgsumter 06-01-2020 12:27 AM

Maybe look at examples of Seminole borders. If I understand you correctly, I think that is the look you are going for.
https://buzzingandbumbling.blogspot....orial.html?m=1

quilting cat 06-01-2020 01:43 PM

If nothing else, fold under your seam allowances and applique!


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