![]() |
Sweatshirt quilt help.
Any suggestions on sandwiching my lap size sweatshirt quilt? Will batting be too heavy? or just back it with a cotton fabric? Have never done one before using sweatshirts,have made T-shirt one.Any thoughts on this will be greatly appreciated....
|
IMHO, the batting will make the quilt too thick and heavy, and difficult to quilt... but it really depends on what you are going for.
|
I have a pattern for making sweatshirts out of quilted fabric. The best sandwich stuff would be prewashed flannel and backed with muslin. Batting would be too much, unless it was as thin as flannel. Sweatshirt fleece does have some give and being a knit, it does breathe.
Even the wrong interfacing on sweatshirt knit can make it too stiff. |
I have just fininshed 2 tee shirt quilts and the lady requested no batting and no quilting and to use sweatshirt fabric for the backing. I was a little skeptical at first but they both came out really nice. I thought that with no quilting they would be really "floppy" but the layers stay together pretty good. I did go around the edge with a 1/2" seam and that seems to help. She really liked them.
|
I never made a quilt out of sweatshirts and just said no to clients. I felt that the material is just too heavy. You just have to decide what your DSM can handle.
|
Originally Posted by Blue Button
(Post 7019946)
I have just fininshed 2 tee shirt quilts and the lady requested no batting and no quilting and to use sweatshirt fabric for the backing. I was a little skeptical at first but they both came out really nice. I thought that with no quilting they would be really "floppy" but the layers stay together pretty good. I did go around the edge with a 1/2" seam and that seems to help. She really liked them.
|
I agree with QuiltnNan. It might be very heavy with a batting.
|
Prism99,
I put the fuzzy side inside and yes it kind of sticks to the top so it not really "floppy" . |
| All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:07 AM. |