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-   -   Who has made a t-shirt quilt? (https://www.quiltingboard.com/main-f1/who-has-made-t-shirt-quilt-t180295.html)

Helen6869 02-22-2012 01:03 PM

Who has made a t-shirt quilt?
 
How hard are these to make? My dgd wants me to make her one. Any advice on this from those who have done one would be greatly appreciated.

ckcowl 02-22-2012 01:29 PM

you need a fusable stablizer (not paper backed fusable used for appliques---a leave in one sided fusable stablizer---found at joannes & stores like that)
you fuse the stablizer to the back (wrong side) of the motif's/designs you want to use - cut them out- into the sizes you want them to be- lay out your t-shirt pieces in a (pleasing) layout- fill in around them with blocks- strips-what ever you choose to make them all go together into a quilt top-
there are many tutorials and commercial patterns for t-shirt quilts- just do a search

cwessel47 02-22-2012 01:39 PM

I've made a couple of them as commissioned works. I did not use a stabilizer but perhaps the t- shirts in question were of higher quality fabrics. I know the owners and have asked how they held up. Things are good years later. Creating a pleasing layout is the biggest challenge. Measure the design areas first and see how many of them can match up either width or length-wise. THEN cut them. I am a graph paper fanatic. And it works for me. Good luck!

lakekids 02-22-2012 01:54 PM

The only time I use intefacing on my T-Shirt quilts is if the fabric is very flimsy. Otherwise I just use them as is. Mine are also different than many by having multiple sizes cut. I use the method that Too Cool T-shirt quilts uses. Pieces are cut in increments of 4 inches (plus seam allowance) based on the design on that shirt. Pieces range from 4in X 4 in to 16X16. This will include non-square pieces also - 4X8, 4X12 etc.This makes for a very interesting T-shirt quilt. I then plan the layout based on shapes, sizes and colors of cut pieces. I will typically add a quilting cotton border and backing.

As for quilting, I machine quilt on my domestic machine usually using invisible thread on the top. I do not typically quilt through any designs because the designs sometimes 'grab' the needle. I will outline quilt the design and letters (or the word if the letters are small) and then do some type of background quilting in the rest of the block. My background quilting usually varies from block to block.

lakekids 02-22-2012 01:57 PM

Link to one of the T-shirt quilts I have made.

http://www.quiltingboard.com/main-f1...ml#post4790296

quilterella 02-23-2012 02:02 AM

1 Attachment(s)
I made one for my DSIL using her racing tshirts. I had never made one before, but got some help from here. I knew I needed tricot interfacing and not Heat-N-Bond, but that was about it. I knew I didn't want to make just squares, I wanted something different. I chose a snowball with alternating nine-patch pattern. Not only was it alot of fun, but it was a great, positive learning experience.

pocoellie 02-23-2012 08:00 AM

I've made a couple of them, they're really not that hard. I stabilized the shirts, then cut the blocks out. The first one I tied, the second one I quilted, and used polar fleece for the backing. I had NO problems.

new2q 02-23-2012 08:19 AM

I am working on one right now (my first)....since I am new to quilting and sometimes math challenged....I made all of my t shirt blocks the same size using a 15 inch square ruler (man sized t shirts XL). Bought Pellon fusible interfacing at Walmart and had no problems. If I can do it, anybody can do it. I am now working on my backing piece. I am putting a few smaller t shirt designs on the back in a few sections.....I might rethink that when I start quilting it all together. Hopefully I can post a picture when I get it done.

Sandee 02-23-2012 02:04 PM

My T shirt quilt
 
http://www.quiltingboard.com/picture...lt-t97930.html

I used fusable stabilizer on the back side of the shirts.

Sandee 02-23-2012 03:27 PM

I meant fusible interfacing- not fusible stabilizer. Oops....


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