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GrannieAnnie 10-29-2010 12:07 AM


Originally Posted by Maride
Maybe we should be buying the wide backing fabrics to make our tops too.

I'm wanting to do an applique butterfly quilt and that's what I'm going to do. Find a light green leafy backing fabric then scatter butterflies about.

GrannieAnnie 10-29-2010 12:07 AM


Originally Posted by Maride
Maybe we should be buying the wide backing fabrics to make our tops too.

I'm wanting to do an applique butterfly quilt and that's what I'm going to do. Find a light green leafy backing fabric then scatter butterflies about.

patdesign 10-29-2010 12:30 PM


Originally Posted by ree-nee
I just buy sheets less expensive and, oh, the variety of colors.

Sheets are tempting, but they are usually woven with more threads to the inch and are a little harder to sew.

Farm Quilter 10-29-2010 01:32 PM


Originally Posted by applique
I use wide backs from SewBatik and LangaLapu. Any leftovers go into other quilt tops as borders or pieces. Love them.

SewBatik's wide back fabrics are $19/yd and LangaLapu doesn't even have prices listed. YIKES!!! When I can purchase batiks for $6/yard for regular widths, I don't see an advantage to the wide backs, except for the seams, and they really aren't that big a deal.

featherweight 10-29-2010 01:44 PM


Originally Posted by Farm Quilter

Originally Posted by applique
I use wide backs from SewBatik and LangaLapu. Any leftovers go into other quilt tops as borders or pieces. Love them.

SewBatik's wide back fabrics are $19/yd and LangaLapu doesn't even have prices listed. YIKES!!! When I can purchase batiks for $6/yard for regular widths, I don't see an advantage to the wide backs, except for the seams, and they really aren't that big a deal.

JoAnns wide fabrics are about $9-$12 per yard. With the coupon they are 40-50% off. I guess that is why they have choices of different fabric widths and patterns. Then everyone can purchase what they like and want.

cbuchanan 10-31-2010 03:44 PM

I've heard of using sheets but just read an article recently that said that sheet thread count is too high for quilting and because of that, the needle splits the threads and weakens the backing fabric. Just passing on what I read. I've never used sheets but try to buy the wide backing whenever I can find a color to coordinate with my quilt. For quilts for my church, we always by Moda cream or white muslin. It has a beautiful finish.

Wilma Cogliantry 11-11-2010 03:07 AM

I may be able to answer some of your questions - if you take a quick visit to my site, www.christianlanequilters.com

My husband, Jim, and I are both full time quilters. We are also the people who own the copyright to our product and sell FatBacks®

FatBacks® is not a generic name. It is our name for wide width fabrics (from 108" wide to 120" wide) that is cut at three and one quarter yards long. It is priced at three yards. The extra one quarter yard is free.

A FatBack® is a quilt backing specifically cut for a queen sized quilt which is to be quilted on a longarm machine.

A "standard" queen sized batting is 90" x 108". A FatBack®
is at least 108" wide and is 117" long. The extra free quarter yard allows us to mount our work properly.

Customers can purchase wide fabrics from many sources, but we are the only sellers who can legally use the word of our product.

We had to contact Joanne's years ago, because they also thought our name was generic and were using it in their national sales flyers. They stopped immediately.

We sell our FatBacks® and we also sell wide fabrics in half yard increments to quilters and to customers for other purposes.

I can answer specific questions about products - check our our web-site first and ask me what you would still link to know!

I hope this will not be seen as an advertisement and as a simple explanation.

Wilma Cogliantry
Christian Lane Quilters
Berlin, CT

www.christianlanequilters.com

patdesign 11-11-2010 04:04 PM


Originally Posted by Wilma Cogliantry
I may be able to answer some of your questions - if you take a quick visit to my site, www.christianlanequilters.com

My husband, Jim, and I are both full time quilters. We are also the people who own the copyright to our product and sell FatBacks®

FatBacks® is not a generic name. It is our name for wide width fabrics (from 108" wide to 120" wide) that is cut at three and one quarter yards long. It is priced at three yards. The extra one quarter yard is free.

A FatBack® is a quilt backing specifically cut for a queen sized quilt which is to be quilted on a longarm machine.

A "standard" queen sized batting is 90" x 108". A FatBack®
is at least 108" wide and is 117" long. The extra free quarter yard allows us to mount our work properly.

Customers can purchase wide fabrics from many sources, but we are the only sellers who can legally use the word of our product.

We had to contact Joanne's years ago, because they also thought our name was generic and were using it in their national sales flyers. They stopped immediately.

We sell our FatBacks® and we also sell wide fabrics in half yard increments to quilters and to customers for other purposes.

I can answer specific questions about products - check our our web-site first and ask me what you would still link to know!

I hope this will not be seen as an advertisement and as a simple explanation.

Wilma Cogliantry
Christian Lane Quilters
Berlin, CT

www.christianlanequilters.com

Sorry a little confused here what was mentioned about fatbacks? I thought we were discussing wide fabrics for backing being used for piecing. Did I miss something? :-)

Wilma Cogliantry 11-12-2010 03:10 AM

Hi Pat,

This was the message from Susan49 that caught my eye:
"I haven't use the 108" much because I don't find colors that I like. I have not noticed them being thinner. Just the opposite. They are usually very stiff. Some of our quilt shops carry fat backs. JoAnn have some. Be care at JoAnn because a lot of times the fabric shiffs as it is rolled on the bolt and they cut exactly on the measurement. By the time you square up the two ends you are short. I am using a longarm and need to square things up."
Susan49

I wanted to do two things:
I thought I might be able to answer some of the specific questions about the deliberate differences between regular widths fabrics and the wide goods meant for backing quilts and the reasons why. And, why they should or should not be used in quilt tops.

I started quilting in 1967. My husband, Jim, and I have been full time professional quilters for eleven years and we've quilted over 4,000 quilts from our customers. I like to share what I've learned. We've been selling wide fabrics for ten years and I have a lot of knowledge about how to work with the fabrics.

I also wanted to protect our product's name. JoAnn stores sell a lot of fabric from different manufactures. I don't. The wide goods that we cut into FatBacks® are not the kinds of goods that JoAnn's stocks. There is a reason for the price differences.
Whenever the word pops up in any form I try to respond and share knowledge.

I apologize for misunderstanding the topic.

Now, off to quilting! Wilma

lots2do 11-12-2010 03:32 AM

I can understand why you want to protect your product's name, Wilma.

quiltmaker 11-12-2010 04:27 AM

Maybe I'm not understanding Favorite Fabrics either or some of the other comments. Why would you want to use a wide backing fabric for piecing? That is way to much fabric to try and fold and cut for piecing. The difference in cost for 44" wide versus 108" to 120" wide should in my humble opinion be self explanatory. I believe Wilma was just trying to explain her fatbacks which are what many people consider wide backs but she/her business have named them fatbacks. She was also just trying to explain the quality/differences in them.

I don't work for Wilma but have purchased from her before and the quality is excellent.

Quiltzilla 11-12-2010 06:35 AM

Our 108" fabrics come from Benartex, RJR Fabrics, Moda and, Robert Kaufman fabrics, and yep the pricing is odd. Your 1.5 is right on the money. Most of the 108s are not as fancy as far as the print, but they seem to be the same weight as the other fabrics made by those companies. The Moda fabric, being a muslin, is hard to compare.

108" Fabrics

ptquilts 11-12-2010 07:03 AM

I have used sheets, long time ago, they were hard to quilt through (by hand), also they have a sizing on them that comes off in the wash and they are different after being washed.

patdesign 11-12-2010 07:20 AM


Originally Posted by Wilma Cogliantry
Hi Pat,

This was the message from Susan49 that caught my eye:
"I haven't use the 108" much because I don't find colors that I like. I have not noticed them being thinner. Just the opposite. They are usually very stiff. Some of our quilt shops carry fat backs. JoAnn have some. Be care at JoAnn because a lot of times the fabric shiffs as it is rolled on the bolt and they cut exactly on the measurement. By the time you square up the two ends you are short. I am using a longarm and need to square things up."
Susan49

I wanted to do two things:
I thought I might be able to answer some of the specific questions about the deliberate differences between regular widths fabrics and the wide goods meant for backing quilts and the reasons why. And, why they should or should not be used in quilt tops.

I started quilting in 1967. My husband, Jim, and I have been full time professional quilters for eleven years and we've quilted over 4,000 quilts from our customers. I like to share what I've learned. We've been selling wide fabrics for ten years and I have a lot of knowledge about how to work with the fabrics.

I also wanted to protect our product's name. JoAnn stores sell a lot of fabric from different manufactures. I don't. The wide goods that we cut into FatBacks® are not the kinds of goods that JoAnn's stocks. There is a reason for the price differences.
Whenever the word pops up in any form I try to respond and share knowledge.

I apologize for misunderstanding the topic.

Now, off to quilting! Wilma

Thanks so much for clearing that up.

glenda5253 11-12-2010 12:07 PM


Originally Posted by Quiltzilla
Our 108" fabrics come from Benartex, RJR Fabrics, Moda and, Robert Kaufman fabrics, and yep the pricing is odd. Your 1.5 is right on the money. Most of the 108s are not as fancy as far as the print, but they seem to be the same weight as the other fabrics made by those companies. The Moda fabric, being a muslin, is hard to compare.

108" Fabrics

Now I'm confused?!?! Went to your web site Quiltzilla and you have a 'fatback' section with widths from 54" to 108". So...what is a wide back, a fatback, a 54", a 60", a backing fabric, etc.?

I'm just learning the quilting lingo since I found this board and this thread is getting too confusing to me.





:-( :oops: :-(

Wilma Cogliantry 11-12-2010 01:22 PM

FatBacks!® are 3 1/4 yard long cuts of wide-width fabric for backing Queen-sized quilts.

Our FatBacks® are sold at the three yard cost. We also sell our wide width fabrics in half-yard continuous units.

Many fabric stores sell wide width fabric. Only Christian Lane Quilters sells FatBacks!® We have a registered trademark on the name.

When other businesses use our name, FatBack®, in any form, such as: fatback, Fat Back, etc., to sell their wide width fabrics, it is a violation of our trademark.

JoAnn's Fabrics was using the word "fatback" to sell wide quilt fabric in their flyers a few years ago. They stopped doing so as soon as they were asked.

A "standard" quilt batting for a queen sized quilt is 90" wide by 108" long. Our FatBacks® are wide width fabric (from 108" wide to 118" wide) by 117" long (which is 3 and 1/4 yards). The extra inches on each side allow longarm quilters to mount the backing the batting and the quilt top on their machines properly for quilting. Our FatBacks® are sold at our three yard cost.

Our customers, many of whom are longarm professionals, love the fact that the backings are exactly the right size for their queen sized quilts.

Hope that is better and more helpful explanation. It always takes time to learn the lingo!

Here is a link to our home page. Our copyright information is at the bottom of the page
http://www.christianlanequilters.com/home.html

Quiltzilla 11-12-2010 01:42 PM


Originally Posted by Wilma Cogliantry
FatBacks!®...

We have now changed our wide fabric section to the name 'wide widths'. The fabrics there are cut to order.


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