Puff Quilt Question Please
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: New York
Posts: 480
Puff Quilt Question Please
Hi....I am planning to make a small puffy quilt and just wanted to know how it is after washing and drying? I know if you don't tack down a quilt sometimes the batting could shift and was wondering if the fiberfill got lumpy.
I guess I was a little leery because I made one of those potholders that you fold four squares into a triangle and put on top of a backing fabric and then just sew around the outside (and then turn it right side out) with just a little bit of tacking in the middle and when I washed it, it blew up like a balloon....lol!
Also, could I make a puffy quilt with fleece instead of cotton? Thanks for any help.
I guess I was a little leery because I made one of those potholders that you fold four squares into a triangle and put on top of a backing fabric and then just sew around the outside (and then turn it right side out) with just a little bit of tacking in the middle and when I washed it, it blew up like a balloon....lol!
Also, could I make a puffy quilt with fleece instead of cotton? Thanks for any help.
#3
Super Member
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Sunny Florida
Posts: 4,431
Are these stuffed squares? Try a few blocks made from scrap fabrics. Put them together on muslin. Wash and see how they look. The results will depend on how much fill is put in the square.
You may want to pre wash the fabrics for the shrink factor.
You may want to pre wash the fabrics for the shrink factor.
#4
I made a puff quilt also known as "biscuit quilt" and each square was filled with poly stuffing. The tendency is to over fill each puff. It's for a full size bed and is way too heavy. Never been washed. It will have to be taken to commercial laundrymat.
#5
I used fiber fill in my puff quilt. Getting the amount of fiber fill correctly was a challenge but I discovered if I weighed each section I did pretty good. I have a scale that can weight very small amounts. This was the perfect way for me to get it right. I set the fiber fill on a plate and the digital scale picked up the smallest amount and surprised me half to death with the accuracy. Tacking it well is the most important part however. This is a beautiful quilt to do have fun with it.
#6
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2017
Posts: 1,386
I've made a lap sized panel quilt and was careful not to overstuff with polyfil. I secured the center of each square with a sewn button which helped evenly distribute and secure the filling - it's held up thru many washings just fine. Yes, it's a bit heavy so it wouldn't suit me to make or use as a full size (twin, full, queen, etc..) bed quilt.
#10
I made this puff quilt as a baby quilt for one of my grandsons. It is minky back, poly batting scraps that I 'fluffed' and stuffed into the biscuits (the batting scraps were much lighter weight than the bags of poly stuffing that can be purchased), and the top is minky, flannel, and fleece. It is fairly weighted, heavier than a 'regular' baby quilt, nice if you like the feel of a weighted blanket. It is soft and wonderfully textured for the babies to play on. I did quilt in rows in between the biscuits.