Retro quilt top
#21
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Bosque County, Texas
Posts: 2,709
If you want it as wall art and never as a bed quilt, then you can hang it as art not as a quilt. Make a canvas - plenty of instructions on youtube for this, staple your top to the canvas. The staples should hide in the seams pretty easily.
You will be hanging the top as fiber art and while it will be a large canvas it is not an unusually large canvas for artists.Fold the top around the edge of the canvas and no frame will be needed. A canvas of that size will have at least one cross piece brace in the back and you can hang it from that with no problem. This is thinking outside the box for a quilter but quite common for an artist.
You will be hanging the top as fiber art and while it will be a large canvas it is not an unusually large canvas for artists.Fold the top around the edge of the canvas and no frame will be needed. A canvas of that size will have at least one cross piece brace in the back and you can hang it from that with no problem. This is thinking outside the box for a quilter but quite common for an artist.
#25
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Joplin, Missouri
Posts: 1,058
Hi.. I had several polyester knit quilt tops that were made when those knit were so popular. One thing about them, that fabric is indestrucible.. I got some light weight single knit (also poly) and backed the quilts with that.. Then I just tied the ones I had.. I tied them close together. I keep one in the back of my car to use however it needs to be used, for a picnic, a stadium blanket, to lay on the ground when there is car trouble.. If it gets dirty, it goes in the washer and dryer.. I love those silly quilts!
#26
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Lebanon Missouri
Posts: 2,668
My Mom made one out of poly for my little sister when she was a teenager and it is very heavy.After Mom passed she had our nephew make a frame to attach it to and its been hanging in her living room these past 15 yrs -no sagging problems.And Mom tied it because it was to heavy to quilt
#27
Thanks all for all the wonderful ideas!
I like the canvas idea as I've planned for it to be a mood-statement piece of fiber art. Yes, I am thinking of DIYing like for a canvas frame... Guess I know what to look out for next time I go to a DIY store. Staple-gunning it should work as the material is strong, so chances of ripping is small.
If you want it as wall art and never as a bed quilt, then you can hang it as art not as a quilt. Make a canvas - plenty of instructions on youtube for this, staple your top to the canvas. The staples should hide in the seams pretty easily.
You will be hanging the top as fiber art and while it will be a large canvas it is not an unusually large canvas for artists.Fold the top around the edge of the canvas and no frame will be needed. A canvas of that size will have at least one cross piece brace in the back and you can hang it from that with no problem. This is thinking outside the box for a quilter but quite common for an artist.
You will be hanging the top as fiber art and while it will be a large canvas it is not an unusually large canvas for artists.Fold the top around the edge of the canvas and no frame will be needed. A canvas of that size will have at least one cross piece brace in the back and you can hang it from that with no problem. This is thinking outside the box for a quilter but quite common for an artist.
#28
Super Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 7,312
I wonder if putting a hanging sleeve on the back and then getting a long piece of metal like rebar (used to reinforce concrete) that would extend out each end. Then you could use drapery rod mounts for the rebar. Just a thought.
#30
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Jozefow, Poland
Posts: 4,474
Good for you for rescuing such a quilt top. I don't enjoy working with polyester double knit but I do have two or three quilt tops that were donated for me to finish in double knit. I think that I'll just get them done as quickly as possible. I can't imagine hanging such a large quilt, but if you've got such a wall--it would certainly be impressive looking.
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