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T-Shirt Quilt - Rescue me!

T-Shirt Quilt - Rescue me!

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Old 12-24-2017, 04:39 AM
  #11  
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I have made t-shirt quilts with rubberized shirts and lots of other types of materials. I prep the shirts by ironing the backs with a stabilizer and than stitch the cut pieces together. I than use fleece on the back and stitch in the ditch thus avoiding stitching over the rubberized parts or the t-shirt. Since we live in the south, a heavy quilt is not needed and the fleece works really well. I am in the process of make one for our granddaughter and one for our grandson using this method. It also makes it easier to wash and keep clean. So maybe I am not a "real" quilter, but it really works well for me. Like you I have expensive machines and do not want to mess them up.
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Old 12-24-2017, 04:54 AM
  #12  
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I’ve made about 5 T-shirt quilts. I prepare the shirts with fusible interfacing. I quilt on my domestic machine. I meander around the designs. I never quilt on top of them. You can do it just be careful.
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Old 12-24-2017, 06:42 AM
  #13  
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I just made a king size t-shirt quilt for a boy who works for us. It had some rubberized designs on most of them. I ironed SF101 interfacing on the backs of all the shirts. Did a large meander over the whole thing and stitched on and off the designs with no problem. I stitched at 10 spi and didn't really slow down at all. Maybe it's the fact of the interfacing on the back of the shirts that make a difference. Good luck!
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Old 12-24-2017, 06:47 AM
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Yes, she can do it, but the quilting within the block will have to be something like an echo stitch. If it is a very large logo, you can hand tack areas or machine stitch SMALL designs in a black area. One of my kids had a lot of band's concert shirts and they had very large designs. I 'quilted' in the spaces when it was just the shirt and the interfacing and then did they real quilting as echo stitching when it was assembled.
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Old 12-24-2017, 07:48 AM
  #15  
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I tied my last t-shirt quilt and was very pleased with the results. That one before that I have quilted and there were large spaces with no quilting, which concerned me.
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Old 12-24-2017, 01:10 PM
  #16  
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Originally Posted by klswift View Post
Yes, she can do it, but the quilting within the block will have to be something like an echo stitch. If it is a very large logo, you can hand tack areas or machine stitch SMALL designs in a black area. One of my kids had a lot of band's concert shirts and they had very large designs. I 'quilted' in the spaces when it was just the shirt and the interfacing and then did they real quilting as echo stitching when it was assembled.
this is a great idea. I'm going to remember this quilting idea.
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Old 12-24-2017, 01:23 PM
  #17  
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I recently made a t-shirt quilt and practically messed it up with those rubbery logos. HOWEVER! I posted to this board and a number of people suggested that I use waxed paper over the logos while I'm stitching on them, which I tried, and it worked PERFECTLY. It solved the problem completely!
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Old 12-24-2017, 09:14 PM
  #18  
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I haven't made a t-shirt quilt and never plan too.
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Old 12-25-2017, 06:43 AM
  #19  
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I have made several t shirt quilts. Not my favorite thing to make. I stitch right thru the rubberized logos all the time. I find I either cover them with waxed paper or tissue paper when I quilt the quilt. The foot doesn't want so slide over the rubber otherwise.
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Old 12-25-2017, 08:54 AM
  #20  
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I did sitd in the sashing and simple straight line stitching in the blocks. Also used sf 101 to stabilize. Worked fine.
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