Quilting frames help please
#1
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Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: West Virginia
Posts: 1,621
Hi All i'm mountain-moma from W.v and i'm trying to find a pattern for a set of quilting frames i would love to have hubby make me a set of wooden ones but can't find a pattern for the horse's that sit' on all 4 corners any help would be gratefullyappericated
#3
MountainMamma:
Can't help with the quilting frame directions but I'm sure by the time the sun goes down you'll have received a dozen websites to visit that tells you want you want to know.
Welcome to the site. Glad to have you on board.
Can't help with the quilting frame directions but I'm sure by the time the sun goes down you'll have received a dozen websites to visit that tells you want you want to know.
Welcome to the site. Glad to have you on board.
#5
I found this one, not quilt what you want, but works really well.
http://www.texasbob.com/q_frame.html
if you scroll down to the bottom, this one describes the kind of frame you want. You can leave it on the back of folding chairs, instead of saw horses.
http://community.stretcher.com/forums/p/6480/66377.aspx
http://www.texasbob.com/q_frame.html
if you scroll down to the bottom, this one describes the kind of frame you want. You can leave it on the back of folding chairs, instead of saw horses.
http://community.stretcher.com/forums/p/6480/66377.aspx
#10
Hi,
The second site you posted was very interesting. The first e-mail was about what I would call a curtain stretcher. It is a frame with hundreds of nails sticking up around the edges. My mother used to have one. You stretch lace curtains on it to dry. That way they are stiff and don't need ironing. I remember helping her do it when I was a kid. I am sure some of you remember the metal frames that you put a man's dress pants into when you hung them to dry. My Dad didn't wear dress clothes to work but one of our neighbors always hung her husband's pants out like that.
The second site you posted was very interesting. The first e-mail was about what I would call a curtain stretcher. It is a frame with hundreds of nails sticking up around the edges. My mother used to have one. You stretch lace curtains on it to dry. That way they are stiff and don't need ironing. I remember helping her do it when I was a kid. I am sure some of you remember the metal frames that you put a man's dress pants into when you hung them to dry. My Dad didn't wear dress clothes to work but one of our neighbors always hung her husband's pants out like that.
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