Do you iron your quilt tops before..
#111
Originally Posted by ginnie6
you sandwich them? I have on some and not on others. Just wondering what everyone else does.
I'm with Bearisgray. I do all the things she does for all the same reasons. It's so much easier to fix little glitches before the quilt is all put together and I like my work to look as good as possible before I start to quilt.
Keep asking any and all questions you may have we're only too happy to give our opinions.
Take what you like, of our opions, and leave the rest. Soon you find what works the best for you.
Andie :D :D :D
#112
Super Member
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 1,265
I press-press-press all throughout the whole assembly process, and give the whole she-bang a one-more-time pressing before sandwiching and quilting. Doing this makes everything work so much better, and my professional quilter says that the clients who do this give her the easiest quilts to work on. For example, you can actually "block" some of the more rebellious blocks whose shape retention needs some assistance by pressing; the seams lie flat everywhere, which has to make the quilting easier; you can press/steam out some of the barely noticeable "fullness" that comes from easing seams; and a hundred other little positive things that result from taking this extra step.
#115
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Roswell, NM
Posts: 1,727
I longarm quilt and it is so much easier when the top and back is pressed I was hoping someone would address this.
Originally Posted by dunster
Most longarmers ask that the top be pressed, threads be trimmed, etc. before they get it for quilting. There is nothing magical about the longarm that makes the seams lie flat. However, if the back is wrinkled, I have found that I don't have to press it (except at the seams) because I can easily get the wrinkles out by spraying very lightly with water when it is stretched on the frame.
I press at every step during piecing, again when the blocks are put together, and a final press if necessary before quilting.
I press at every step during piecing, again when the blocks are put together, and a final press if necessary before quilting.
#118
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: California
Posts: 3,502
I iron the tops when they're done and if they have been folded before being put onto the long arm, I iron them again with starch.
I no longer have to iron the backing after seeing a Sharon Schamber video on it. She loaded the backing into the frame and as she loaded it she sprayed it lightly with starch. I tried it and it was amazing! I wanted to film it! The fabric was washed and had that un-ironed look. I sprayed each section as I loaded it and the wrinkles just totally disappeared, the backing tightened up, and it loaded just perfectly.
I no longer have to iron the backing after seeing a Sharon Schamber video on it. She loaded the backing into the frame and as she loaded it she sprayed it lightly with starch. I tried it and it was amazing! I wanted to film it! The fabric was washed and had that un-ironed look. I sprayed each section as I loaded it and the wrinkles just totally disappeared, the backing tightened up, and it loaded just perfectly.
#120
I always iron my quilt tops before quilting them. I also iron the backing fabric before loading it on the longarm. Even with the top and backing stretched on the frame, it seems like the seams can still have "bumpy" seams unless I try to get it ironed well. I made a 2' x 4' ironing board out of plywood and duckcloth which makes the ironing so much easier.
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