Tee Shirt Quilt - I'm a newbie
#1
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Join Date: Dec 2011
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Tee Shirt Quilt - I'm a newbie
Hiya, I am planning a tee shirt quilt for my parents of their old Harley Davidson tee shirts. My mother-in-law has helped with quilt ideas before but I'd like a more specific question answered. I need to buy the interfacing for the tee shirts but I don't know what weight to buy. My mother-in-law said not a heavy one, but that doesn't help me. There a lot of options; medium weight, featherweight, so-soft, etc. Suggestions?
My parents are plannig on using the quilt as display only, but I'd like it to be soft enough for use should they ever want to use it too. Thanks again. K
My parents are plannig on using the quilt as display only, but I'd like it to be soft enough for use should they ever want to use it too. Thanks again. K
#2
The best interfacing to use for T-shirts is the iron-on tricot. It's lightweight which makes it easy to quilt through and if you apply it so the stretch on the interfacing is perpendicular to the stretch on the T-shirts, it really helps to keep the blocks from distorting. You can get it at JoAnns and lots of places on line.
#5
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The best interfacing to use for T-shirts is the iron-on tricot. It's lightweight which makes it easy to quilt through and if you apply it so the stretch on the interfacing is perpendicular to the stretch on the T-shirts, it really helps to keep the blocks from distorting. You can get it at JoAnns and lots of places on line.
#6
The tricot is knit just like the t-shirts. Stretch each shirt (gently!) to see which way is 'stretchier'. When you fuse the tricot on the back, if the shirt is stretchier up and down, make sure the extra stretch of the tricot goes back and forth. Clear as mud? It just helps stablized the knit, so it does NOT stretch. (gee..how many times did I type 'stretch'!!?? lolol)
#7
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Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Northern Michigan
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you want a lightweight interfacing- the t-shirts are plenty heavy- the interfacing is to keep the fabric from stretching while you work with them. a fusable lightweight tricot is pretty (available) and inexpensive.
#10
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Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
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I have found the fusible nylon tricot to add quite a bit of weight and thickness. Haven't tried it, but I'm wondering if MistyFuse would be better. Requires slightly different handling because MistyFuse doesn't have a paper backing (I would just use parchment paper when fusing it to the t-shirt fabric). I think it's Bearisgray who uses MistyFuse on the backs of regular quilt tops to fuse to batting. If MistyFuse would do the job, it would be a lot thinner and softer than nylon tricot.
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