Denim Quilt?
#31
Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Posts: 10
I am currently preparing to make two denim quilts for grandsons. Because of the weight, I have been collecting very light weight jeans and cutting them apart(to qualify, must be cotton with no stretch)...will use woven plaid shirting with the "blues". Using strip quilting pattern.
#32
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Tippy-top of a ridge in WV
Posts: 6,355
I made my first denim quilt years ago with squares of denim from old jeans and skirts for the front and use flannel squares for the back, sewed together with rag edges. you put the two squares together, sew an X in the middle, or a heart or whatever turns your crank, sew together in rows with half " seam allowances. Sew rows together and when you have it big enough, start cutting those seam allowances for ragging. That is the hard part, but worth it. If you use old jeans, you can get many color variations and it makes for a very interesting quilt.
#36
Junior Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Brooksville, FL
Posts: 207
I have made numerous jean quilts. They are great. Most went to me grandsons. I even embroidered on them. They were all the rag quilts. Real easy to make. I did use a thin batting and flannel. Keeps them nice and warm and indestructible. Lol
#38
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 490
I made one a number of years ago for my grandson. I cut 5 inch squares and sewed them together to make a rag quilt. I embroidered different sports themes on a few of them. You don't put batting. It is heavy enough without it.
#40
The ladies from my church made several jean quilts to give to MCC for them to pass out anywhere needed around the world. We asked a local thrift shop to save any jeans they got donated to them that weren't sellable. They gave us huge garbage bags full of them! (We finally had to tell them ENOUGH!) We had several nights where we cut them up. Some "deconstructed" the jeans. They passed them to the marking group, who marked them using 5" square cardboard templates. The next group cut the fabric into squares. Later about 6 of us got together for a sewing day. We had 2 sewing machines going. Two people at each machine, one sewing and one handing pieces to her. Then we had one on the iron and one runner. When sewing the long strips of blocks together we offset the seams by 1/2 block so we did not have to line everything up as we sewed and eliminated some of the bulk at the seams. We found it worked best to use a thin batting to help absorb the seams. We did not try quilting them. Had an evening when we got together and tied them. We made them twin size and they were pretty heavy. Hopefully they are now keeping someone in a faraway land toasty warm on a cold night.
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