using a cricut to cut out shapes for quilts
#1
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 574
using a cricut to cut out shapes for quilts
I just bought a cricut and the lady said that you could cut out shapes if you iron a stabilizer to the fabric before cutting out the fabric. Has anyone tried that and did it work? what stabilizer did you use by chance?
#2
Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Sonoma County, California
Posts: 132
Which Cricut did you get? Which model? I think some of the newer models you can do that. I have the original baby bug. I have never used it for fabric but I have cut out shapes with card stock and traced them onto my fabric.
#3
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 1,812
That's why I bought a Cricut!
Use Heat n Bond Ultra. Iron to 100% cotton fabric, about 3-4 seconds for each press of the iron (no steam). Peel off the paper. Place the fabric side up on the sticky mat. Use a brayer or roller to press firmly onto the mat.
Set the machine to low speed, max pressure, and the blade at 4. For thicker fabrics, multiple pass option may be necessary.
Works great! My first attempt was making the cutest snowflakes using the Winter Lace cartridge and white fusions fabric. I was hooked!
Use Heat n Bond Ultra. Iron to 100% cotton fabric, about 3-4 seconds for each press of the iron (no steam). Peel off the paper. Place the fabric side up on the sticky mat. Use a brayer or roller to press firmly onto the mat.
Set the machine to low speed, max pressure, and the blade at 4. For thicker fabrics, multiple pass option may be necessary.
Works great! My first attempt was making the cutest snowflakes using the Winter Lace cartridge and white fusions fabric. I was hooked!
#8
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 574
This is so helpful! thank you so much everyone for responding!
That's why I bought a Cricut!
Use Heat n Bond Ultra. Iron to 100% cotton fabric, about 3-4 seconds for each press of the iron (no steam). Peel off the paper. Place the fabric side up on the sticky mat. Use a brayer or roller to press firmly onto the mat.
Set the machine to low speed, max pressure, and the blade at 4. For thicker fabrics, multiple pass option may be necessary.
Works great! My first attempt was making the cutest snowflakes using the Winter Lace cartridge and white fusions fabric. I was hooked!
Use Heat n Bond Ultra. Iron to 100% cotton fabric, about 3-4 seconds for each press of the iron (no steam). Peel off the paper. Place the fabric side up on the sticky mat. Use a brayer or roller to press firmly onto the mat.
Set the machine to low speed, max pressure, and the blade at 4. For thicker fabrics, multiple pass option may be necessary.
Works great! My first attempt was making the cutest snowflakes using the Winter Lace cartridge and white fusions fabric. I was hooked!
#9
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2011
Posts: 574
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Julieintheburg
Main
4
07-28-2015 04:27 AM