Are they the same thing?
#2
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Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Greater Peoria, IL -- just moved!
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If I'm understanding the question, my initial guess is that "wovens" (not familiar with the term) would have yarn dyed fabrics. So a woven plaid or stripe as opposed to a printed one. Homespuns often had some thread irregularities and sometimes thicker yarn/less dense weave. I'd treat them the same and onc pre-washed would keep them together.
#3
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Anchorage, AK
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wovens and homespun are similar but not quite the same. A homespun is also woven, but as Iceblossom said, the weaving is a little courser, more "vintag-y", and usually has a more "Little house on the prairie" feel to it.
Wovens in general are simply fabrics that have a warp and weft, whether printed or thread-dyed....not stretchy like knits.
Again, as Iceblossom said, they can be stored and used together unless you specifically want to separate the two styles of quilts - antique style from non-antique.
Wovens in general are simply fabrics that have a warp and weft, whether printed or thread-dyed....not stretchy like knits.
Again, as Iceblossom said, they can be stored and used together unless you specifically want to separate the two styles of quilts - antique style from non-antique.
#4
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Join Date: May 2008
Location: MN
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I sort of kept all the woven stripes and plaids together. There were sort of two groups - the fabrics from/Ike men's shirts and the coarser feeling ones. Unless they fitted in better with a color group.
Are they "the same "? Not exactly, , but close enough for my sorting method and space.
Are they "the same "? Not exactly, , but close enough for my sorting method and space.
#5
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Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: northern minnesota
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Yep, there is definite difference between homespun and woven. Homespuns are dyed threads that are woven after the threads have been dyed. The weave is usually coarser, and in my experience, they do not hold up as long as good quality quilting fabric. I keep mine separated.
#7
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Join Date: Aug 2018
Location: Greater Peoria, IL -- just moved!
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I can say that while I watch the weave and density, in my mixed scrap quilts (commercial) homespuns have held up at least as well as standard woven cottons. Sometimes better!
In a quilt I did for my husband before we were married/he moved to be with me, he overwashed the top and wore out the back which had to be replaced. The homespuns in that are still intact, although now a couple of the standard woven fabrics have frayed.
My preference was to make projects with mostly homespun, but to offset that by say Kona Cottons, but I have mixed them in with general scrap quilts.
In a quilt I did for my husband before we were married/he moved to be with me, he overwashed the top and wore out the back which had to be replaced. The homespuns in that are still intact, although now a couple of the standard woven fabrics have frayed.
My preference was to make projects with mostly homespun, but to offset that by say Kona Cottons, but I have mixed them in with general scrap quilts.
#8
I think the difference is more marketing than anything. Like ktbb said, wovens are technically any fabric made on a loom rather than knitted or felted. But in the quilt shop they were any fabric with a more visible weave- shot cottons, homespuns, ikats, sometimes even gauzes were all lumped under wovens at various times. Homespuns were just any thread-dyed fabric that wasn't an ikat.