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linmarlang 06-24-2020 03:37 PM

I think this is what I will need to do. Thanks so much for your suggestion and quick reply.

linmarlang 06-24-2020 03:44 PM

This is very clever. Thanks for letting me know about this method. According to the calculations, I won't have enough fabric this time. Is this method meant to be used when you are short on backing fabric?

linmarlang 06-24-2020 03:45 PM

Yes, I don't think I will have enough material for this but an interesting suggestion.

CMQUILTER 06-24-2020 09:28 PM

This has happened to me. Don't over think this, I just add what I need to top and side. Turns out just fine.

toverly 06-25-2020 04:00 AM


Originally Posted by true4uca (Post 8396148)
I sometimes will cut my backing into four pieces and in your case do a ten inch cross . HTH.

I do the same if I need width and length. I'll run coordinating fabrics both up and down in a plus sign. But I don't try to center them, I off center them. That way if it gets crooked, it was intentional. If I only need width, I'll add any extra blocks to the width and make it wider.

Iceblossom 06-25-2020 05:49 AM

Another person who pieces backs and advises to go off-center when adding fabric to make a backing bigger.

As I've quilted over the years, I've started doing more piecing on my backs. Incorporating fabrics that didn't make it to the top, usually because the scale is too large, orphan blocks, etc. More recently I'm trying to use up stash and since most of my fabrics are 3 yards or less, sometimes I have to look at the back as one very large quilt block.

I do not seem capable of making a baby quilt that actually fits one width of fabric. When the tolerances have been very close but not quite enough, I have put on two narrow borders along the problem length/width. You do want the additions to show, so that usually means cutting off a narrow strip of whatever was too narrow.

So, say you are dealing with yardage and a quilt that is a full 44" wide, but your backing fabric turns out to be only 42" usable. Cut off roughly 2" and then 4" strips on either side make it 48", which isn't a huge amount of extra but usable, you can always make the edging strips wider. I'm usually using a print on my backs, the bars tend to be coordinating solids.

When you baste your quilt together, work on having it go down the center and expect that there will be some degree of off-ness in the finished product, whether that is one side is slightly wider or narrower or some tapering.

juliasb 06-25-2020 08:28 AM

I have put extra runner pieces on the sides of just a plain muslin when I have cut shy for my Grace Frame.

bearisgray 06-25-2020 08:43 AM

If this is a baby quilt - and you are quilting it on a domestic sewing machine - if you have an inch of backing all the way around -
pin/baste very carefully - and one can squeak by.

linmarlang 06-25-2020 07:31 PM

Thank you for your reply. That’s good to know but unfortunately I don’t even have an inch extra.

vivsqt 06-26-2020 04:20 AM

I ran into the same problem on a queen size quilt, so I made a large 9-patch for the backing. Turned out really nice.


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