Sprunki Sinner Edition
Step into the dark and rhythmic world of Sprunki Sinner Edition, where music...
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Latest Forum Posts
Collapse
-
It's fine, Helen.
-
Quarter page coloring is a little bigger. Barbara could you ask Lynn if she minds my posting this.
If she mind,... -
The top is finished. Now to decide how to quilt it
-
Thank you for the coloring page. I drew it up in EQ8 and started playing. Since it is so easy to switch out blocks in EQ8...
-
I was wondering the same thing - are you doing Autumn or Spring colorway
-
Beautiful! Happy little ladybugs!
-
Beautiful, Ursula. Isn't it wonderful we can make changes to give quilts our own touch?!
-
Beautiful, Elizabeth.
-
Really pretty, Helen.
-
Love your fabric choices!
-
Lynn Wilder graciously shared her coloring page for Laurel Ridge should you wish to play with fabrics/colors. Find it on...
-
Yes, there is. Click on their name, it takes you to their profile. There you find the Private Message button. Easy. She...
-
Hi Barbara, Margaret K here. I was able to reply to Elizabeth A. under my post about selling templates but is there a way...
-
Elizabeth A. Yes!! Thank you I am interested. I will pay your original cost plus shipping. I don’t know how to contact...
-
It is finished! I did my own floral arrangement and added the ladybugs with 3D fabric paint. This was a challenging but...
-
Barbara, Somewhere on Lynn Wilder's blog I read that she uses EQ8 to do a lot of her designing of
quilt patterns.... - Loading...
- No more items.
Trending Forum Posts
Collapse
-
Home from the Maine Quilts show where my Color my World quilt, rename ‘Home,’ received 3 ribbons. I’m overwhelmed...
-
Well, here it is, the end of 2022, and I finally have finished my 2021 BOM quilt! I apologize that the photo is not centered....
-
Hi There,
I hope you can help me. I know I'm very late in getting to this point but life is finally allowing... -
I'm quite behind on my BOM, but now have all the tall buildings of the outer ring done. I would like to add some house...
-
Hi all.. I am behind in my Color My World and just starting the skyscrapers... Does anyone have the finished size (with...
-
My quilt is finish
-
For anyone paper piecing, is your quarter inch a tiny bit larger? When I’m trimming up the finished building, I line...
-
I decided early to do paper piecing instead of the wax…I’m more comfortable . However, I have a few questions…anyone...
-
Will we have access to the Color My World videos after December 31st? I can't seem to find info on this.
-
I am BRAND NEW to the Quilt Show and fell in love with this pattern. I downloaded all of the instructions. My concern is......
-
I'm a new-ish star member and would like to download the "Color My World" pattern...but I can't find where to...
-
See how I quilted Color My World and the added surprise quilting in Wendy’s border:
https://bbquiltmaker.b... -
Hello - I know someone has solved this problem...I seem to remember a question arising when we put the inner circle together...
-
Cap'n John showed me a new feature--you can see all the photos posted on any particular topic--at once.
Open... -
I know Barbara has reminded us to download all files prior to the end of the year. I finished my downloads today and decided...
-
Please use this topic to share your FINISHED top or quilt here. This will make it easy to see all the great quilts everyone...
-
Sunday Sew and Sews met today. Pam R. came up with a brilliant way to make One World—she used striped fabric!...
- Loading...
- No more items.
Charging for a T-shirt quilt
Collapse
X
-
-
-
-
Filter
-
Administrative
new posts
-
Charging for a T-shirt quilt
I have been asked to make a couple of t-shirt/sweatshirt quilts for the daughters of our doctor's physician assitant. They need to be done soon, so I am guessing it will be for graduation. I am awaiting all of the details. But, in the meantime, what questions should I be asking her, and what in the world would I charge? I know I will keep the quilting at a minimum and on the simple side, and it will be done on my domestic machine. If she expects more, I will not take on the project. I have too many other FUN projects I am doing right now to heavily quilt TWO quilts! I have never done a t-shirt quilt, but look at it as a fairly easy project. Am I right? So maybe, charge $100 a quilt plus the cost of fabric and batting? I know she has gone through some rough times, and doesn't have a whole lot to spend, and I could use the money for Houston Festival. But, I don't want to get in over my head, and not make enough to make it worth while. Thanks for any input!
Dawn
In beautiful Northwest MontanaTags: None
- IP
-
The going rate for making a tshirt quilt in my area is $15 a shirt, plus supplies, plus quilting.
You need to cut each tshirt to a uniform size, let's say 13" which would allow for a 1/2" seam so finish at 12". Another common size is 15" finished. Every tshirt needs to be stabilized with fusible non woven interfacing such as Pellon 911. Actually you would rough cut the shirts, fuse them, then trim to the size needed. It's a big, time consuming job. Those who make these a lot, buy a heat press to use instead of an iron...
Often they have sashing and cornerstones, perhaps 2"-3" wide, then a border of perhaps 5" - 6". They could be set together without sashing of course, but sashing does help to keep the bulky seams away from each other at the corners. Press each seam allowance open to reduce bulk too. Bulk in tshirt quilts is one of the issues to watch out for, you don't want to sew over bulky corners and risk a broken needle. The other is if the interfacing doesn't fuse well, and pulls away... that can create folds and pleats on top when you are quilting it, because the knit tshirts will stretch when quilted.
After the top is pieced, use a light poly batting. These babies are heavy!! So cotton makes them even heavier. I use Quilters Dream Poly when I quilt them. The back can be any nice cotton.
I use a longarm and mostly do a large, simple meander, avoiding all intersections. Just a safeguard for those bulky seams. I also avoid quilting in the most rubbery of decals. They are sticky and grab the needle and thread and can shred/break the thread. On a DSM, I'd use a demin needle for strength, and a poly thread like Dual Duty. You will have to stabilize the quilt well, with safety pins and stitch slowly. You could meander or maybe just do strait line quilting with a walking foot, but not SID, rather find a path that is not going to hit the rubbery parts and avoid those bulky areas... perhaps a square around each image and then lines in the sashing like a grid?
Most tshirt quilts are large, bed size and they are very heavy to maneuver under a DSM. You will have a tall order to get into the center of the quilt with all that quilt in the harp area of your DSM. Perhaps she/you should consider sending it a longarmer, esp if it's more than 9 shirts.
As far a sweatshirts, I think I"d pass on that!! And don't mix tshirts and sweatshirts, it will be nightmare to quilt!
HTH and JMHO
- IP
Comment
-
Thank you Michelle for your in depth tutorial on how T-shirt quilts should be made, and some of the pitfalls! I now know that this is not a quicky project. I will charge a lot more than I originally would have, (if I decide to make them) and let her know that she either accepts my possibly troubled quilting, or she can pay the bucks to get it up on a long arm! I'll check those prices out ahead of time, too. I didn't realize these quilts were so "weighty" or had such bulky seams. I've got a lot to think about here! Thanks, again!
Dawn
In beautiful Northwest Montana
- IP
Comment
-
I have sewn 2 t-shirt "quilts" for our son & daughter. The word "quilts" is used since after piecing all the shirts & fabric bits, I put right sides together with flannel (after washing & drying the flannel in hot water 2 times to pre-shrink) & then turned & closed the
opening, top stitched around the edge & done. The kids loved them without batting & quilting.
Michelle is correct about the importance of fusing before cutting to stabilize the knit. I used a knit interfacing & lined up the stretch in opposing directions to the shirt. Otherwise, it's so wonky, it's impossible to cut it square. The shirt designs weren't very cooperative either as to size. In order to keep things a consistent size, I had to add fabric strips to some of the squares. This was a fun design exercise with the kids choosing what they liked.
Wish I could attach photos, but I don't have them on this computer.
I'd come over & help if I could!
Have fun
- IP
Comment
-
I made a large t-shirt quilt for an acquaintance out of her daughters shirts. To please the mother, I agreed to use as many shirts as possible and make it as big as possible. I used knit fusible on the shirts and then cut them. It was a huge puzzle to fit together. I made it in three sections, did minimal quilting, and then stitched the sections together and then bound it. No batting. I furnished the backing fabric, fusible, and thread. I really undercharged at just under $200. She wrote me a check for $250, which I gratefully accepted.
When her son graduated from high school, she wanted a oversized pillow case to fit a body pillow. That was much easier than a quilt. I still used the fusible to control the stretching. I asked for $35 and she paid $50.
She has one more daughter to graduate in 1.5 years. I know there is another large quilt in my future. I will do it, but it will be the last t-shirt quilt I will ever make! I have not enjoyed the process. Although, I know that I have made it a much larger chore than it needed to be. If I had been given the freedom to just make it anyway I wanted, it would have been much simpler and a limit on the number of shirts used.
- IP
Comment
-
Originally posted by ScoopieThanks, Roseanne! I'm seeing the value of us posting our quilts on our profiles, now. I went to your profile.......hoping! But alas, there were NO quilts, except that cutie pie drawing! I would love pictures when ever you get a chance!
Dawn
In beautiful Northwest Montana
That actually is a quilt, though small.
It's a 2' x 2' panel submitted to The Dream Rocket Project.
The "drawing" is individual hand embroidered stitches about the size of grains of rice. And then echo quilted in cream.
I really need to get other photos posted!
- IP
Comment
-
Sprunki Sinner Edition
Step into the dark and rhythmic world of Sprunki Sinner Edition, where music...Create unique, sprunky beats with Sprunki Incredibox. Mix quirky sounds, meet weird characters, and unleash your inner musical maverick for free! -
It's fine, Helen.
-
Quarter page coloring is a little bigger. Barbara could you ask Lynn if she minds my posting this.
If she mind,... -
The top is finished. Now to decide how to quilt it
-
Thank you for the coloring page. I drew it up in EQ8 and started playing. Since it is so easy to switch out blocks in EQ8...
-
I was wondering the same thing - are you doing Autumn or Spring colorway
-
Beautiful! Happy little ladybugs!
-
Beautiful, Ursula. Isn't it wonderful we can make changes to give quilts our own touch?!
-
Beautiful, Elizabeth.
-
Really pretty, Helen.
-
Love your fabric choices!
-
Lynn Wilder graciously shared her coloring page for Laurel Ridge should you wish to play with fabrics/colors. Find it on...
- Loading...
- No more items.
What's Going On
Collapse
There are currently 4005 users online. 436 members and 3569 guests.
Most users ever online was 20,162 at 03:06 PM on 02-20-2024.
Forum Stats
Collapse
Topics: 8,263
Posts: 155,338
Members: 26443
Active Members: 1,441
Welcome to our newest member, Marguerite Bechtel-tuckermays39436.
Latest Topics
Collapse
Trending
Collapse
There are no results that meet this criteria.
Working...
X
Comment