Quilting Forum

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Latest Forum Posts

Collapse

Trending Forum Posts

Collapse

  • Happy Dance! I won ribbons!
    Home from the Maine Quilts show where my Color my World quilt, rename ‘Home,’ received 3 ribbons. I’m overwhelmed...
  • What I learned
    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....
  • Late at this but having difficulty
    Hi There,

    I hope you can help me. I know I'm very late in getting to this point but life is finally allowing...
  • Adding house numbers
    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...
  • Ahhhhh.. almost done! Have a question!!
    Hi all.. I am behind in my Color My World and just starting the skyscrapers... Does anyone have the finished size (with...
  • My Colorful World With Parks by Duffy
    My quilt is finish
  • Printing for paper piecing question
    For anyone paper piecing, is your quarter inch a tiny bit larger? When I’m trimming up the finished building, I line...
  • Paper piecing color my world…anyone else?
    I decided early to do paper piecing instead of the wax…I’m more comfortable . However, I have a few questions…anyone...
  • Video Access
    Will we have access to the Color My World videos after December 31st? I can't seem to find info on this.
  • New to The Quilt Show
    I am BRAND NEW to the Quilt Show and fell in love with this pattern. I downloaded all of the instructions. My concern is......
  • How to download pattern?
    I'm a new-ish star member and would like to download the "Color My World" pattern...but I can't find where to...
  • Quilting color my world
    See how I quilted Color My World and the added surprise quilting in Wendy’s border:

    https://bbquiltmaker.b...
  • Getting outer circle to lie flat
    Hello - I know someone has solved this problem...I seem to remember a question arising when we put the inner circle together...
  • Great new way to see all the photos!
    Cap'n John showed me a new feature--you can see all the photos posted on any particular topic--at once.

    Open...
  • Color My World Pattern - Download Heads Up
    I know Barbara has reminded us to download all files prior to the end of the year. I finished my downloads today and decided...
  • Color my world — your finish here
    Please use this topic to share your FINISHED top or quilt here. This will make it easy to see all the great quilts everyone...
  • Quilt is complete. Fun!
  • One World — This is Brilliant!
    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.

Wavey borders - Help Please!

Collapse
X
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Wavey borders - Help Please!

    I have a problem with some quilts where the edges are wavey. At first I thought it was bias binding not behaving, but even ones with straight grain will do it. It usually happens on quilts where there is a narrow inner border and a wider out border. The problem seems to not start until the outer border. It doesn't happen all the time, but I can't figure out what makes some do it and not others. I can usually spritz with water and get it to lay flat by working it with it and leaving spread on the floor to dry, so it hasn't been a big disaster - YET! Any advice that you can give to help me avoid this problem will be greatly appreciated - I want to figure it out before I ruin a project. Thanks in advance!

    #2
    It is possible you need more quilting in the outer border.

    Comment


      #3
      I usually have the same problem but mostly make bed quilts so its not so obvious.I'm interested in any tips too.And,by the way, I love your heron quilt Karen. Julie

      Comment


        #4
        Are your borders bigger than you quilt? I have a tendency to not measure as accurately as I should (middle of the quilt top to bottom and side to side and then make the borders that size) You sometimes have to ease in your inside so the border isn't too big. Didn't do this once and sent the quilt off to a long arm quilter who sent it back. In the end I had to remove 4-5 inches on the long sides of a queen side quilt and 2-3 on the shorter sides so that the border was not too big. Learned that lesson the hard way. I do better now but still is a problem for me. (was taught by grandparents that if a little is good more is better ---- doesn't work in quilting ---what can I say!!!!!)

        Ann Home is Where We Park It.

        Comment


          #5
          I learned the hard way about those borders. I always did not want to take the time to measure, so I would cut it bigger and cut off the excess after sewing it on......they were always wavy. :roll: I finally started measuring top bottom and middle and now the borders are always flat. I'm sure there are other things that could cause it, but that seemed to fix my problems. Hope this helps.

          Dana in Olive Branch, MS

          Comment


            #6
            I know this is not the easiest or most frugal way to go with borders but it will certainly keep things from getting WAVY on you. Cut the borders with a bit of extra length on the LENGTHWISE
            grain of the fabric. Lay the center of the quilt out flat and then place the borders (one at a time) across the middle of the quilt for the top and bottom borders and up and down the middle for the side borders. Cut each border even with the edges of the quilt center. When sewing the borders on, I fold them into eighths and fold the quilt center likewise, marking the folds with pins. Then I match the pins so as to ease in any fullness over the entire border. This method is only for borders that are not going to have mitered corners. Hope this is clearer than mud and helps someone. Happy Quilting! Sally in NE Ohio

            Comment


              #7
              Thank you all for the help. I have been measuring, but perhaps not as accurately as is needed. Also, had not considered that there may not have been as much quilting on the borders as in the main part of the quilt. Could be the combination of these two things is causing the problem - would explain why it doesn't happen all the time. Thank you all again - I bet next project will behave itself if I follow your combined suggestions!

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by snowplow3840
                Didn't do this once and sent the quilt off to a long arm quilter who sent it back.
                I so should have done that! I don't have a long arm but my neighbor & dear friend asked me to quilt a baby quilt for her. I quilted it but trimmed off a bunch and it isn't perfect. I don't think she has any idea.

                Next time, I'll teach her about how to add borders!

                Joyce
                Jules~

                @julesquilts on IG 
                working farm wife and quilter in the off-seasons
                Tired.
                Modern quilter, QOV volunteer, Improv, FPP w/o stitching on paper, freehand quilting on my long-arm.
                BERNINA 790 Pro, Elna Serger, Handi Quilter Fusion, 3 FW,  a lot of old Singers and other vintage and antique machines (25+).

                Comment


                  #9
                  Another thing to do to avoid wavy borders is to pin from the middle out. I do the sides first, find the middle of each, fold the border in half and pin out to the ends. Once they're sewn on, I do the same for the top.
                  While you're pinning, be very careful to not stretch either the quilt top or the border you're applying. That's why it's a very good idea to use the lengthwise grain.
                  eileenkny

                  from the beautiful Hudson Valley of NY
                  Gammill Classic Plus w/IQ

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Also be sure to prewash everything. I learned the hard way - when I had not prewashed and finally finished the quilt and then washed it to remove markings, the block background fabrics shrank more than the border fabric did. Voila! A wavey border! You can see the problem in my Santa quilt on my profile.

                    I intend on blocking the quilt to see if it will help. People actually liked how much the blocks shrank, it gave the hand quilting that real old fashioned look, but the wavey borders totally frustrate me.

                    I guess we live and learn!

                    Nancy in lovely western NY

                    from the beautiful Hudson Valley of NY
                    Gammill Classic Plus w/IQ

                    Comment


                      #11
                      From my own experience of the wavy borders, I did this once and I figured out why it became so wavy. I was stretching the fabrics as I sewed border onto the quilt top. Stretching the border or the quilt top will always cause this. Keep them both nice and flat while sewing-no stretching at all, nice and flat one on top of the other both flat,no stretching.
                      Kathy

                      from the beautiful Hudson Valley of NY
                      Gammill Classic Plus w/IQ

                      Comment

                      What's Going On

                      Collapse

                      There are currently 2706 users online. 291 members and 2415 guests.

                      Most users ever online was 20,162 at 03:06 PM on 02-20-2024.

                      Forum Stats

                      Collapse

                      Topics: 8,262   Posts: 155,341   Members: 26452   Active Members: 1,399  
                      Welcome to our newest member, [email protected].

                      Latest Topics

                      Collapse

                      Trending

                      Collapse

                      There are no results that meet this criteria.

                      Working...
                      X