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.

Ironing the quilt layers before basting

Collapse
X
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Ironing the quilt layers before basting

    I have flannel for the backing. Do I need to iron it before quilting? I bet you all do. I am wonkering how it will look after it is used for a while. Having little wrinkles before quilting may make it look bad. Lol I am lazy aren't I. Hope someone responds soon. I need a cheerleader. LOL Jan

    #2
    I have started basting this quilt once, only to decide to use a white batt. Now I have to iron it all over so I can baste it with the white batt. It is full size. I ironed the flannel backing but it looks like I should iron it again. Wonder how it is going to look after it has been used a day? Lol Jan

    Comment


      #3
      Flannel shrinks a lot when washed. If your quilt will be washed some where down the line, Please wash the flannel before quilting. And yes you will have to iron it. Sorry. The voice of experience. Betty Ann

      Comment


        #4
        IT SHRINKS A LOT!!!!! Experience here, too!

        Comment


          #5
          I always wash my flannel TWICE in HOT water and dry it on the hottest setting, too. Flannel shrinks far more than ordinary cotton, and I want it to shrink BEFORE I include it in my quilt, not after.

          And yes, you have to iron it before you use it. Otherwise, your cuts will be off.

          BethMI

          Comment


            #6
            What do you mean your cuts will be off??? I washed it once. It didn't iron well or easily. Jan

            Comment


              #7
              Wrinkled fabric results in pieces that are too large. think about it and try it out with regular cotton. Take very wrinkled fabric, cut a 5 x 5 piece. Then iron it totally flat a re-measure. It will measure 5 1/8 or maybe even 5 1/4" instead of just 5". Same with flannel, except that flannel tends to be even more wriinkled than regular cotton.

              BTW, when I iron my flannel, especially for backing, I use lots of fabric sizing and it comes out VERY flat and also slides smoothly over the bed of my machine while I am machine quilting it.

              BethMI

              Comment


                #8
                What is fabric sizing? You can tell i am new to quilting. :?:

                Comment


                  #9
                  How come I seem to be the only one around here that likes the look quilts get when then shrink after quilting them? Even when I use flannel backs... I've been doing this long enough to go out of style at least three times already. Sheesh!

                  Wow! Great tip - I use starch a lot, but I never thought to starch or use sizing on my flannel backs to get them to slide more easily when I machine quilt them.
                  keithdommer.com

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by lorniki
                    What is fabric sizing? You can tell i am new to quilting. :?:
                    It's the stuff you iron shirts with. The spray can says "Magic Sizing". You'll find it with the spray starch in the laundry aisle.
                    keithdommer.com

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Keith
                      How come I seem to be the only one around here that likes the look quilts get when then shrink after quilting them? Even when I use flannel backs... I've been doing this long enough to go out of style at least three times already. Sheesh!

                      Wow! Great tip - I use starch a lot, but I never thought to starch or use sizing on my flannel backs to get them to slide more easily when I machine quilt them.
                      Oh No Keith, you are not alone :lol: I love the way they shrink after being washed! And I have realized, if I do heavy quilting on my quilt it comes out real greate. I know a lot of people loves to prewash their fabric, but I dont :shock: .
                      keithdommer.com

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Thanks, Brink! One of the things I love about quilting is that its my own little world - I can do whatever I want, however I want. In a somewhat educated way though. That's one great thing about this forum. And sometimes it's nice to know you're not alone... =)

                        Does anyone have any numbers about flannel shrinkage? Is it more than the 5% of the batts that I like?
                        keithdommer.com

                        Comment


                          #13
                          I am with you Keith and Brink. I love the look of the quilt after washing. Trying to think of the right word....authentic.....antique...cozy.
                          keithdommer.com

                          Comment


                            #14
                            I'm right there with you Keith, Brink and dogquillter.
                            Also I always use starch, first when I cut and then again right before I stitch the quilt together.
                            As far as flannel I think the amount of shrinkage depends on the mfg. and the quality just like cottons.
                            Keith I agree with you the nice thing about quilting is that you can play in your own little world, learn, create and just have fun. - (no quilt police).
                            keithdommer.com

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Me, too! I'm in the soft, puckery, old fashioned camp! My quilts are, too! LOL!!! :lol:

                              Seriously though....if you are concerned about excessive shrinking, just pretest the fabric. Mark a square on the fabric with a permanent pen, then cut it out, leaving some extra around the marked square to allow for fraying; wash and dry it a time or two and re-measure. You can do the same thing with a piece of batting if you have a project that you need to keep relatively flat.


                              It's Not What You Gather, But What You Scatter
                              That Tells What Kind Of Life You Have Lived !

                              Comment

                              What's Going On

                              Collapse

                              There are currently 2864 users online. 226 members and 2638 guests.

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

                              Forum Stats

                              Collapse

                              Topics: 8,262   Posts: 155,336   Members: 26443   Active Members: 1,442  
                              Welcome to our newest member, isadoraabhaya isadoraabhaya-isadoraabhaya.

                              Latest Topics

                              Collapse

                              Trending

                              Collapse

                              There are no results that meet this criteria.

                              Working...
                              X