Further Quilt Repair

I just so happened to find a chunk of quilt at some thrifting something I was at awhile back. Someone had taken a commercially made quilt, I think from Target, and cut a chunk off of it. I got the chunk for a couple bucks. It’s long and skinny, the perfect length and width for laying on the couch! Booyah, person who gave away their quilt chunk! What were you thinking?

Of course, there was one long edge that was just open to the world, and we can’t have that. How indecent! So I took it to the craft store with me and pipcked some quilt edging that matched. The important part of this terribly blurry-because-I-craft-at-night picture is where it says “Extra Wide Double Fold”. There are several kinds of this stuff (quilt binding? quilt edging? I’m not sure), but the double fold means that this thin strip of fabric is folded in half, and in half again, so that the edges are all tucked inside. I prefer the look and feel of that to the single fold. And be careful, because there is some that’s not folded at all, and I don’t even see the point of that.

Flapjack has fallen in love with this quilt btw, and was an adorable impediment the entire time I was working on it.

I opened up one package of the binding, and started jamming it onto the edge of the quilt. This process is a bit tricky. I left an extra inch or so hanging off the end so I could tuck it in later. Your goal is to get the edge of the quilt pressed into the crease on the binding, so that the binding wraps around the edge. You will sew through the bottom edge of the binding, through the quilt, and through the binding on the other side. My sewing machine can’t handle that, so I did it by hand.  (There’s Flapjack again. Aren’t you jealous of how cute my dog is??)

Once I had one whole edge sewn down, I went back, tucked the ends in, and sewed them shut. Here’s the finished end, but I had to use the flash so the colors aren’t great.

The hardest part for me was keeping the central fold of the binding touching the raw edge of the quilt. It kept creeping upwards, so I would end up with very little quilt to sew through. I think I did a pretty good job, other than that. For now, I have only completed on edge, and I’m not sure if I’ll do the others. The colors look cool as they are, and I have to complete NEW crafts for you piranhas. You’re insatiable!

March 19, 2012. Tags: , , , . Arts and Crafts.

2 Comments

  1. TextileRanger replied:

    Two tips: 1) you can slide a big safety pin down along the folded binding to help keep it in place (like a little frame to keep the binding from opening) and 2) I just read about a product called Lapel Stick, which is like a glue stick for fabric. It’s supposed to be really great at holding things together, but it’s still easy to sew through. Or maybe you could just use the glue.

    • thatcleverchick replied:

      I did pin it the entire way, but big safety pins would probably have been better. If I continue on this quilt, I will definitely look into that glue.

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