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tee shirt quilt

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    tee shirt quilt

    Can anyone tell me what interfacing to use on the back of the tee shirt for a tee shirt quilt? I saw one at a local quilt show one time and I can't remember what the woman who made it told me. I do remember she said it was important?????

    #2
    I use a lightweight fusible on the back of shirts. I don't want to add a lot of bulk, just stabilize them until I get the top made.

    Joann's sells a prepackage of 10 yds for not much $ and if you have a coupon or they are on sale, that is better. I just saw them the last time I was there. At my small store, the interfacing is on the end of the cutting table and these were in a box (on the floor, of course) near there.

    Hope this helps!
    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 Artista 200E, Elna Serger, Handi Quilter Fusion, a lot of old Singers and other vintage and antique machines.

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      #3
      thanks, do you know the name of the fusible?

      Comment


        #4
        Katherine I use a fusible knit I fuse it to the t-shirt opposite to the way the shirt stretches, it remains soft Good Luck Joan

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          #5
          I have heard from JaneAnne, who confirmed what Martha Deleonardis stated in her book T*SHIRT Quilts, that 911FF Pellon Fusible Featherweight is the way to go. It can be purchased at Joann's, where it is currently on sale at 50% off! Supposedly, this particular one is forgiving, if the directions are not followed perfectly. Others seem to get temperamental if you don't bond it just right.

          Dawn
          In beautiful Northwest Montana

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            #6
            Wow Thanks! I'll go there tomorrow......Katherine from Richmond area VA

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              #7
              Yes, I didn't know the code numbers but I use Pellon Fusible Featherweight, too.



              Originally posted by Scoopie
              I have heard from JaneAnne, who confirmed what Martha Deleonardis stated in her book T*SHIRT Quilts, that 911FF Pellon Fusible Featherweight is the way to go. It can be purchased at Joann's, where it is currently on sale at 50% off! Supposedly, this particular one is forgiving, if the directions are not followed perfectly. Others seem to get temperamental if you don't bond it just right.

              Dawn
              In beautiful Northwest Montana
              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 Artista 200E, Elna Serger, Handi Quilter Fusion, a lot of old Singers and other vintage and antique machines.

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                #8
                I made a king-size tee shirt quilt about ten years ago with NO fusible. :shock: The quilt is washed constantly due to dust allergies and
                while the woven-fabric sashing is wearing out, the tee shirts are just fine. The sashing worked as a stabilizer while sewing the
                top together. I will be making another quilt soon and don't plan to use fusible in this one either. I did make slightly wider seams (about
                1/2 inch) and most of the tee shirts were fairly new.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Anybody tried the Margo stand-by of starch yet?

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by SuperJudy
                    I made a king-size tee shirt quilt about ten years ago with NO fusible. :shock: The quilt is washed constantly due to dust allergies and
                    while the woven-fabric sashing is wearing out, the tee shirts are just fine. The sashing worked as a stabilizer while sewing the
                    top together. I will be making another quilt soon and don't plan to use fusible in this one either. I did make slightly wider seams (about
                    1/2 inch) and most of the tee shirts were fairly new.
                    I don't know if this is the same process, but I know that there is a book titled "Too Cool T-shirt Quilts" that has a process that doesn't use stabilizer. I just haven't bought it yet.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      We use EK130 from Pellon it is not stiff at all works great

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Nancy from STL how did you quilt the tee shirt quilt you talk about in the forum where you didn't use stabilizer or backing????stitch in the ditch ????how large a block size did you use. I'm concerned about the stretching??? I would be grateful for any info you could tell me to clarify

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                          #13
                          I'm not Nancy, but what I used was a fairly good-sized meandering stipple stitch
                          over all of the blocks and sashing. This was early-on in my machine quilting
                          efforts -- not that I've done all that much since then -- :wink: but it worked
                          out quite nicely.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by katherinequilts
                            Nancy from STL how did you quilt the tee shirt quilt you talk about in the forum where you didn't use stabilizer or backing????stitch in the ditch ????how large a block size did you use. I'm concerned about the stretching??? I would be grateful for any info you could tell me to clarify
                            Forgive me for the late reply. I referred to a book titled "Too Cool T-shirt Quilts" that has a process that doesn't use stabilizer. To date, I haven't seen the book, so I'm not sure how the process works. I plan to get a copy of the book before I ever make a T-shirt quilt. However, now you can get fusibles that are nearly weightless and have a great drape, but they are probably expensive too and you'd need quite a bit for an entire quilt.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Thanks Nancy, I finished the quilt I was making last week. It is made up of 30- 13.5" squares backed with pellon 911F. The fusible interfacing made it a breeze to sew them together but it is a little heavy so I pressed the seams open. I used warm&white batting and a cotton backing that her Mom picked out. It is a graduation gift for a High Schooler who is heading off to college in the Fall. They love it! I stitched in the ditch but since warm and natural calls for 10" quilting I free motioned around certain designs on each square using the color thread matching each tee because they were so amazing I didn't want to distract from them. For example one was a boat and crossed oars because she is on rowing team so I sewed around them. I was really happy with it and now my daughter is saving shirts for my Grandson who is a freshman so I can make him one eventually. I think I would look a little for a lighter interfacing but one thing is for sure. I believe the one I made will wear like iron!

                              Comment

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