Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
[vb_side_1]

Latest Forum Posts

Collapse

Trending Forum Posts

Collapse

[vb_side_2]
[vb_main_1]

Silk Half Square Triangles

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Silk Half Square Triangles

    As a gift/challenge, I was given a bag full of half-square triangles of Japanese silk tie fabric. I have purchased a good quality fairly stiff cotton to use with it, but am looking for ideas on how to proceed. The finished blocks will be about 4 inches square. I plan to use a lightweight interfacing to help stabilize the longer bias edges, but can't decide which fabric to interface, i.e. silk, cotton or both, and whether to interface the whole triangle or just an inch or so along the edge. Any thoughts? Thanks!

    #2
    I can't say I ever did this but my thoughts are that if you interface the whole silk triangle it will make it equal to the fairly stiff cotton as it is.
    Karen
    Lyndhurst, Ohio USA - East Side Suburb of Cleveland, Ohio

    Comment


      #3
      You really want to stabilize the silk!!!! If you are going to mix cotton and silk in the halfsq triangles I would surgest you stabilize both and not just only a strip at the seamallowance. Why?? Silk is a difficult fabric to work with when its not sabilized..and when you mix cotton/silk you want to make the "quality" of the 2 fabric as alike as you can. Also...when you are done with the quilttop and want to quilt it..the silk will give you a hard time if not stabilized!
      It seems like a lot of work though, but I bet it will look gorgeous in the end!
      Lyndhurst, Ohio USA - East Side Suburb of Cleveland, Ohio

      Comment


        #4
        Thanks, gals! Although the silk is quite a bit heavier than, for instance, a silk blouse, I think you're probably right about stabilizing the whole triangle. I hadn't thought as far as the (eventual!) quilting. I might do a few test squares to see what works best.

        The fabric came from my cousin, who purchased it on a recent trip to Japan. She's an artist and art professor who works primarily in "found" items - turning things that other people would normally throw away into art. I once attended one of her shows, and afterward sent her an e-mail stating that, yes, she's still an artist and I'm still an accountant. Hence her challenge to me to use my quilting creativity and her "found" objects in a project. I'm going to a retreat this weekend, and figure the endless repetition of sewing triangles together will allow me to both get something accomplished and yak with my sister and other retreaters.
        Lyndhurst, Ohio USA - East Side Suburb of Cleveland, Ohio

        Comment

        What's Going On

        Collapse

        There are currently 77 users online. 0 members and 77 guests.

        Most users ever online was 442 at 07:43 AM on 11-15-2024.

        Forum Stats

        Collapse

        Topics: 7,646   Posts: 144,737   Members: 16,641   Active Members: 5
        Welcome to our newest member, Lev Anderson-LevTest1.

        Latest Topics

        Collapse

        There are no results that meet this criteria.

        Trending

        Collapse

        There are no results that meet this criteria.

        Working...
        X