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TOPIC: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable?

Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 14:45 #59715

  • NanaPie
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What is the vinegar/water ratio to iron the fabric flat? I have seen that reference before but don't remember what the recipe is. I'll put it where I can find it this time!! Beverly
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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 08:11 #59673

  • Margo
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I really like your quilt, Agnes. "Planned scrappy" is my favorite color! :lol:

Whereas the favorite color of my DH is "bright shiny objects" :roll:


It's Not What You Gather, But What You Scatter
That Tells What Kind Of Life You Have Lived !
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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 07:46 #59669

I agree with the mitered joins!

Maggie in e. Central Illinois
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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 07:27 #59668

A little piece of advice that I have rarely seen anywhere is that the least unforgiving fabric choice is solid, no matter what you are doing. The eye travels until it has somewhere to stop. In solid fabric it is the seam line. The minute you use fabric with a pattern, even tone on tone, marbled, etc there is now something other than seam lines to occupy the eye. We all have our own style of quilting and i also believe that should be our prime consideration. I enjoy making planned scrappy quilts which means that I am in control where the fabrics fall and not a free fall of fabric. Now that I am using stash fabrics only the challenge sometimes is how to achieve something pleasing to the eyes with what I have. The following quilt is planned scrappy with autumn colors and the constant of neutral background. The border was two more "leftovers." They were bindings I had prepared and then changed to a different fabric. I pressed the fold line out using vinegar and water. Because of the amounts I had to be creative. I used the mitered joins because they seemed to flow unlike straight joins.

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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 07:02 #59667

  • pam7040
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Teri, funnily enough I nearly put in my previous post 'would it be less noticeable if you did a diagonal join rather than a straight one' then thought 'don't be daft of course it wont.' :roll: :roll:


In leafy Berkshire, south of England.
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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 06:09 #59661

  • Margo
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Lots of sound advice here JoJo. I would only add that you make every effort to cut the borders on the straight of grain to make the quilt lay or hang flat and straight.

I also do not object to borders of different fabrics, but then, my favorite quilts are very scrappy! :wink:


It's Not What You Gather, But What You Scatter
That Tells What Kind Of Life You Have Lived !
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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 04:52 #59659

Piecing the border is perfectly fine. One thing I would encourage is mitering, if possible as visually the diagonal line isn't as easily noticed as a straight line.
Teri
Teri

Quilting is a Beautiful & Complicated Art!
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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 07 Mar 2011 04:36 #59658

  • pam7040
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JoJo, for my own BOM, I would prefer one long piece for my borders, but I dont have huge lengths of any of my fabrics except the white on white, so most of my borders, particularly the bigger ones, will have to be in at least two pieces.


In leafy Berkshire, south of England.
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Re: Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 06 Mar 2011 21:34 #59650

  • Scoopie
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If the piecing is done well, (small stitches with a fine thread, and matching a print, if there is one) and it is quilted well, it is equal to the one with no seam. Actually, you will probably be seeing more quilts with seams in their borders, as the price of cotton rises and people by less yardage, or draw from their stash. And, there will probably be more cornerstones in borders!

Dawn
In beautiful Northwest Montana
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Borders | One Piece or More Acceptable? 06 Mar 2011 21:23 #59648

  • ladyquilter
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I've been doing some deep contemplation on borders :shock: and whether it makes a difference on whether a border is cut from one long piece on the straight of grain or whether it is equally acceptable to have pieced together two pieces of the fabric to make the length needed for a border. The cost for fabric has made me shop more conservatively and buying 2-1/2 yards of fabric so that I can have one solid piece on a long border doesn't make financial sense any longer.

So -- if there were two finished quilts that were exactly the same but one quilt has the last border in one piece and the other quilt had the same border but pieced in two sections so that they could be sewn on the straight on grain, would you think the one that had the solid pieced border was superior?

aka ladyquilter

Troutdale, OR
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