Ideally, we use 100% cotton to make quilts; however, you do not have to be confined to commercial fabric outlets when looking for quilting material.
Cotton is also attainable from clothing and bedding that you find in your travels.
Wherever you might locate any of these items, read the tags to confirm their cotton content and scoop them up for your collection.
You will be surprised with the array of colors and patterns available in items that are picked up from places other than a fabric shop.
Cotton fabric presses crisply and produces seams with minimal distortion.
Using 100% cotton to quilt with will give you a superior product and this isn't an old wives tale! Cotton/polyester blends, as a rule, do not hold a pressed crease as well as 100% cotton and they may pucker when sewn because of the extra give in the material.
While these types of material are an excellent choice in making a quilt that needs to withstand wear and frequent washing as for a quilt made for a child, the fabric may stretch along the grain lines causing difficulties in accurate fabric piecing.
Patterns customarily call for yardage using fabric that is 44/45" wide and of course, the color choices can be mind-boggling.
Any quilter will tell you the best as well as the hardest thing to do is shop for material for a particular project as it is easy to be lead astray when that certain bolt of fabric catches your eye from the other side of the room! Fabric is usually chosen after you have picked a pattern and a color theme.
When you purchase yard goods, ask the clerk if any of the fabric you want is discontinued or will be in the near future.
This may be the case if you are purchasing fabric that is on sale for a hard to believe price.
Every quilter makes their own rules as to how much material should be purchased.
If you are buying for a particular project, always purchase a little extra to compensate for shrinkage, an error in calculation or making a wrong cut.
If you are in search of nothing in particular and happen onto a bolt of fabric that must go home with you, buy at least one yard/meter.
If the material is being discontinued, you may want to consider purchasing as much as is available, especially if you have a vision as to what project it would be included in.
Fabric is usually sold in bolts that are 44/45" wide.
There are other sizes with names such as Fat Quarters and Eighths.
Fat Quarters are as their name depicts, a quarter of a yard of material; however, they typically measures 22" x 18".
Eighths, again, are what their name says.
An eighth of a yard of material measuring 11" x 18" or 9" x 22" depending on how the fabric store cuts them.
The sizes for Quarters may vary slightly depending on the actual width of the original bolt of material.
Cotton is also attainable from clothing and bedding that you find in your travels.
Wherever you might locate any of these items, read the tags to confirm their cotton content and scoop them up for your collection.
You will be surprised with the array of colors and patterns available in items that are picked up from places other than a fabric shop.
Cotton fabric presses crisply and produces seams with minimal distortion.
Using 100% cotton to quilt with will give you a superior product and this isn't an old wives tale! Cotton/polyester blends, as a rule, do not hold a pressed crease as well as 100% cotton and they may pucker when sewn because of the extra give in the material.
While these types of material are an excellent choice in making a quilt that needs to withstand wear and frequent washing as for a quilt made for a child, the fabric may stretch along the grain lines causing difficulties in accurate fabric piecing.
Patterns customarily call for yardage using fabric that is 44/45" wide and of course, the color choices can be mind-boggling.
Any quilter will tell you the best as well as the hardest thing to do is shop for material for a particular project as it is easy to be lead astray when that certain bolt of fabric catches your eye from the other side of the room! Fabric is usually chosen after you have picked a pattern and a color theme.
When you purchase yard goods, ask the clerk if any of the fabric you want is discontinued or will be in the near future.
This may be the case if you are purchasing fabric that is on sale for a hard to believe price.
Every quilter makes their own rules as to how much material should be purchased.
If you are buying for a particular project, always purchase a little extra to compensate for shrinkage, an error in calculation or making a wrong cut.
If you are in search of nothing in particular and happen onto a bolt of fabric that must go home with you, buy at least one yard/meter.
If the material is being discontinued, you may want to consider purchasing as much as is available, especially if you have a vision as to what project it would be included in.
Fabric is usually sold in bolts that are 44/45" wide.
There are other sizes with names such as Fat Quarters and Eighths.
Fat Quarters are as their name depicts, a quarter of a yard of material; however, they typically measures 22" x 18".
Eighths, again, are what their name says.
An eighth of a yard of material measuring 11" x 18" or 9" x 22" depending on how the fabric store cuts them.
The sizes for Quarters may vary slightly depending on the actual width of the original bolt of material.
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