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Once Your Quilt is Tied or Quilted, You'll Want the Perfect Binding Learn 6 different ways to bind your quilts with ease and perfection – you'll have smooth and square mitered corners and even edges all the way around your quilt. |
Tying Your Quilt
Sometimes tying a quilt seems like the very last resort to getting a quilt finished.
While hand quilters love the look of a skillfully hand quilted quilt, and machine quilters appreciate the beauty and complexity of fine machine quilting, tying a quilt can be equally rewarding.
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| This quilt is tied using embroidery floss |
Many tied quilts are simply tied in the corners between the blocks, leaving the blocks as open space. Other quilts are tied in the center of each block with either yarn or perle cotton.
The best ties are washable, won’t unravel, will stay tied, and are strong enough to hold together when they are tied. Even with those considerations, why not add a little flair? Using embroidery floss or cording might be a possibility. And instead of using yarn or perle cotton, try a ribbon.
And what about adding something interesting in the tie? Sew a cute shaped button – say a train or fire truck – onto your quilt, and then tie the knot on the back of the quilt. Simply pull your thread from the back of the quilt, attach the button, and knot the thread, just as you would sew a button on a shirt.
Another possibility is a bow. Instead of just knotting your quilt tie, finish it off with a bow. Add a large button under the bow for an even more interesting look. As added safety against the bow coming untied, double knot it.
And speaking of trains, trucks and other things with wheels, make double-sided circles of fabric (yo-yos) and sew them on to your quilt as wheels of your vehicle, attaching them just in the center. You might even add a button on top, and make the fabric circle wheel able to spin around.
If you have a lattice on your quilt top, maybe you could lay down a narrow ribbon and tie it in place with ribbon ties every few inches along the way. If this quilt will be washed, you might want to secure the ribbon strips with other stitching as well.
Where you place the ties on your quilt can be interesting, too. Just as quilters stitch their quilting to make a design, your ties can add to the design of your quilt.
If your quilt has an ocean flavor, your ties can be like birds in the sky or whiskers on a seal. A basket quilt might have bows along the handles of the baskets. And your Sunbonnet Sue might have ribbons on her hat.
Have fun with every aspect of your quilt – from sewing the blocks together to quilting the top – whether you hand quilt, machine quilt or tie your quilt, finish it so someone you love can enjoy using it.
Happy Quilting!
Penny Halgren
www.How-to-Quilt.com
www.TheQuiltingCoach.com
Penny is a quilter of more than 27 years who seeks to interest new
quilters and provide them with the resources necessary to create
beautiful quilts.
This article courtesy of http://www.How-to-Quilt.com.
You may freely reprint this article on your website or in your newsletter
provided this courtesy notice and the author name and URL remain
intact.
©2009, Penny Halgren
Learn Even More Tips for Tying Quilts
This colorful quilt is tied and finished with self-binding. Using the shortcut techniques in this DVD Mentor, you can finish this quilt in a short time. Imagine how this quilt will brighten every day! This quilt is full of triangles, and the DVD Mentor has techniques and shortcuts to make sewing any kind of triangle easy. When you finish this quilt, you won't think twice about any triangle in any quilt. Tie a Quilt and Sew half-square triangles with this Fluttering Stars DVD Quilting Mentor. |


