Can U minister to answer this: putting a border strip on a quilt?

What is the trick. Do you start in the middle to maintain it from bulging.

Matching the borders is very knotty for me. Do you overlap them?

Any help will be appreciated.


Answers:    To put in a border to a quilt top that has not be quilted, first measure down the middle of the quilt. To this numeral, add the size of the border to the top and bottom for a miter corner.
Then fold the border in partly, mark it next to a pin; then fold it again and mark off the next two folds beside a pin. Find the center of the quilt top by folding it in partly, matching it next to the center of the border, then find the 1/4 carve, pin that, and then the other 1/4 indicate and pin that. Take your first measure of the quilt surrounded by the middle, and with that splodge, pin the end of the quilt to it at both ends. The moved out over with be used to miter the corner periphery. Use this same method for the border at the ends of the quilt - the top and bottom. Once you have adjectives the borders pinned you will have to hold on to dividing the quilt into sections to fit into the size of the border. That style all will be square and not own one side longer. Now if this is a quilt that is already quilted, you would use matching method but be more careful surrounded by the sewing so it does not pucker. Good luck. You should have told us if it is a quilt top singular or a ready-made or finished quilt already.
I cut mine a little longer than requisite. Then I use a rotary cutter and mat to remove the excess in a straight file. Also, if you are getting bulging it may be due to stretching of the fabric. As you are sewing, the member not being stitched should any be folded behind the apparatus on the table, or folded in your nouns in an accordion shape. This approach it is not hanging down which can stretch out your stuff making the quilt bulge or curve, or putting stress on the thread possibly causing it to break. I am not anyone a smart aleck when I suggest this, Go to your local library and look up quilting. There are tons of books with adjectives tips on all sorts of technique. I love the Singer book on machine quilting! Also, Yahoo! have a chat room called textile which is sewing and other fabric crafts. The folks contained by there can repeatedly be very valuable with question. Good luck!!!
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