Showing posts with label tutorial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tutorial. Show all posts

Sunday, November 13, 2016

How to applique your EPP without pins and stress - a tutorial

I was making a Project 48 block last night where the instruction was to applique the EPP to a background fabric. It's something I do quite often in my EPP projects, but I find when I explain the concept to people, they sometimes don't understand how I do it, or how easy it is. So on finishing this block, I thought I'd do a little photo tutorial to show you.

This technique works with either blocks, or entire quilts, or side strips. 

(And I'll apologise now for the state of my hands and the macro shots. I've been gardening like a mad woman the last couple of weeks so my hands are a mess; and my little Canon camera has a mind of its own on the macro setting, giving me a horrible glamour filter each time. It's like a freaking Doris Day movie every time I look at the photos. Probably best given the state of my hands, but sorry about that.)



So this is your finished EPP block, unpressed but still gorgeous.



And here is the back of it.



Give the back a bit of a press with a hot steamy iron. Don't push back and forth. PRESS. You want to put a permanent crease in those outer shapes, especially.



If you've glue basted as I have, take a cuticle stick (one of the wooden ones you get in packs of 3 at Priceline) and gently use it to lift the fabric from the paper. It will kind of pop. 

If you have used a scant amount of glue, kept the glue away from the edge, and used a decent seam allowance, this will be easy. If you haven't, then you're doing EPP wrong. Sorry, but you are. I'll come by another time and show you how to EPP properly, I promise.



Use your cuticle stick to lift out the papers as you release them from the glue. 

Or if you have thread basted, just clip the threads and pop the papers out!



This is the back of the block after all the papers have been removed. Don't worry about the seam allowances that have lifted, because ...



... you'll get the chance to give them a bit of a press. Again, PRESS, don't move the iron back and forth. You want those seams to maintain integrity. If any of the seams move and go a bit skewiff, just use your fingers to re-position them and press them gently back into place (preferably without burning your fingers). Easy!



Grab your spray starch of choice. Mine is Crisp because I can get it easily at my IGA. Yours is probably something else a lot cooler and funkier. It doesn't really matter. 

Give the front a quick spray of the starch and press with a dry iron. Do the same with the back, pressing so you don't dislodge all the fine work you have done with your seam integrity :).

Your EPP block is now prepared for the next step!



Take your background fabric, and press it in quarters and open it back out so that you have registration lines for placing the EPP on top of it.



Position your EPP on top of the background. See how it is centred perfectly?



Roxanne basting glue is your new little friend. I use the one with the steel nozzle because it makes gluing minimal and accurate. Very important!



Fold your positioned EPP block gently forward at the half way line without moving it off the position you placed it in. Gently dab a little dot of glue inside the seam line, just on the corners will do it. This is where it pays to have a 3/8 inch seam allowance on your EPP. Trust me - you do NOT want this glue anywhere near where your needle will be because it when it is hard it is damn near impossible to get your needle through it and your will curse this technique forever and ever. 



When you have glue dots on all the corners, gently flip your block back to where it was originally. 



PRESS the glue dry with your iron (dry iron).



Now flip the bottom half back and dot with glue again. Don't forget to also add glue at the seam allowance near the centre line. Flip it back...



...and press. The glue should now have dried. 



This is how I double check it's all attached. Just kidding. But look! No pins required!



Find your best matching thread. I use Superior Egyptian cotton exclusively for all my applique because it's bloody lovely. And no one is even paying me to say that. I get it in the donuts in all the colours because I do so much applique in so many bright colours. But other people swear by Aurifil 50/2 cotton, or silk, or Superior bottom line. Use whatever you can afford and whatever suits the work you do.

As for needles I only ever use Clover Gold Applique No. 10. I tried the Hiroshima Tulip needles but they weren't as bendy for my style of applique (I swear by Tulips for EPP though). Again, use the needle that suits you the best.



Knot your thread and come in from the back. Start a little beneath the applique, and just catch a couple of threads at the seam fold.



I do a stitch every 2-4 mm.  Depends on the curves an intricacy. But this is an EPP block with straight edges - every 4-5 mm will do the trick.



The points are important. Make sure you take a stitch at each one to secure it. If you don't, your points can invert when you wash or iron the block again.



And here's what the back looks like.

Keep going until the whole block is appliqued. You can choose to cut the back out if you like, later. Just carefully trim 3/8 inch inside the stitching lines with sharp scissors, making sure you don't cut through the front part.

And there you have it! Told you it was easy!

Please ask any questions in the comments below and I will answer them there. Hopefully you'll find this tutorial helpful!

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Moving fabric from the design wall to the sewing machine - a tutorial

I will admit that for as much fun as I have standing in front of my design wall (currently in my spare bedroom) and fiddling with blocks and fabric, there is a certain amount of terror with moving those bit of fabric off the wall and towards the sewing machine. And it's silly to have that terror, as I have a pretty fool-proof way of converting the beauty on the wall to a fully sewn quilt, and I thought I would show you how I go about doing that with this little tutorial.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

So you have all your squares laid out on the design wall, or the bed, or the floor, and you want to sew them together but you don't want to stuff it up.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Take some scraps of paper (I use little post-its), a pen, some binding clips and some pins. Write the numbers of your rows from 1 to 'whatever' on each little piece of paper. I had 14 rows, so I wrote 1-14 on my paper.

Work out how best your brain works. What you are going to do is gather all those squares into 14 piles - one for each row. Decide now if you want to go left to right, or right to left and then stick to that. I go from left to right so that the far left block is always on the top of my pile. And I consider the bottom row as row 1. But you can do whatever you want to do.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Grab those squares from the bottom row first, left to right (in my case) until you get to the end of the row.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Clip all 14 squares with a binding clip, and then pin the number "1" to your first block and set it aside.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Keep going with each row until you get to the top. Clip, pin the next number on, etc.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

At the end, you should have 14 piles of numbered, clipped squares. Pretty!

Now head over to the sewing machine. But first things first. This is what I was faced with when I tried this yesterday. Seriously - my sewing room is getting ridiculous, but hey at least I have one.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

But 10 minutes later (just don't expect to sleep on the spare bed anytime soon) I had this.  Much better.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

I have since thrown out that calendar ... which was stuck on July 2011.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Put your favourite quilting music on. Normally I'm all for sea shanties, but yesterday I was in the mood for a little Yo-Yo Ma and Chris Thile.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

CLEAN AND OIL YOUR MACHINE. This is the first thing I've sewn since I quilted a big quilt last weekend, so I had a  lot of lint to clean out.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

For heaven's sake change over to a new needle. Your quilt and your machine will thank you for it later.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Take the pile labelled "1" and remove the first two squares.Sew them together at the side seam. Don't remove the pinned label - you'll need this for later.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Press the seam to the left, preferably without an iron. I use either a Clover pressing tool ...

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Or my fingers. Either work as well as each other.

Keep going until you get to the end of the row. Then pick up the pile labelled "2" and do the same thing again, but this time finger press your seams to the right.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

You can either keep sewing rows like this until you get to the last one, and then sew the rows together, or you can sew them together as you go. It's really up to you. Put row 1 on the bottom, and row 2 on the top, and start matching the seams. You'll see that my pressing your seams differently they will butt up against each other.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Pin so that the left facing seam doesn't get flipped when sewing it (it will be the row underneath and you won't be able to keep an eye on it from above.

Make sure you press the seams of the odd-numbered rows to the left, and even-numbered rows to the right.

From Design Wall to Sewing machine

Soon you'll have a reduced pile of rows, and a larger sewn quilt. And you'll keep going and going and you'll wonder why you left the blocks on the design wall for so damn long. See? Not scary at all.