Kidston Fabric
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More Great Information on Kidston Fabric:
Crochet Afghan on the Sofa | Large Granny Square Blanket (Zimbio)
I love the colours in this. I wish I made it huge. I suppose I still could! I
don't know why I haven't posted pictures of this before. Im terribly sorry!
I've so many blankets to show you ^_^
The blanket on the sofa with my other lovely crochet cushions and a patchwork
blanket! There is my bolster cushion from pip studio that lives there now.
Fabulous for my back ^_^
Do you like cath kidston?! This is a cath kidston paisley fabric cushion Ontop
of my crochet afghan. I love it. I had an Ikea cushion that I had put in the
washing machine and it went all lumpy... But the cushion cover was made for
14" so the ikea pad stuffed in nicely and made it all plump ^_^
Don't forget to show your crochet lovelies in the flickr group!
How do I finish my quilt?
I'm making my aunt a quilt this christmas. It looks lovely so far; I've used Cath Kidston fabrics as well as some red and light blue gingham and dark purple stuff! I've sewn all of the squares now and it's really starting to come together! Yay!
I sort of know how to add the wadding (or batting if you're american). But how do you get the wadding to stay in place inside the quilt? The wadding I bought looks as though you can iron it on, but I'm not taking chances! What do I do?
Are you talking about getting it to stay there permanently, or just while you do the quilting? (Quilting, by the way, isn't the part where you sew all the squares together. That part is called patchwork. Quilting is the part where you sew through all the layers--patchwork, batting, and bottom layer--to make them stay together.)
If you need to hold it in place temporarily, there are several different ways. You can use a spray-on adhesive designed for quilting. Or you can pin the batting in place. (If you pin it, look in the quilting notions department for special curved safety pins that will let all the layers lie flat together after they're pinned.) You can also baste the layers together with a needle and thread.
Of course, to keep it in place permanently, you need to quilt it either by hand or machine. You can also tie it in place with bits of yarn every four inches apart or so.
A good quilting book will explain this better than I can, as well as provide lots of pictures and specific details. Check your local quilting shop, bookstore, or library.
