Quilting Stabilizing Bias


Biased Edges FAQ

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Last week I asked for advise on how to stabilize a bias edge so I could sew
something else onto it and still have it lie flat.  I got a bunch of great
suggestions, tried one and was very happy with the results!

What I ended up trying was using a tear-away interfacing.  I layered my
pieces with the border (cut on the straight-of-grain) on top, the block
(with bias edges) in the middle and the tear-away interfacing on the bottom
next to the feed dogs.  I pinned the piece before sewing, matching seams
where I needed - I think I pinned every 2-3 inches.  That made the difference!
The border I added lies flat!  Thanks for all your help.

                                        Mair Geiser

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Maggie Pepe:

        I've done a couple of quilts where I sewed a number of strips together
and then sliced them into triangles(creating lots of bias edges) Then you mix
and match different triangles back into squares-it's easy and fun. If I'm
going to let the cut triangles sit around for awhile, or if I'm going to be
handing them a lot, I spray them with spray starch. I haven't done this a lot
because I don't like the sticky feel. But I think it does reduce the
stretchiness a bit.
        Arn't there iron on stabilizers for applique that can be torn off
later?
Or
how about the thinest stabilizer that stays on after sewing?

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Mona Gollan:

I have had success with using my steam iron to steam
the edge back into shape. I draw a line for the known
measurement, i.e. the 12" block, then place and/or pin the
stretched fabric edge to the paper and steam the fabric
back within the known measurement parameters.

The only tips I have for keeping the bias from stretching, short
of adding a stabilizer which adds bulk, is to put as little
stress as possible on the piece while sewing/handling/pressing,
steam back into shape each time you press, and try to sew the
piece without an exposed bias edge as in the Half-square
triangle pieceing method. I also use freezer paper templates
on pieces that won't fit into any of the previous categories.
The freezer paper will hold the edge nicely while you sew.

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Susan Walz:

I've gotten slightly better results by:
1. place 1/4" quilter's tape along the edge, stitch next
   to the tape.
2. Use freezerpaper cut to the finished size & ironed
   to the pieces, stitch next to the edge of the paper.

Both add a little stability to the bias.  But
there ought to be a better way.

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Jean Jasinski:

I don't know how to get you out of the situation with the wavy borders;
perhaps you could try using the iron to either stretch or shrink your
current blocks.

I avoid stitching on the bias if at all possible.  I do this sometimes
by wasting fabric or sometimes with careful planning.  For instance,
to not waste any fabric, you can put two squares together, mark the
center diagonal line, and then sew 1/4" seam on each side of the line,
then cut along the line.  You have two sets of right triangles that
each open up to a square.

A------C
|      |   Mark from A to B and sew 1/4" on each side of the line.
|      |
+______B

The math is such that you consider the finished distance from A to C
and then add 7/8" to get the size of the square.  Certainly if you have
lots of two triangle=1 square combinations to sew, then you only mark
a set of squares that are connected and then cut them apart after you
have sewn the diagnonal seams.

For two triangles sewn together to get you another triangle, you
mark this way:

A-----D
|     |     Mark an X (A to B and C to D).  Then when you sew four
|     |     seams.  This time you don't sew on EACH side of the marked
C_____B     line, but you have to alternate.  So if you sew on the
            left side of the cut line on the upper left branch of the
            X, when you get to the middle. you switch over and sew
            on the right side of the cut line on the bottom right
            branch of the X.  And then you do the same thing on the
            other side of the X.  Draw it out.

            The math for this set of cuts is A to D + 1.25" and you
            end up with four sets of triangles sewn together and
            when you open up a set, you get a triangle.


For other shapes, I have to waste a little fabric:

For trapezoid + triangle = rectangle,

A----------+         +                 +------------+
|         /         /|                 |            |
|        /   +     / |   =             |            |
C_______/         /__|                 +____________+


what I do is first cut the trapezoid piece as a rectangle of the finished
size.  Then I cut a square of the size A-C and align it.  Then I mark
the diagonal line on the square and SEW ON THE DIAGONAL.  Then I cut
a 1/4" seam along the sewn line, open up, and I have the finished shape.
The bias gets sewn before the cutting.

It's a little sneaky but it can work for many shape combinations.  You
need to compute the math for the different combinations but it's not
so hard to sew up a couple and measure them to see what works.

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Millie Wujek:

It is easier for me to stitch bias seams BEFORE cutting.  For squares which
are made of 2 triangles, use one of the methods discussed earlier.  (My
favorite is the method of layering the 2 colors of fabric, drawing squares
a bit larger than needed on the top layer, drawing the diagonal, and stitching
1/4 inch on each side of that diagonal before cutting apart.

When you've already cut the fabric, if you are sewing one bias edge to one
edge which is cut with the grain, put the straight grain edge on top if using
the sewing machine.  Mark centers, and pin carefully before sewing.

If sewing two bias edges together, you'll probably have better luck to mark
the center of each seamline, and the end of each seamline, and pin the two
fabrics together matching centers--then sew by hand.  Hand sewing lets you
gently ease if one fabric was more stretched.  And a hand-sewn seam has more
"give."

If the bias edges you are talking about are at the outer edge of the quilt,
and you are trying to add a final border or binding, cut a final border on the
straight, mark off on the straight fabric (in the seam allowance) the lengths
that each bias chunk should be (before stretching), and carefully pin the
bias edge to the straight-cut border.  Again, it may be easier to sew by hand
or to hand baste the seam before machine stitching.

Bias edges are trying to one's patience!  (Been there.)  Fortunately, some
heavy quilting in the troubled areas will camoflauge (sp??) a multitude of
sins.

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Cynthia Parsley Baehr:

I just finished the top for a Roman Stripe quilt (small for
guild challenge) and had the same problem.  Next time I will cut the
triangles the other way.  Luckily, I only had to restitch it twice.
You might try some fusible interfacing - or mayby a tear-away facing
to keep the blocks stable while you stich.

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Sharon Danielson:

I don't have any suggestions for taking the waves out but when I
am working with pieces that will have a lot of bias, I spray starch the
fabric and iron it before I cut.  The extra stability seems to help.

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Marina Salume:

The tips already mentioned are good. Also, you can try sewing
your pieces to a foundation, like a lightweight interfacing or
paper that you can tear away afterwards.

To salvage the border you already have, you may be able to run a
line of machine stay stitching along the outside edge, to keep it
from stretching anymore. Then get a long straight edge and measure
and cut until that border is square, even if you have to cut the
points off of some of the pieces. A bit of rippling will "quilt out",
but if your border isn't square you'll end up with a quilt that
isn't square. It's easier to measure and cut before you quilt it,
when you can get it to lie really flat on your cutting board.

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Darcy L. Falk:

I have successfully used the following technique to help "shorten" bias
edges:
1. Unthread your sewing machine.

2. "pretend" sew the bias edge with a finger or thumb at the *back* of the
presser foot, so that tiny wrinkles or gathers are made in the quilt piece.

This doesn't really shorten the edge, but it does seem to help temporarily
gather the edge so that it can be eased in without puckers.

Also, for a more permanent solution, especially if you have a lot more to
do with the pieces, you might try using a semi-long basting stitch (not
really long) to actually sew the pieces.  I have used this technique in
gathering an outside edge that has grown due to a lot of quilting in the
center (and not so much on the border).

And I always assume that everyone knows that if you put the longer piece on the
bottom, that your presser foot will do a little bit of easing as you send
it through the machine. (But at our Sunday Bee last weekend, it was
mentioned and a couple people had never heard this...)

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Marla Greenspan:

If you don't feel like taking it off----
- -I had a wavy border on my Irish chain and it has flattened out over
time and with quilting.

If you do feel like taking it out---

Carefully press the edge back in shape (go slow) then run some hand
basting along the edge so it won't stretch again.
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