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Binding Tutorial

Warning:  this is a picture-heavy post.

I made this mini quilt for my friend's birthday.  She likes Tula Pink fabric, so I used Tula Pink True Colors along with some Moda white for the front, and a Tula Pink unicorn fabric from her latest line for the back and binding.  The pattern I used is the kite block from Flying Parrot Quilts. I quilted it using the pattern "Abstract Butterfly".  It finished at 20" square. I love how it turned out.




I have also created a binding tutorial that I will share here.  It is also available as a free download.

How to Bind a Quilt

The Math

1.     Figure out how many binding strips you need.  Measure the perimeter of your quilt and add 12”.  For example, 60 + 60 + 80 + 80 + 12 = 292”.  

2.     Divide this number by 40”, which is a good measurement for width of fabric (selvedge to selvedge).  This number will tell you how many strips you need to cut.  For our example, 292/40 = 7.3, so I need to cut eight strips of fabric.

3.     Decide what size you want your binding to be.  Often times a pattern will tell you to cut 2.5” strips.  I prefer the look of 2.25” strips and I feel that they are more balanced and equal on the front and back.  It’s a matter of personal preference.  

4.     To figure yardage for binding, multiply the number of strips needed by the width you will cut them.  For our example, 8 * 2.25 = 18”, so I will need ½ yard of fabric minimum.  I prefer to add on a few inches in case of shrinkage during prewashing or to allow for squaring up the fabric or any mis-cuts.  So, I would purchase 5/8 yard.

The Creation

5.     Cut your strips of fabric and join them at a 45-degree angle.  The easy way to do this is place one fabric right side up.  Use the right end of this piece and the left end of the next piece face down, as shown.  Sew from the top left to the bottom right, being sure to backstitch at the beginning and end.  You can mark the sewing line on your fabric with a fabric marker or pencil, or use a tool such as what you can see on my sewing machine bed.


6.     Continue joining all your binding pieces until you have one long, continuous piece. I like to chain piece mine.  


7.     Before doing any cutting, test each of your seams to make sure they open up into a straight line.

8.     After you are satisfied that all of your joins are sewn correctly, carefully trim each piece so that you have a ¼” seam allowance remaining.

9.     Press each seam open.


10.  Press your binding in half with wrong sides together.

The Attachment

11.  Lay out your binding around your quilt top to make sure that you have made a long enough binding piece.  Also make sure that no joins are near the corners.  If they are, you need to adjust the layout until they are out of the corners.

12.  Make sure you have aligned the raw edges of the quilt and the binding.  Use a walking foot or your machine’s dual feed feature to do the sewing. Leaving an 8-12” tail for a mini or a 12-15” tail for a regular quilt, begin sewing your binding to the quilt around the middle of a side using a ¼” seam allowance.  If you’re working with a mini quilt, you will want to start sewing a few inches from the bottom corner instead. I would also suggest using pins to hold your binding in place no matter what size you are working on.

13.  When you get to the corner, stop sewing ¼” from the edge and pivot your quilt to sew at a 45-degree angle to the corner.  Remove quilt from machine.


14.  Fold the binding up at a 45-degree angle.


15.  Now fold it back down on itself, lining up the top fold with the edge of the quilt.

16.  Make sure that the raw edges are aligned, pin, and sew down the sides, again stopping ¼” from the edge, rotating, and sewing toward the corner at a 45-degree angle.

17.  Continue this process until you are back at the side you started on.

The Cutting

18.  Sew down a few inches.  You will want to have 12-20” of unsewn quilt left on a larger quilt, or as big of a space as you can get on a mini quilt.  Sometimes you might have to un-sew a bit of previously sewn binding to get enough slack to work with.

19.  Lay the unsewn side of your quilt on a flat surface.  Place both loose ends of the binding flat along the edge of the quilt.  Leave a 1/8” gap between the two where they meet.  Roll back the excess binding pieces flat along themselves.


20.  Trim the left-hand side at the fold along the 1/8” gap.

21.  Open the piece of binding that you just cut off.  Line up the open binding with the right side of the binding, making sure the left edges are aligned.

22.  Trim any excess binding to the right of your aligned pieces.  *Make sure you only cut the top piece of the binding, not the bottom one that's already sewn down.* Your binding is serving as a ruler, rather than having to remember any exact formula for size.  This method works for any size binding.  Set trimmed excess binding aside.

The Join

23.  You are now going to join your pieces using a mitered seam.  Though it’s a bit tricky at first, this process yields a beautiful, invisible join. With the quilt positioned so that the binding is on the top, open the left side so that the right side is facing up.

24.  Open the right side of the binding so that the wrong side is facing up. (If you are using solids, the right side has the ironed crease bumps and the wrong side had the ironed crease dents.)

25.  Overlap the pieces so that the left side goes straight across and the right side meets it at a right angle.  Sometimes it’s really tricky to get enough space to work with, so you may need to un-sew a bit of the seams in order to make the pieces easier to work with.  I like to pin my pieces in multiple places to hold them together.  

26.  Sew from top left to lower right.  You may find it easier to mark the diagonal line with a fabric marker or pencil before sewing.



27.  Before you cut, make sure that you open up the binding and make sure that you sewed the seam in the right direction and that nothing is twisted.  You also need to make sure that the binding lays flat along the quilt.  If it seems too big, you can make your seam allowance slightly larger and try again.


      

28.  Once you have verified that everything is oriented correctly and is the correct size, carefully trim your seam allowance to ¼”.


29.  Press open your seam.  Since the majority of the binding is already attached, I use a seam roller on this seam rather than trying to iron it.  You could also run your fingernail down the seam several times as well.

30.  Sew the loose binding into place.
      

31.  Admire your beautiful join.


Finishing Touches
32.  If you are planning to do a traditional binding process, sew the binding to the quilt top, then turn it to the back, clip in place, and hand-stitch down.




33.  If you are planning to machine-stitch down the binding, there are several ways to do it.  You could sew the binding to the front, fold it to the back, and stitch it down.  This will leave a line of stitching visible on the front of your quilt.  I don’t prefer this method because of the uncertainty of where that stitching line is going to land.  Instead, if I am finishing with the machine, I attach the binding to the back of the quilt first, then fold it to the front and stitch it down.  This way I am guaranteed that the front looks how I want.  The binding process works the same either way you decide.

And that's it.  Did you find this binding tutorial helpful?  Let me know if you have any questions or if something isn't clear.

Linking with For the love of geese and My Quilt Infatuation.





How to Make an H Seam Quilt Backing

I worked on a guild quilt over the weekend.  When I laid out the backing fabric over the top, I realized that it was going to be really close on the length if I only used two widths.  Using a third length would be really excessive though.  I was only short a few inches.  

Sometimes when I am faced with this situation I piece an extra strip for the backing.  For example,  I have used extra blocks, a checkerboard of squares of leftover fabrics from the top, or pieced heart squares for the back.  In the best case scenario, you will have accounted for this and have enough extra backing to make a frame of sorts around the pieced area.  


You may wonder why I'm saying you want a frame.  Well, it's really hard to get a pieced backing perfectly centered on the quilting frame and since it's fabric there is a chance it will stretch slightly or it may shift a bit during the quilting process.  Plus, if the piecing goes to the edge, part of it will get trimmed off because the backing needs to be bigger than the top.

In this case, I did not have any of the top fabrics, but I did have loads of backing fabric.  So I made what I call an H seam.  That way, I get the little extra length I need, but I don't need to use quite so much fabric.  

Here's how you do it.

1.  Cut two pieces of fabric to be six to eight inches wider than the width of your top.  For example, if your top is 60" wide, cut two pieces that are 66" (one yard, 30").
Blue represents quilt top.

2.  Remove selvedges only for the parts that will be in the seams.
3.  Cut one piece of fabric that is half of your measurement plus 3".  This 3" measurement gives a little bit of wiggle room.  Using our sample measurements above, cut a piece that is 36" long (one yard). {66/2 = 33" +3" = 36"}
4.  Cut this short piece in half along the fold.
Cut along center fold, as designated by blue dotted line above.

5.  Sew the short edges together using a 1/2" seam allowance.

6.  Press the seam open.

7.  Trim off the selvedges and square up the piece if necessary.

8.  You should now have three pieces of fabric:  two that are the width of your quilt by 44" and one that is 22" by the width of the quilt. (Note: dimensions may vary since most quilting fabrics no longer measure 44" wide.)

9.  Find the center of the long edge of each of the long panels and mark with a pin.  

10.  Matching centers, sew the long seams using a 1/2" seam allowance.  Press these seams open.

11. Trim the sides to be square as needed.

12.  Your backing should now look like this--pictured with right side down, seams up.



My drawing is not quite to scale, but I think it illustrates the process pretty well.  I feel that the H seam not only saves fabric, but it is a big enough piece that it doesn't alter the integrity of the back.  It would look odd if I inserted a strip that was only a few inches wide.  I don't feel that the seam is very intrusive in the look of the backing in most cases. I added approximately 18" to the backing on this particular quilt.  If you truly only needed a small amount, I'd say you could trim it down to around 9", but I probably wouldn't go smaller.  I really feel that the 18" or so on this looks better.

And here is the quilt after I got done quilting it.  

The backing seams are not very easy to see, right?  
The quilt top pattern is from the book Winter Wonderland by Sherri Falls.  The quilt was made by members of my quilt guild. I used Loophole for the quilting pattern. The backing is Moda Grunge with stars on it.

I hope you find this method helpful.


A Few Small Finishes

Over the weekend we travelled out of state to get my kids from their grandparents'.  I had a few small projects to finish off, so it seemed like a good time to work on them.  First is this mini made with the leftover bits of my two Lori Holt Bubblegum Kisses quilts.  I was hoping to use the leftover backing as backing on this project too, but, alas, it was too small.  So I had to use some of my background yardage.  I used the leftover binding from one of the Bubblegum Kisses quilts as well.

Second is this Bonnie and Camille mini mini.  I originally made this for round two of the B & C Barn Quilt swap.  As I was finishing it, I noticed that it had a small red speck that I think is Kool Aid on it.  I couldn't send it like that, so I made a new one.  The red speck one languished here forever (a year!).  I decided to just finish it off for myself.  I used the leftover binding piece from the Bursting Star quilt I shared two weeks ago.  It's maybe not what I would have pulled from my stash as a binding, but the leftover piece fit exactly, so I figured it was meant to be.  Did you know that I have free instructions for how to make this block?  It's called Eight Hands Around and it is a 6" block.  It's a lot easier than it looks.

I also brought along my EPP project.  I'm not sure I love it so far, but I will stick with it to finish. I'm glue-basting the fabric to the papers, but it's not holding very well and I find it very tedious. On the plus side, once I'm done sewing, I'm done.  No appliqué is required to finish, which totally increases the chance that I will actually finish.
I'm excited that my husband has agreed to finish the downstairs bathroom during his time off between classes.  We brought back enough trim from his dad's shop to finish the bathroom.  The trim for the whole basement is made, but we couldn't haul all that.  We're getting a bit closer on a cabinet plan for the sewing room too. 

In other news, while I was at my parents' house, my mom made me cut my dad's hair.  It was really weird!  I should mention here that although I cut my husband and son's hair, I just use clippers and I have no training other than watching a video 20 years ago that came with our clippers.  Dad's hair ended up much shorter than he's used to, but it was a free haircut.

I've gotten a few more sets of Polaroid blocks in the mail.  Both were side swaps.  That leaves me needing two more side swap sets and five more sets from my actual swap group.  The mailing deadline is Saturday.

Other things I'm thinking about:  I can barely stand to look at the news headlines lately.  So much discouraging.  It's really got me down. Why is Kids Bop still a thing?  Why was it ever a thing?  Can spiders live under your carpeting?  How terrifying to consider.  I don't love going really fast on boats, especially when eight year olds are driving.  Why don't people know what a yield sign means? Why don't people slow down?  Why do they text while driving?  What could possibly be so important that you can't wait until you stop? Life is already fleeting; slow down and don't be risky.

Linking with mmmquilts.