Repair Your Antique Quilt in 10 Easy Steps
Give Your Old Friend a New Lease on Life
By Kate Sheridan, published Jan 05, 2006
Published Content: 45 Total Views: 81,519 Favorited By: 3 CPs
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Whether it's a quilt that your great-great-granny stitched together 100 years ago, or one of dubious parentage found stuffed in a bag at a neighborhood moving sale, damaged antique quilts always deserve a second chance to warm someone's life.If your treasure is truly rare, has unique historical value, or you really don't have the patience to make careful repairs, consider asking a local quilting group or historical society to refer you to a quilt restoration expert.
Otherwise, just get started! Follow these 10 easy steps to do-it-yourself. You needn't be a quilting expert or a master seamstress to make your own antique quilt repairs.
1. Examine your quilt seam by seam, square by square and make a list or chart of all needed repairs. Note colors, fabrics, wear patterns, stitching idiosyncrasies and sewing techniques you'll need to replicate. Your inspection may yield some spots "almost" ready for repair. Include them now.
2. Gather your supplies. Always keep a supply of muslin on hand to allow you to try out stitches and repair techniques before you use them on your antique fabrics. Keep both silk and cotton threads on hand. Silk is great to work with and leaves no trace behind, but cotton is kinder to fragile fabrics.
3. Work first on frayed seams, loose bindings and quick-fix stitching, along with any gaps in the filling. Authentic cotton batting is available online, and well worth the effort.
4. Keep a detailed log of your repair project. As soon as you finish one repair, note it in detail. You're documenting your antique quilt's experiences, literally, for posterity.
5. Work from top to bottom, left to right. Where the fabric is just loose and not worn or torn, repair it by simply turning the loose end under and re-stitching it into place. If a piece is torn, missing, worn away or has a hole in it, replace it with a reproduction piece of the same pattern, or one close to the same texture and wear. Worry less about matching the replacement fabric pattern than matching the color and material composition. Several sites online offer both restoration-quality and reproduction materials.
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Resources
- Quilting information and supplies: www.quiltbus.com Antique quilting: www.foxfire.org
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