Visible Mending, Part 1

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2020
  • What do you do when the puppy eats a hole in your DIL's quilt? If you are me, you find an interesting way to mend it!
    If you are interested in hand sewing notions, you can find them at pieceocake.com/
    If you are interested in my thimble, it is from Liuxin Newman, the Thimblelady, and you can find her store here: www.thimblelady.com/ref/28/
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 17

  • @gonefishing3644
    @gonefishing3644 Před 10 měsíci +1

    It is always interesting to see how someone else does a repair job. I would have laid a piece of tracing paper under the hole and then used a pencil to outline the hole on the paper, cut out the paper (keeping those scissors far away from the quilt) and use the paper as a template for cutting the batting. Would have also used the paper template to outline the fabric patch for the back, adding an additional half inch or so to the border of the fabric patch. After hand-stitching the fabric patch on the back of the quilt like a piece of applique, I probably would have used a lightweight fusible material to attach the batting in the patched hole. Only then would I hand stitch an applique flower or some other decorative shape to cover the hole on the front of the quilt.

    • @BeckyGoldsmith
      @BeckyGoldsmith  Před 10 měsíci

      Excellent suggestions! That would be a good and methodical way to go about the job. I personally would not use fusible, but that's me. Thank you for commenting :-).

  • @lisareed5669
    @lisareed5669 Před 2 lety

    You are a GREAT MIL. I hope you are appreciated.

  • @vickiehouston1759
    @vickiehouston1759 Před rokem

    I followed you examples and instructions on a 10 yo baby quilt that I made for the baby boy. He is very happy with the results!

    • @BeckyGoldsmith
      @BeckyGoldsmith  Před rokem

      It is so nice to be able to save a loved, but damaged, quilt. Congrats!

  • @sandramyer7081
    @sandramyer7081 Před 3 lety

    I ‘m thankful when you started and I’m look forward to the 2nd Part🌸😂

  • @stephanieoakley7509
    @stephanieoakley7509 Před 2 lety

    "Were just gonna go in" it hurt your soul to do the surgery part. I felt it too my grandma made me a quilt when I was little and it lived on my bed for 15plus years until the patches started coming apart which is why I came across your video. Its lived in my chest for 4 years and I always cry a little when I change out our beds because it's right there on top. I gotta fix it I miss her so much I need the quilt back to useable fashion

    • @BeckyGoldsmith
      @BeckyGoldsmith  Před 2 lety +1

      I encourage you to pull the quilt out, find some fabric that makes you smile, and sew it in place where needed. Embrace the stitches you use and the fact that you are making your grandmother’s quilt usable again. Don’t worry about perfection. Sew with love as best as you can.

  • @PinkSparkleyPeep
    @PinkSparkleyPeep Před rokem

  • @marnconley4882
    @marnconley4882 Před 3 lety +2

    Would it work to lay the quilt on a piece of paper larger and draw the hole on to it and use that as a pattern for the back piece and the batting?

  • @shannon4826
    @shannon4826 Před 2 lety

    literally came to this video to figure out how to repair a hole my *cat* tore out of my quilt (my dog is blameless in this affair)

  • @SierraSadie1
    @SierraSadie1 Před 3 lety

    Why not just make the opening round or square instead of such an odd shape? I think it would look nicer instead of an odd-shape patch.

    • @BeckyGoldsmith
      @BeckyGoldsmith  Před 3 lety +4

      I could have but the simplest reason is because I didn't want to. I didn't want to hide it, I wanted it to stick out because the hole in that shape left by the puppy is now part of the story of the quilt. If it was just any old antique quilt with no backstory I might have chosen differently. But the beauty of this sort of mending is that we get to make those choices... no rule apply :-).

  • @yolandacorzine4595
    @yolandacorzine4595 Před 3 lety

    Thats why dogs need to be outside.. I never have animals in my house to destroy my quilts..