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Hi I'm Natalie, from the Missouri Star Quilt Company. I'm not mom! She's not here today,
so, you don't get to see her cute face. You got me, but that's fine. We're going to have
a lot of fun together. We're going to talk about t-shirt quilting. I understand that
there've been quite a few questions on our forums and our blogs about t-shirt quilts
and luckily I'm working on one for my sister. She happens to be a marathon runner so she
gets a t-shirt every time she runs a race, which is great. And I have kids who are in
t-ball, and soccer, and swim team, and they get shirts every time, every season. You know
we have kids that go to concerts. We've made t-shirt quilts out of concert shirts. Really
there’s a lot of things in life that we get a t-shirt for and what better way to preserve
those memories, than by putting them into a quilt.
So, today we're going to walk you through that step by step. And show you how it's done
from start to finish. It'll be great! So, to prepare our t-shirts we're going to want
to cut out the part that we're going to use. So, that means we're going to cut along these
seams right here. We're going to cut off this part right here and we're going to cut it
down about here. We want to have enough space so that we can trim it up and square it, and
so that is how we're going to prepare these t-shirts. We want to separate the front from
the back so that we just have the useable part of the shirt that we want to use in our
t-shirt quilt. So I just cut right here along this side seam. It doesn't have to be pretty
you're going to square it up later, and preferably wash your shirts so your not cutting through
stinky armpits and you know, things like that. So, we just cut that off and then we cut it
down here a-ways. So, that we can have enough space to square our t-shirt up.
Then I'm going to cut these little side seams, just on the fold. Remember it's not perfect,
this is not the finished product it's just to prepare the shirt for the fusible stabilizer
that we're going to do in the next step. So then you just have pieces like this, you want
to get all your shirts done at once so that just makes the process faster. Alright, so
to stabilize our t-shirts we're going to use this great product it's a Pellon Fusible Featherweight
and you can purchase it by the yard on our website. It comes with directions on this
little piece of paper that's wrapped around it, and you can generally get about two t-shirts
per yard if you use small t-shirts you might be able to get three. What we're going to
do is we're going to just cut off the amount that we need. It's about a half a yard per
shirt and I'm just going to cut it like this. You can rotary cut it if you want. It has,
you want to take this away before you start ironing, it has a really soft smooth side
and then on the iron on side it has little bumps that you can feel with your fingers.
So, that's how you know which side you want to iron on.
So what I do is I lay my smooth side down on the ironing board and then I put the t-shirt
on top of it, and you don't really want to worry to much about cutting it to an exact
size because you don't want to get this stuff on your iron. It gums it up really bad, and
it's quite a mess if you do that. So, the other thing that you want to worry about is,
sometimes, because these shirts are screen printed when you heat them up the ink will
smear. So I just use the back of another t-shirt and put it right over the top of it like that.
So there's no, it protects this picture from smearing. It helps out a lot and makes it
so that it sticks. And then you just start ironing you want to hold your iron still and
let it press for a few seconds in every spot, and you just do this until the whole thing
is completely attached, and then you're done! You move on to the next one! So, we're just
going to press this out and then I'll show you what we do after that.
OK, so I tend to be kind of impatient and rush through the ironing part but we really
want to take your time and make sure that it's completely attached. You want to press
it and hold it and leave it still, and then move it to the next section of the shirt,
and you can check it from time to time and see. See, this one is sticking which is really
good. That's what we want. We want it really securely attached because then when you quilt
it it's not going to come apart and separate and cause puckers. Alright, so we get rid
of that one and we pull this over to the cutting mat. We can double check, it's completely
attached up here you can see that it's got a good adhesion. Alright, so I'm going to
use my square ruler. This is a 12 1/2" square and I just kind of eyeball it. I look at it,
I see that we've got about the same distance on either side, I try to make sure the bottom
is lined up straight, and once you feel like the pattern in the middle of the ruler is
square and centered, then you just start trimming it. I just make a little cut here, trim up
the side. I'm going to slide that over a little bit. Trim it on this side, and then I turn
it, and then you have your square. And when you're done trimming up all of your blocks,
what you have here is a block that you can use just like any other quilting fabric. It's
square, it's stable, it's not going to stretch, and then you can do whatever you want with
them.
You can border each one, you can sash all your blocks, you can do a nine patch next
to it, an hour glass. You really can incorporate these into your quilts however you want to
do it. It's completely up to you. For my sisters quilt what I decided to do was border each
shirt in a different color, or two opposite colors. I'm using blue and orange, because
they tend to be kind of dominant in her shirts. I wanted to pick something that she would
like to look at but also enhance the shirts. So, what I did is I took 2 1/2" strips of
fabric, and bordered each one. Half of them with blue and half of them with orange. So
then when you've got these pieces they join together really easily just like any other
quilt. When you add this fabric, the quilters cotton, it stabilizes the quilt a little bit
more it makes it so that when you put it on the machine to quilt, it doesn't have as much
stretch. These pieces support the pieces in the middle and it just makes it so much easier.
So I'm going to show you what I've got so far. I've got, the quilt is coming together
really nicely. Can you see that? This piece right here in the middle I want to talk about
for a second. She had these little emblems on the front pockets of some of her shirts,
and so what I did is I decided that I would put these in, in a four patch, and to make
a 12 1/2" block I cut four 6 1/2" squares, and then seamed them together. She has a couple
of other shirts with long emblems on them, and what I'm going to do for that is cut them
into a 12 1/2" by 6 1/2" rectangle. Then she'll have one seam down the center of those. By
doing that then they match the rest of the 12 1/2" blocks, and I think that's kind of
a neat way to incorporate the smaller pieces of the t-shirts. Then she gets to see everything,
so, what we're going to do now is finish, we're going to finish bordering the t-shirt
blocks. We're going to put the last row on and then we're going to border it and then
you'll get to see that.
OK, so we've got our block and it's backed and it's square. What I'm going to do is I'm
going to add my 2 1/2" strips of fabric. So, I'm just going to show you how I do this I'm
going to put two strips on either side this way and then I'm going to put the long strips
across the front. So, I'm just going to get that done and then we'll join the blocks together,
and we will add the row to the bottom of the quilt. I use a 1/4" seam just like every other
quilting project that I do. That's always worked out just fine, and I'm kind of taking
a little shortcut here rather than precutting my strips. Which you could do you could cut
them to 12 1/2" I'm just going to slice it off and put it on the other side. Cause we
take some shortcuts around this place if you haven't noticed. Alright I'm going to press
these out. I'm not going to get the iron on the pattern at all. I'm just going to press
these open so that I can sew the other pieces on the ends and it takes about two strips
to do one t-shirt.
This one strip is going to fit on three sides so I'll need that extra second strip to do
this long piece right here. So two 2 1/2" strips with the fabric for each 12 1/2" t-shirt
block, almost done. OK, so we're just going to finish sewing this block, I'm going to
trim it, and press it. Then we're going to join our three blocks together. So we're just
going to slice this right here. Make sure it's straight cause that matters. Going to
press these edges open being careful not to hit the print, cause we don't want that to
smear. Alright, so I've got these three pieces and I'm alternating the colors, so I'm going
to do an orange, a blue, and an orange. I'm going to sew these seams down the middle.
I'll do this one first and then this one, and then we'll join this row to the bottom
of the quilt. So meet me back in just a minute and I'll show you how that's going to look.
OK, so we've got our quilt squares sewn together and what we're going to do next is take these
three squares and we're going to join them to the bottom of this quilt. This is our last
row, and it's important when you alternate your squares that you match up your seams
so I'd recommend pinning them right here at the seams and stitching those down so that
you don't have any gaps or any off set seams.
So, then when we're done with that what we're going to do is we're going take it and have
it machine quilted, and I just want to show you this one. I put this together for my son.
He wanted it done in his school colors. OK, so you can see with this quilt that once your
t-shirts are stabilized and they're made into your quilt top with your other fabric, you
can treat it just like any other quilting fabric. You can machine stitch right over
it doesn't generally take away from the pattern. It looks great, it stays together. These are
wonderful quilts my kids have certainly enjoyed theirs. So yeah, go out and make a t-shirt
quilt for your friends, your graduates, your fathers who have t-shirts from every vacation
they've been on. You know, really, the possibilities are endless. So, go out and make a quilt and
I hope you've enjoyed this tutorial from the Missouri Star Quilt Company.