Glass and Mosaics

Information about glass and mosaics

rainbow

Hand Cut

Hand Cut

Cutting Quilt Patches With Scissors

For those quilters who hand cut their patches, here is a shortcut way to hand cut the patch and know that your finished piece will be the right size.Rather than marking the cutting line on your fabric, mark the sewing line. That way, you have an accurate sewing line, regardless of how accurate your cutting line is.After all, the point of accurate stitching is to get an accurate patch when the block is sewn together.Here’s how: Step 1: Create a template the finished size of your patch and place it on the wrong side of your fabric.There are a few things to watch for as you place the template on your fabric.First is to be sure that the straight sides of your template are lined up with the straight grain and cross grain of your fabric.For more information and a description with pictures of the grains of fabric, see the article about Fabric Grain Lines.Second – if you are marking more than one patch at a time (which I recommend), be sure that you leave at least 1/2 inch between the patches – having enough space for each patch to have a 1/4 inch seam allowance.Also, be sure that your template is placed at least 1/4 away from an edge of the fabric and the selvedge edge (after you trim the selvedge off).Third – place the template on the wrong side of your fabric. You will mark a sewing line, and you want to be sure that as you sew on the wrong side of the fabric, your line is showing to guide you. Step 2: Mark around the outside of your template with a pencil or marker that shows up on your fabric.Because you are marking on the wrong side of the fabric, it is only a little bit critical that your mark doesn’t show.Mostly you want to be sure that the mark won’t show through permanently on the front of your quilt.Most of the pencils available for quilting will work great for this type of marking.Surprisingly, there are several different colors that can be used for marking dark fabric – silver is one of my favorites, yellow works well, and white is good as well. Soapstone is another option.The idea is to get a soft material that will mark the fabric easily, so you get an accuracte mark without stretching and pulling the fabric. Step 3: Remove the template and determine where the 1/4 seam allowance is (this is where you will cut).Long before quilt shops started carrying 1/4 inch masking tape, I discovered it in a paint store.Not too surprisingly, it is less expensive there and at other home improvement stores like Home Depot, although you don’t get the fancy packaging that assures you it is for quilting.Let me assure you, the tape is the same.The point is, you need to determine where you will cut that is approximately 1/4 inch away from your sewing line.You could also use a ruler to measure the 1/4 inch, and mark a cutting line. Step 4: Cut the patch on the cutting line.Using your scissors, cut the patch on your cutting line – either on the outside of the masking tape, or on a drawn cutting line.If you are using masking tape, you can easily just move the tape around the outside edge of the patch.The tape will be sticky enough to use to mark several patches.Whether your cuts are perfectly straight are immaterial (pardon the pun), because the more critical line is the sewing line. As you sew these patches together, you will want to stitch on the inside of the marked sewing line.It is surprising how much difference just a pencil width will make in whether your finished block is the correct size.

About the Author

Penny is the author of 9 books for beginner quilters and a self-taught quilter of more than 26 years who seeks to interest new quilters and provide them with the resources necessary to create beautiful quilts.

Guy gets hand Cut Off


World Cuisine 48297-99 Tri-Blade Plastic Spiral Vegetable Slicer


World Cuisine 48297-99 Tri-Blade Plastic Spiral Vegetable Slicer


$29.00


Cut vegetables and fruits into noodles, or curly, paper-thin ribbons with this inexpensive yet robust slicer. We recommend the World Cuisine brand over others because it costs about half or less of the price of similar models, makes nicer noodles, is easy to use and clean, and can slice fairly large quantities quickly, and is quite sturdy. The popular Joyce Chen type slicers can only process small…

Swissmar Borner V-1001 V-Slicer Plus Mandoline  6 Piece Set


Swissmar Borner V-1001 V-Slicer Plus Mandoline 6 Piece Set


$35.95


An inexpensive alternative to a professional stainless-steel mandoline, this device makes it possible to quickly, uniformly, and safely slice and julienne vegetables and fruits. It also shreds cabbage and neatly dices potatoes, tomatoes, and onions. For safety, a holder firmly grips food with stainless-steel prongs so fingers are protected from the German surgical-steel blades, and the three …

Presto 02970 Professional SaladShooter Electric Slicer/Shredder, White


Presto 02970 Professional SaladShooter Electric Slicer/Shredder, White


$36.50


A great big idea for salads and much more. Slices and shreds right where you want for perfect salads and much much more. Professional speed power and convenience. Includes thick and thin slice cones ripple cut cone shredding cone and funnel guide….

Redhead (1959 Original Broadway Cast)


Redhead (1959 Original Broadway Cast)


$7.14



Afro Noise I: Cut Hands


Afro Noise I: Cut Hands


$12.11


A bludgeoning mix of machine and Central African percussion plus other acoustic instruments combine to create one of the most physically intense musical experiences ever. Since 2007’s Whitehouse album Racket, and after his original Afro Noise mix became one of the most downloaded experimental mixes ever made, William Bennett’s remarkable Cut Hands album has seen four long years of meticulously obs…

Doobie's Choice


Doobie’s Choice


$3.12


20 tracks spanning 1972-1991, handpicked by the Doobies themselves. Tracks include ‘Cotton Mouth’, ‘Toulouse Street’, Another Park, Another Sunday’ & more and includes liner notes by Barry Alfonso. Rhino Records….

THE PREMIUM CIGAR - 60 minute VHS Video guide - The art of tobacco blending, cigar ettiquette, sizes, shapes, colors, what is a premium cigar? Find out.


THE PREMIUM CIGAR – 60 minute VHS Video guide – The art of tobacco blending, cigar ettiquette, sizes, shapes, colors, what is a premium cigar? Find out.


$17.74


Sixty minutes of insightful & entertaining information that will give you confidence in selecting a premium hand made cigar.

From the tobacco fields of Honduras to your local cigar shop, The Premium Cigar takes you on a journey exploring the intricacies of tobacco cultivation and the art of premium cigar manufacturing.

Industry experts discuss the art of tobacco blending, basic cigar etiquette…


Hand-cut Dovetails & Advanced Hand-cut Dovetails (2 Vhs) By Rob Cosman


Hand-cut Dovetails & Advanced Hand-cut Dovetails (2 Vhs) By Rob Cosman




District 9 [Blu-ray]


District 9 [Blu-ray]


$5.99


A provocative science fiction drama, District 9 boasts an original story that gets a little lost in blow-’em-up mayhem. Set in Johannesburg, South Africa, District 9 begins as a mock documentary about the imminent eviction of extraterrestrials from a pathetic shantytown (called District 9). The creatures, it turns out, have been on Earth for years, having arrived sickly and starving. Initially rec…

Philadelphia


Philadelphia


$3.49


Philadelphia wasn’t the first movie about AIDS (it followed such worthy independent films as Parting Glances and Longtime Companion), but it was the first Hollywood studio picture to take AIDS as its primary subject. In that sense, Philadelphia is a historically important film. As such, it’s worth remembering that director Jonathan Demme (Melvin and Howard, Something Wild, The Silence of the Lambs…


Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

One Response to “Hand Cut”

  1. July 16th, 2011 at 8:39 pm

    canvas oilpainting says:

    Your blog has made me think about an question from another angle. This is quite rare when I change my idea about such subjects but it looks that youa€?ve done it. The day has started with something new! Thank you!

Leave a Reply

Subscribe to our Newsletter