I love the crispness of a newly quilted quilt. Many people here wash them right after quilting. Do you and if you do, why? I never have and I'm wondering about it.
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I love the crispness of a newly quilted quilt. Many people here wash them right after quilting. Do you and if you do, why? I never have and I'm wondering about it.
I wash mine when completed to remove any dirt, hairs, loose threads, markings, etc that the quilt may pick up during construction. Also and especially if I am gifting the quilt, I feel like I am better equipped to deal with any runs in dyes that might happen. I figure whoever gets the quilt will wash it eventually so I like to remove any issues they might run into.
Personally I always wash mine with color catchers, to avoid any bleeding of colors and use fabric softener. Aside from that I love the softness and cuddliness of a laundered quilt. If you like the stiffness I suggest either using starch in the wash or spray starch and iron after you wash it.
I do because a crispy quilt is not very cuddly. My quilts are made to be used, I have not made any quilts for display yet.
I did absolutely have that moment of regret that the newly finished crisp quilt was not going to be crisp after it was washed, but as soon as it came out of the dryer all soft and snuggly, I had no more regrets.
How did people deal with color bleeding before these color sheet things for the washer came around? Those have just been very recent years...but people have been quilting for decades...and using the hated red fabric. I have noticed that a cotton/poly blend of red doesn't bleed but 100% cotton red does. Beware..wash before using...wash at least twice. I now have to go buy these sheets to hopefully cure a red bleed problem on white and my budget is thin and I know these sheets aren't cheap. How'd they deal with the age old problem prior?
I have a cat in the house. I've always heard to find the most comfortable spot in the house, sit where the cat lays,tried it, fell off the shelf! lol This is also one of the reasons I'm going to put all my fabric on the comic book boards. Let's see her lay on top of those. LOL
Hi, Cyndi!
All that Karen said is true. Other reasons for washing a completed quilt is to remove the residue of the spray adhesives used & to give your quilt that "crunched up" look that is often desired.
I'm just now quilting two jelly roll quilts for my grandsons. They will be my first washed-before-delivered quilts! I've always spot washed (to get any marker lines off) and lint rolled (to get any cat hair off) but I'm sure these quilts will be washed dozens of times before they wear out, so it won't hurt to be the first to wash them. I'd just never even thought of washing them before giving them away until reading about it here on the forum. Not the first thing I've learned here and surely not the last!
I've started using these sheets in all my laundry. I just told Mom about them, as she lives alone and has hi water bills and I thought she could combine some of her laundry loads. Sometimes they come out just as they went in, so i lay them aside and use them again. I prewashed some reds and the new sheet was just as red as the several reused sheets. The other weird thing I found out this week...my DH's work clothes.... black T's and jeans that have been washed for a couple of years now.....the sheets I threw in still came out a dark gray! Didn't expect that at all and sometimes I've been known to throw in some other dark colors in with those black clothes......hmmm, now wonder they don't look so bright anymore.
The second thing: I went to Amazon, thinking I could get them cheaper, but since I needed a box right now, I found that WalM had a cheaper price than ordering them by the carton from Amazon....somewhere about 3.50 for a box of 24.
And I don't know how they used to keep dyes from running, but I suspect that they prewashed everything, as I was taught to do when I first started sewing in the '60's. And before that, I think everything probably was prewashed simply because they recycled their fabrics from draperies to clothing to quilts to who knows what.
I like to wash the quilt when it's finished. On the one I made for MOM, It instantly showed me a spot that I had pulled out FMQ and hadn't redone. So that was a good thing. You can always iron and starch them out flat again if you don't dry them all the way in the dryer. I know, Cause that's how I fixed Mom's! and o yeah, I have a black dog.......
I love the smell of a freshly laundered quilt, especially if it has been hung out on the clothesline in the fresh air to dry. Plus with cats and dogs, it is always best to wash before giving a quilt to someone who might have an allergy to animal hair.
I love the look of old quilts...so I wash mine to get the "old fashioned" look and like cat n bull I use mine so I like that cuddly feeling. As to those color catchers...they work awesome. We can't get them here in Canada so last weekend when I was across the line I picked up 3 boxes from Safeway for about $3.69 per box.
Years ago quilters pre-washed all their fabrics or their quilts were made from old clothing. I normally don't pre-wash my quilting cottons, so when the quilts are finished I give them a gentle wash with a few color catcher sheets to remove any soil, threads and chemicals that might have been used on the fabric. If the quilt is to be a gift, I love to give it the first washing in case any colors bleed and to make sure it's nice and soft and smelling nice. I like the way washed quilts look...more soft and cuddly. :)
I wash mine to make sure any seams and binding hold up, especially if it is a gift. Then the whole bleeding issue and cat issue too. I don't let my cats on anything I'm constructing but I do let my cats on me so sometimes it is transferred by accident.
kellie
Attachment 20099Attachment 20100These pictures are worth a thousand words! Had I not washed this quilt before gifting it, I would never have seen the seam in the block on the back had split! I was able to remove the defective piece and repair it by hand. I would have hated for the mom-to-be wash this quilt and have this happen to her. As this is a baby quilt, it will get used and washed alot. I also like the wrinkly affect that washing gives the quilt. It help hides my imperfect stitches from sewing the binding on by hand. I also have 4 cats and 3 dogs and even though they don't lay all over my fabrics and quilts, their hair is everywhere!!!
You know Cyndi, you have gotten all the bestest responses here. My reply is merely incidental.
I always wash when completed. I love the feel of a crinkly quilt. I also have a basement dweller named Dinah the kitty and as with all the others with kitties, they will seek out your favorite fabric or newest project. Also, each household I am sure you have noticed, has it's own fragrance. You know, like you can walk in someone's house and tell what they've been cooking for the past 10 years, or the dampness that creeps in some homes, etc? It will linger in your quilts too. You may not be aware of or smell your house "scents" but others do.
Also, auntiemern is correct. Vinegar and salt in cold water was the best for setting dyes. We used to soak new clothes or fabric in the washer up until fairly recently! It wasn't always foolproof of course and the vinegar scent fades away in the drying process. I am sold on the color catcher sheets.
I rarely prewash my fabrics anymore if I know where I purchased it and the manufacturer...while I love the color catchers, I still use white vinegar in my wash to keep colors fast if I need to...I love the crinkly look of quilts so I wash mine as soon as I am done with the binding...I love seeing how it will turn out...I find that washing hides a lot of little mistakes as well that I might have obsessed about a bit...I make a lot of quilts for babies and families so I want to make sure they hold up well...unwashed quilts look flat to me but I think it depends on the look and use you are going for...plus, with 4 cats and a black dog, a few hairs and probably a few drops of wine or coffee are going to make it on anything I make! :D