Choosing the Right Batting for your Quilt

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Choosing the Right Batting for your Quilt

Batting Guide Once you have pieced a beautiful patchwork top, the next step in the quilt making process requires batting. (Or perhaps it is called wadding where you live?) Batting is simply the stuff in the middle of your quilt – the layer between the front and the back that gives your quilt dimension and warmth. Since quilts have this extra layer, they require quilt-ing – that is, stitching, (plain or fancy, by machine or by hand) to hold the layers together. There are some choices when it comes to batting. Here is how I (a self-proclaimed non-expert) understand them:

Types of Batting Cotton •100% cotton battings are soft, usually supple (drapable), and usually thin (low-loft) but it seems these days they can be found with many variations. •Cotton breathes – so your quilt will too. •If not preshrunk, cotton tends to shrink. When you wash your quilt for the first time, the batting will shrink and create that wrinkly, quilty look that you either love or hate. (I love.) •Since normal cotton fibers will tend to shift around in your quilt over time if not properly anchored with stitches, the batting manufacturers tell you that your quilting “lines” must be close together (usually 2-3” maximum) to prevent this bunching/shifting. There are manufacturers of new types of cotton batts that claim otherwise and say you can quilt them further apart (up to 8”.) I haven’t had the guts to test their word yet.

Cotton batting is supposed to look flatter.

Cotton Blends •There are many, many different types of batting that are part cotton, part synthetic (nylon, polyester, mircofiber, polypropylene) in a variety of ratios 87.5/12.5, 80/20 50/50…) •Because of these added synthetic fibers, these battings require less quilting to be stable. This is a plus for people like me for whom quilting is not easy nor the favorite step in the process. •The lofts (thickness), weights/drapes, and shrinkage properties of these products vary and it may take some experimentation to find the one that suits your purposes. There are some that I love and some that I cannot stand the feel of.


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