Close This Ad
search
Quilting Newsletter Promo
quick links: find it
printable patterns
buy cover patterns
pillowcase challenge
learn to quilt
tool school
quick & easy gifts
how-to instructions
watch videos
radio show
terms & tips
designer show & tell
ultimate shop hop
 
quick links: do it
get our newsletter
share your project
find a shop
moda designers
message boards
 
Quilts and More Quarterly Challenge - Vote now for your favorite pillowcase!
 
May 2009 American Patchwork and Quilting
subscribe today
give a gift
in this issue
buy this issue
promotions & contests
contact us
customer service
attention retailers
 

TRY TECHNIQUES | FINISHING

Spacer Borders

What can you do with a bundle of blocks that aren't uniform in size? See what the Quilt Doctor has to say.
  • Share
  • Print
  • Comments
1 OF 2 | NEXT >>
 

Sizing Spacer Borders

Dear Quilt Doctor,

I was the president of our quilt guild last year and all of the members of my guild made me a block to show their appreciation. Fortunately, the blocks are all the same size! Some of the members were a bit overachieving and gave me more than one block, though. I have enough for a quilt center and also for a pieced border. My problem is that I can’t figure out how to make them work together. The mathematics baffle me. What can I do?

Thanks for your help.

Patricia Newhart
Oxboro Lake, MI

Dear Patricia,

I’m sure you’ve had fun twisting and turning the blocks to their best advantage, but now it’s time to get those blocks stitched together. You want the quilt finished for your next quilt show, right?

Spacer borders are a good solution when the dimensions of the pieced quilt center and the pieced border are not compatible. Depending on what is needed, spacer borders can be the same width on all sides of the quilt, or they can be one width on the sides of the quilt and another width on the top and bottom.

This is how I would try to figure it out … but keep in mind that I’m a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants kind of quilter. If you need a little more control, sketch the quilt on graph paper first.

On a design wall or the floor, lay out the center of the quilt and the border blocks. Sew the center together. Next, stitch the top and bottom borders and then the side borders, laying them out on your design wall as you go. As you place each sewn border, shift it so you have each one where you would like it in the quilt, allowing for an inner spacer border.

Add the width of the quilt center plus the width of both side borders. Subtract that measurement from the length of the top or bottom border, and divide the difference by two. This number will be the width of your spacer borders. Round the number up to the nearest 1/4" for simplicity, then add 1/2" for seam allowances.

Repeat for the top and bottom spacer borders (add the length of the quilt center plus the width of the top and bottom borders; subtract this measurement from the length of the side borders, then divide by two and add seam allowances) (letter continues...)

Continued on Page 2: Examples of Spacer Borders

More to check out:
Green Pinwheels
Four-Square Pillow
Dotty Stars


 
Marketing Promotion 544x100
 
Add a Comment
 
   
Quilts and More™
in this issue
find the magazine
Quilt Sampler®
in this issue
find the magazine
     
Free e-newsletter - sign up now!