How to choose the best quality fabric for your quilt
How do you choose the best quality fabric for your quilt? Quilt shops,
magazines and patterns will tell you to always use quilt shop quality fabric,
but what does that mean exactly?
To understand what "quilt shop quality" fabric is, we have to go back to
the beginning. Cotton cloth before it is printed at the mill is called
greige (pronounced gray) goods. The higher the thread count of the greige
goods, the higher the quality of the cloth will be.
Average cotton cloth has a thread count of 60 x 60 threads to the inch,
sometimes called 60 square. It may thin or stiff and it shrinks a lot in the
wash. Expect your batting to migrate or beard through these widely spaced
fibers over time. Better fabric - which is what you usually find in quilt shops
- has a thread count of 68 x 68 or more and is made with longer staple cotton
thread. This makes it feel a little softer, accept dye better and have a
longer life. It will still shrink a little in the wash, but not as much. PFD
(prepared for dying) and batik fabrics can have up to a 200 thread count and
generally don’t shrink at all.
The first time a mill prints cloth, they will usually do so on lesser
quality greige goods in order to test the colors and the placement of the
designs.
Look at the selvage of fabric you have just purchased. See those color dots?
They aren’t there to help you choose co-ordinating fabrics, although many
people use them that way. They are there for the manufacturer to make sure the
color was correct and that it printed in the correct place.
The printing process manufacturers use can be quite complicated.
Fabric designers work about a year in advance to come up with the concepts
which are then converted into colorized designs. These designs are sent
overseas to the mills to be test printed and returned to the manufacturer for
approval or correction. Most of the quilt fabric we use today has been
printed in Korea or Japan. Classic Cottons is the only company that
prints in the United States.
In the 1920's - 1940's, mills would test their prints on low quality greige
goods. These low quality greige goods later became feedsacks. In todays
market, these first run tests often become the flat folds that you purchase in
discount stores. These flat folds may be printed on lesser quality fabric
which won’t last, or they could be printed on good fabric but the colors
and/or designs weren’t up to manufacturers specifications. Some flat folds are
printed as deliberate knock-offs of a popular design. If you compare it to the
original design, you will see that the colors are bit off, or a part of the
design (like a leaf or a vine) is missing.
Quilt fabric also goes through a multi step finishing process, which sets
the dyes and makes the fabric softer. Inexpensive fabric skips the last couple
of steps, resulting in stiff fabric that wrinkles easy and is very susceptible
to bleeding and/or sun fading. Fabric that is quickly printed to take
advantage of a trend like hot a hot cartoon character often skips those last
few steps because it is less expensive to make and manufacturers believe
people buy it without planning on any long term use.
Whenever you make a quilt, use the best quality fabric you can find.
Don't frustrate yourself by using second or third best. You will be
happier with the process and prouder of the end result.
For more information, read Harriet Hargrave's
From Fiber to Fabri;
the essential guide to quiltmaking textiles. It's an excellent book
that takes you from the cotton boll to the finished product. You'll
learn about the history of textiles, how fabrics are manufactured, prepared,
and dyed; and how they are printed and finished. The book offers numerous
tests to help you determine the quality of fabric.
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