One of my friends is about to become a first time grandmother. She's a quilter and has been sewing like crazy. She knew that I was making a pattern for a baby blanket with satin binding and begged me to show her how to attach it. This tutorial is for her and for all of you who have wondered how to make the binding look neat and professional.
The puppy applique will be found in my Craftsy pattern, “Doggy in the Window” baby blanket.
The puppy applique will be found in my Craftsy pattern, “Doggy in the Window” baby blanket.
Finished Measurements:
Approximately 34" x 40"
Materials:
·
2 yards of baby flannel
·
1 package of satin blanket binding
·
matching thread
Preparing the Blanket for Binding
1. Prewash two yards of baby flannel in warm water. Prewashing
is essential because the flannel will shrink a lot.
2. Press the flannel and cut it in half.
3. If you are adding an applique, do it now, before you put
the front and back pieces of fabric together.
4. Lay the two flannel pieces wrong sides together on
a cutting mat. The right sides of the fabric will be facing out.
5. Cut through both layers with a rotary cutter to square up
the sides. You can usually get a rectangle of about 34” x 40”.
6. Pin the pieces together and stay-stitch around the
outside edges of the flannel. You could zigzag or serge the edges instead if
you like.
About the Binding
Satin blanket binding usually comes in package containing 4
3/4 yards of 2-inch single fold satin. It is found in most fabric stores on the
same display case that contains rickrack, seam binding, and bias tape.
When you examine the bias tape you’ll see that one folded
side is slightly wider than the other.
The cut ends of the binding fray very easily, so care will
need to be taken to prevent your binding fraying apart at any seams.
Attaching the Binding
1. Lay your unbound blanket on a flat surface. (I use an
ironing board.)
2. Open the binding and slid it under one side of the
blanket. Make sure the wider side of the binding is against the back of the
blanket. Leave about an inch of binding overlapping the corner.
3. Snug the blanket right up against the fold all along this
side.
4. Fold the blanket binding up and over the front of the blanket. Pin in
place.
5. Set your machine to make a wide zigzag stitch. On my machine
the width was set at 5 and the stitch length was 1.4.
6. Do not start stitching right at the corner. Begin about
6 inches in from that. You will need to keep that much the binding unattached
for creating a neat corner seam later on.
7. Overlap the zigzag stitch so that it falls partly on the
satin and partly on the flannel.
9. Open the binding. Fold at a right angle so that the
blanket edge lies snugly up against the fold down the center of the binding.
10. Align the binding on the back first. Fold it into a neat, mitered corner that comes exactly to the edge of the stitched binding. This is
really quite easy, but you may need to manipulate it a bit to get it just
right. Pin in place.
11. Turn the blanket to the front and lay on a flat surface.
Once again, tuck the blanket edge right up against the fold of the binding and
pin in place all along the edge.
12. Fold the front segment up to make a mitered corner like
you did on the back. Make sure that the front and back folds are in exactly the
same place on the corner. Again, this may take a bit of maneuvering. Pin.
13. Begin sewing at the top of the
mitered edge. Backstitch a few stitches, then sew forward to the edge of the binding.
Make sure your stitches overlap both edges of the binding. If the front and
back folds are aligned, the stitches will catch both sides of the back fold
just like they do on the front.
15. Continue in this manner stitching sides and turning
corners until you reach the last unfinished side. You will be putting a hidden
seam in this last corner after you attach the two ends of the binding.
16. Stitch along the fourth side until you are about 6
inches from the end. Backstitch, cut the stitches and place the quilt on a
cutting mat.
Note: You will be connecting the two ends
of the binding, the end on the first side you attached and the end on the last
side you attached.
17. Fold this last section of binding back out of the way so
you can work with the binding on the side that you first attached to the quilt.
18. Make sure the blanket edge is snugged up against the
fold in the binding. Now, cut the end of the binding 1/4 inch beyond from the
side of the blanket with a rotary cutter.
19. Fold this segment of binding out of the way and trim the
remaining edge 1/4 inch beyond the side of the blanket.
21. Stitch the ends together with a 1/4 inch seam. Use a
zigzag stitch to finish the edge so that it won’t fray out in the laundry after
it’s all finished. Press the seam to one side.
22. Working on the last side you added binding to, pin the
binding in place. The seam will fall exactly on the edge of the blanket.
23. Zigzag stitch the rest of the binding on this side of
the blanket. Start where you left off with a backstitch and sew to the end in
the same way you stitched to the corner edge on the other three corners.
24. Open the binding and fold
it to miter the corners exactly like all other corners. The only difference is
that this time a seam will be tucked away on the inside.
26. Stitch the mitered folds,
turn the blanket and stitch along this final stretch back on the first side of
the blanket that you worked on.
27. Sew right up to and just
over the beginning zigzag stitches. Backstitch.