I used his last football jersey and his karate uniform as 3D designs. The karate shirt opens to show the logo on the back. I had to turn it around, but that was easy enough.
The football jersey was a real struggle. Firstly, it's made of that athletic stretchy mesh that seems to stick to the needle. Secondly, he was pretty rough on it, and apparently the way to fix a tear is to sew from neck to hem, catching the rip along the way.
There are three such fixes. Thirdly, the top of the shirt is stretched out of shape or maybe it's just shaped to go over those big pads. Either way, it does not lie flat. Instead it bunches up and piles up and does not cooperate in any way.
What do I do when this happens? Don't fight it: make it one of the three-dimensional pieces. Well, okay, fight with it a little bit, but that was necessary to get the shirt to look right. I was aiming for a dropped-on-the-floor look. (It is a boy's shirt after all, and we all know that boys drop everything stinky on the floor.) Not too messy or bunched up because everything important needs to show. Hey girl, I figured it out! And it looks pretty good.
Know what one of the problems of working on such a big quilt is? The weight! This quilt is heavy. Of course, there are in some places four layers of fabric and batting. And let's remember that it's a huge quilt, 78 x 96. Mom said that her son is well over six feet tall, so she wanted it long.
Mostly, though, this quilt was lots of fun: I played while quilting it. A couple of shirts have "mustangs" on them, so I quilted horse-shoes. I quilted around all of the big letters and numbers individually so they would stand out. On one shirt I quilted in sports words. On another there are numbers, but not just any numbers. He had so many different numbers, I could quilt in his numbers, even 00 from his soccer jerseys. Plus circles, squares, loops and anything else I could think of.
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This has turned into a wonderful memory quilt. You have been very creative with how you have used the shirts. I am stunned by how big it is!!
ReplyDeleteGreat finish! I especially like the 'just thrown on the floor' idea - very original.
ReplyDeleteYou made a monster of a quilt, kudos for you for coming up with uninventive design plus then doing all the work of sewing it and quilting it. I know from past experiences that t-shirt quilts are heavy. Thanks for sharing, I need to rest now after reading this post.
ReplyDeleteI finished a Monster T Quilt earlier this year, but didn't think to enter it into the Blogger's Quilt Festival. You did a great job on yours!! 3-D blocks present particularly challenging design decisions.
ReplyDeleteWell done! I made one tshirt quilt. Don't know if I will try it again. It's an accomplishment for sure!
ReplyDeleteBet it feels great to conquer that beast. It is not an easy project. I have made one such quilt and have no desire to go that route again. Kudos to you for coming out on top of that quilt :-D
ReplyDeleteWhat a great finish! I'm sure it will be treasured. The 3-D parts are interesting for sure! I'm working on my first T-shirt quilt and have a few Hawaiian shirts, gonna have to think about that.....
ReplyDeleteLove both your entries into the Festival, nice job on them:)
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun quilt of memories!! I've yet to make a t-shirt quilt but my son cleaned out his closet and handed me lots of his participation shirts so I guess there's one in my future. I've heard they get heavy.
ReplyDeleteLove to see all these memories sewn together and ready to be enjoyed as a quilt!
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