Nice looking TQ!! I'm impressed by the DIY'rs on HF!:boggle:
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Nice looking TQ!! I'm impressed by the DIY'rs on HF!:boggle:
This is just a guess since I haven't seen it in person, but I think this Karo style should work fine for an underquilt too.
After handling it, what do you think AC?
Jerry
Great looking quilt! I'll be it can take you down to zero... I have a similar DIY quilt that I was more than toasty in at the recent Northern Hang. It also has 15oz of down and weighs in at ~24 oz. Pretty similar dimensions too. It was my first real sewing project, so I also made a bunch of mistakes. But, as you said, thats how you learn!
Looking forward to your testing trip report!
What keeps the down from ending up in one corner? Wouldn't it be hard to get it redistributed back evenly?
Really nice quilt there, good colour too.You say your a copy cat well thats a unique quilt you have made there.
Great job, Andy!
Care to comment on how you lined up the baffles with the outer layer to sew? That's the only part of the process I can't envision without it being completely tedious.
that would be a problem if you didn't overstuff.
By overstuffing, the density of the down helps keep it in place (and the 36 short baffles help too!)
Thanks! I just copied TeeDee and LC...and shortened a few steps!;)
oh and why blue? Simple...I didn't have a blue quilt yet! lol
Thanks Sam...
If you notice, each row of baffles (shoulder to shoulder) is orientated the same. I would sew a row (starting at the head, working my way down)...spread both shells out and fold it up opposite so I could only access the row I wanted...sew that row...repeat. It actually lines up as you go
Some rows I would mark on the baffle and the shell so I would keep everything lined correctly. Hard to explain...not hard to do, just tedious.
I think at one point, I told TeeDee that this was an exercise in patience...I haven't changed that opinion! :D