You may have noticed that lately my blogging has not been as prolific, and that I may not have had the chance to comment and respond to your kind comments. Apologies. My excuse is that I have been busy completing my Red and White Pinwheel Quilt ready for the deadline for the NEC Festival of Quilts, which is being held in Birmingham on 8th-11th August 2013.Besides being time consuming, and having to quilt on the hottest day of the year, there have been a few other traumas along the way which I though I would share with you.
As you may know, for marking this quilt I have been using the blue Wipe Off Fabric Marker, to draw on my quilting lines. I have found it really successful, and would use it again. However, to start with, I was removing the blue pen marks as I went along, which was fine until I realised a problem.
I am not *stupid*. When I made the decision to make a red and white quilt, the first thing I made sure of was that I gave the red solid I was going to use, a good 60 degree wash, to make sure that the colours would not run. However, somewhere along the way, I completed the top and put the sandwich together, using a lovely red spotty fabric, and started quilting. My eye may have been off the ball at the time, as we were building a house. It was not until quite far along the quilting process, when I was removing the blue Wipe Off Fabric Marker with a very damp cloth, that I noticed that the water had caused the dye from the red spotty backing fabric to bleed onto the white of my quilt ..... take a deep breath.
|
Red dye bleeding onto white fabric |
It was difficult to proceed with my quilting until I knew for sure that when the quilt was finished it would be a Red and White Pinwheel Quilt, not a Pink and White Pinwheel Quilt. Luckily, I still had some of the backing fabric spare, and I decided to do a test run.
|
Dylon Colour Catcher |
I put some yardage of the spotty red fabric, an old white pillowcase, and a Dylon Colour Catcher sheet in the washing machine on a warm wash, and waited for the results. As you can see it all worked out perfectly. Yes, the colour did run, but the Colour Catcher did the trick of collecting the loose dye particles.
|
Washing Quilts - Colour Catcher Test Run |
Quilting of the Red and White Pinwheel Quilt continued right up to the deadline, but before it was packaged up and delivered, it had to be washed. Even with the test I had done, and the results plainly in front of my eyes, somewhere inside of me still had some doubts, and I had reservations about this moment. A few days before, I noticed a comment by Karen at Celebrate Hand Quilting about washing quilts, and I contacted her for some reassurance. Thanks Karen for your advice, at the right time!
The quilt went in the washer on a COLD WASH, with NO detergent, with FIVE Colour Catchers. At this point I still had the blue markings on the quilt, and I needed to rinse them away, without detergent, which worked a treat. Within a few minutes, with the loose red dye, it looked like a bloodbath in the washing machine, and I could see that all the Colour Catchers had taken up a lot of dye ... take a deep breath.
So I drained the first round of water off, replaced the Colour Catchers with FIVE MORE, and started the process again. There was a lot less red dye in this wash, but the Colour Catchers still took up a lot of red, as you can see from my final collection of Colour Catcher sheets drying on the sink in the laundry room. Once this was rinsed, I finally did a wash with some detergent in it, and THREE Colour Catchers in it. By this point I had moved onto a different packet of Colour Catchers, and I found that Dr Magic Snatch a Dye, which I purchased from Lidl, works just as well.
|
Red and White Pinwheel Quilt drying on the Sheila Maid |
As you can see - the final results show a Red and VERY White Pinwheel Quilt, which I am very pleased with. During all this time, my husband has been thoughtfully searching for Red and White Pinwheel Quilts on Ebay - just in case.
I never really had an interest in Chemistry when I was at school, but I would like to thank all the Chemists that were involved in the development of this wonderful product - the Colour Catcher.