My mother in law made this quilt for my husband when he graduated from high school. It's a wonderfully warm and heavy quilt, made with pieces of old, worn out, blue jeans. She cut 5 inch squares of denim, sewed them together, and then tied the quilt together with a skein of blue yarn that she picked up from K-Mart. For years, this has been one of our favorite quilts! It's really warm, and durable, and full of warm memories.
30 something years later, this poor quilt was showing the ravages of age. The backing had been torn to shreds, and the batting had fallen out. We haven't used it in a couple of years. I finally have the time, so I'm working on refinishing the quilt. I've pulled off the backing and the batting. I had to cut off all of the blue ties. Ye Gods, that was a more involved task than I thought it was going to be!
After some serious consideration, we picked up a high quality black sheet from Target's Threshold collection, and I spent Tuesday afternoon pinning the quilt back together. I had a large expanse of clean floor that I borrowed from my church. I taped down the sheet, then I taped down the batting on top of the sheet, and then I placed the denim top on top of the sandwich. I used basting pins to pin the layers together. 30 minutes after I started, I had a pinned quilt, ready to be pulled together!
I've been tying the layers as my mother in law did before me. I realize now why she didn't want to help me fix the quilt. Getting that needle through the layers of denim is a tough proposition! I've been debating using pliers to pull the needle through! It's going to take me a while to get this thing tied together!
Once I take care of that, I have to figure out how to finish the edges. This is where the only wear and tear on the denim can be seen. The top and bottom edges had been turned in and sewed together. If you look closely at the edge, you can see that the denim has torn and worn right along the edges. So, while I tie the quilt together, I'm going to be contemplating how to finish off the edges of the quilt so that the whole thing will last another 30 years. Your suggestions on binding the edges are more than welcome! I certainly have no idea what I'm doing!
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