|
|
A | B | C
| D | E | F
| G | H | I
| J | K
| L | M | N
| O | P | Q
| R | S | T
| U | V | W
| X | Y | Z
|
1-Patch:
A quilt that uses the same shape, such as hexagons,
diamonds or squares repeatedly.
4-Patch:
A quilt block that is divided into four equal divisions.
9-Patch:
A quilt block that is divided into nine equal divisions.
A 9-patch block looks like a tic-tack-toe grid.
Album
quilt: A quilt that is made and each block is different
and has been signed by a different person.
Autograph
quilt: A quilt that is made and each block is different
and has been signed by a different person.
Appliqué:
The process of sewing small pieces of fabric onto a larger
piece of fabric by hand or machine. These pieces usually
have edges turned under. However if you do not turn under
the edges, it is called raw edge appliqué.
Appliqué
stitch: Another term for blindstitch.
BA:
Baltimore
Album
Background
fabric: The fabric on which appliqué pieces are
sewn to.
Backing:
The fabric on the back of a quilt.
Backstitch:
To stitch in reverse over the previous stitches. This helps
strengthen the beginning or end of a seam.
Basting:
The process of joining layers of fabric before quilting.
You can use long hand stitches, safety pins or a tack gun.
You can also baste the turn-under seam allowances of appliqué
pieces before stitching them in place.
Batting:
The layer of fiber between the quilt top and the back. This
is the part that provides the loft and also the warmth in
a quilt. It can be made out of polyester, cotton, wool or
silk.
Bearding:
This is a problem that is associated with synthetic battings.
The loose fibers of the batting can work their way out through
the spaces between the threads of the fabric. As more fibers
migrate out, they can join and twist to forming little balls.
Beeswax:
A wax that you rub on to the quilting/appliqué thread
to stiffen, strengthen and reduce tangling when sewing.
Between:
A short needle that is used for quilting. The higher the
number, the shorter the needle.
Bias:
A diagonal direction to the grain of fabric. The true bias
is at a 45 degree angle to the selvage. Fabric cut along
the bias requires careful handling as it stretches easily.
Bias
binding: Narrow strips of fabric that is cut on the
bias of the fabric. The stretchy behavior allows it to easily
go around things such as a curved edge.
Binding:
The straight-grain or bias strips of fabric that is used
to cover the four raw edges formed by the backing, batting
and top of a quilt.
Blanket
stitch: Another term for buttonhole stitch.
Bleeding:
The loss of dye in fabric when it gets wet.
Blindstitch:
A handstitch used to secure the folded edge of fabric to
another piece of fabric. You use the blindstitch to secure
appliqué pieces and to hand-finish the quilt binding.
Block:
A single design unit of a quilt top. They are generally
square or rectangular design components, but can be other
shapes. Blocks are stitched together to form a quilt top.
BOM:
Block Of
The Month
Border:
A strip of fabric that is between the binding and the inner
part of the quilt. The border can be pieced.
Bunny
Ears: Formed in two corners when stitching a triangle
and a square unit together. Bunny ears are, in most instances,
trimmed away.
Butted
corner seam: Another term for square corner seam.
Buttonhole
stitch: A hand stitch used to secure appliqué
pieces to the background fabric. The buttonhole stitch is
used often for raw edge appliqué.
Calico:
Printed fabric that has small repeating designs.
Celtic
appliqué: An appliqué technique that uses
folded bias strips to produce complex, curved geometric
designs.
Chain
piecing: To join fabric pieces by feeding them through
the sewing machine one after the other without lifting the
presser foot or cutting the threads between the pairs. You
can also sew strips of fabric together at the sewing machine,
then cut them into desired units.
Charm blocks: A collection of small fabric squares.
Charm
quilt: A patchwork quilt made from charm blocks. Traditionally,
no two charm blocks are made from the same fabric.
Clip:
A small cut to help curved edges of fabric to lay flat.
You cut perpendicular to the seam allowance edge and stop
about 1/16" before getting to the seam line.
COC:
Cream
On Cream
Comforter:
A covering that has been tied instead of quilted.
Crocking:
The term used when dye from a fabric rubs onto an adjacent
piece of fabric.
Cross-hatching:
A network of parallel quilting lines that run in two directions.
They may form a grid of squares or a grid of diamonds.
Crosswise
grain: The threads in a fabric that run perpendicular
to the selvage. The crosswise grain has a little more stretch
than the lengthwise grain.
Cutting
line: The line on a pattern that you cut your fabric
to.
Cutting
Mat: A flat piece of rubber like material that is used
with a rotary cutter to protect the table surface and to
preserve the blade's sharpness.
Darning
presser foot: A sewing machine attachment designed to
allow the fabric to be guided and moved freely during fee-motion
machine quilting.
Diagonal
basting stitch: Another term for Tailor's padding stitch.
Diagonal
set: Another term for on point.
Directional
Print: Fabric with a distinct up and down or side to
side pattern.
Design
Board: Wall or felt-covered board used in auditioning
block components or fabric patterns/colors to plan quilt
top design.
Design
Wall: A area that allows you to put up pieces of your
quilt and see them in relationship to one another.
Easing:
The process of adjusting the length of one fabric edge to
match the length of another fabric edge while stitching
them together.
Echo
quilting: A technique of quilting where you outline
a piece most often appliqué. The first quilting line
is in-the-ditch. The next quilting line is parallel to the
first line and approximately 1/4" away. You continue
adding new quilting lines.
English
paper piecing: A method of hand piecing that uses precut
paper/plastic pieces. You baste your fabric around the piece.
After basting, the pieces are whip stitched together with
the paper inside to hold the accurate shape.
EPP:
English
Paper Piecing
Fat
eighth: A piece of fabric (11" x 18") that
is half of a fat quarter (18" x 22").
Fat
quarter: A piece of fabric (18" x 22") that
is half of a half yard of fabric (18" x 44").
Feed
dogs: Mechanical teeth located under the needle plate
of a sewing machine that serve to guide or feed the fabric
through the machine.
Feedsacks:
Material originally used to hold flour, feed, sugar, salt,
etc. Now highly prized for authentic reproduction quilts.
Finger
pressing: A technique to make a seam lie flat by pinching
the fabric between your fingers.
Finished
size: The size of a completed block or quilt without
the seam allowances.
Foundation
paper piecing: A method of machine piecing that uses
paper with the pattern printed on it. You sew pieces of
fabric to the paper.
Foundation Piecing: A method of machine piecing that
uses muslin or light fabric with the pattern printed on
it. You sew pieces of fabric to the pattern printed fabric.
FPA:
Freezer
Paper Appliqué
FQ:
Fat
Quarter
Free-motion
machine quilting: The process of quilting curved designs
by machine.
Freezer
paper appliqué: A method to appliqué that
uses freezer paper. The freezer paper may be underneath
with heat basted seams, or on top as a guide to tuck under
the seam as you sew.
Friendship
quilt: A quilt made by several people to be given to
one person. Each participant usually signs the block they
made.
Fringe
Foot: This foot produces thread loops on the fabric's
surface for a decorative and dimensional appearance.
Frog
Stitching: To undo previously done stitches. It is called
so for the phrase ... rip it, rip
it, rip it ... sounds like a frog.
Fusible
appliqué: By using fusible webbing, you can press
your appliqué pieces to the background fabric.
Fusible
webbing: A plastic like material that is used to heat
fuse two pieces of fabric together.
Fussy
Cut: Cutting the fabric to capture a certain area of
the design in the print.
Grain:
The direction of the crosswise and lengthwise threads of
a fabric. The lengthwise grain (parallel to the selvage)
is the most stable or least stretchy fabric grain.
Grain
line: An arrow or line that is printed on a pattern
to indicate how the pattern should be laid on the fabric
before cutting.
Homespun:
A loosely woven fabric, may times a plaid, hand-lomed from
hand-spun yarns.
Half
Square Triangle: A block with a diagonal seam line.
Two different fabrics are on each side of the line, usually
forming a light/dark configuration.
HST:
Half Square
Triangle
In
the ditch quilting: Quilting in the seam line.
Invisible
machine appliqué: Sewing machine stitch with
a narrow-width stitch using nylon thread.
Ironing:
The process of moving an iron across the fabric to smooth
and flatten it.
Lattice
strips: Another term for sashing.
Layering:
To lay the backing, batting and top of a quilt together
to prepare it for quilting.
Lengthwise
grain: The threads in a fabric that run parallel to
the selvage. The lengthwise grain is the most stable or
least stretchy fabric grain.
Light
box: A device that you can use to see through darker
fabric to trace from a pattern underneath the fabric.
Loft:
The thickness of the batting. Low loft would be thinner
than high loft.
Long-arm
quilting machine: A large quilting machine that quilts
the top, batting and backing with a variety of designs and
patterns in a relatively short amount of time compared to
quilting on a regular sewing machine.
Long
half: A pieces of fabric (22" x 36") that
is cut along the fold of the fabric.
Machine
appliqué: The process to use a sewing machine
to appliqué pieces to a background fabric.
Matching
points: To line up seams between pieces, most often
at corners.
Meander
quilting: Random lines of stitching that usually do
not cross each other.
Miniature
quilt: A small-scaled version of a larger quilt.
Mitered
corners: Borders or bindings sewn together at the corners
in a 45-degree angle versus perpendicular angles.
Mitered
seam: A seam that is at 45 degrees and is most often
used to join border corners.
Muslin:
A plain-woven undyed cotton fabric.
Needle-turn
appliqué: A method of hand appliqué where
the point of the needle is used to fold under the raw edge
as they are stitching to the background fabric.
Needleturn
stitch: Another term for blindstitch.
Needle:
What you sew with.
Nickel
square: Five-inch square of fabric used in making quilt
blocks.
NS:
No
Steam
OG:
On
Grain
On
point: Blocks are arranged where the sides of the blocks
are 45 degrees to the side of the quilt.
OTB:
On The
Bias
Outline
quilting: Quilt stitching that follows the outline of
a piece.
Overcasting
stitch: Another term for whipstitch.
Paper
piecing: Quilting technique in which a design is printed
onto paper and fabric pieces are stitched together on the
paper for accuracy.
Patch:
A single fabric shape joined to other pieces of fabric to
make a block.
Patchwork:
A block that is made up of several small pieces of fabric
that are sewn together.
Peanut:
A piece of fabric that is 11" x 18" or 9"
x 22".
Piecing:
The process of sewing pieces of fabric together by hand
or machine to make a patchwork.
Piecing
stitch: The name of the hand-piece stitching for patchwork.
Plump
eighth: A piece of fabric (11" x 18") that
is half of a fat quarter (18" x 22").
Prairie
points: Folded fabric triangles stitched around the
perimeter of the quilt as embellishment.
Pressing
foot: The part of the sewing machine that holds the
fabric flat against the throat plate during stitching.
Pressing:
A lifting and lowering of the iron to set seams and to remove
wrinkles. Pressing will not stretch or distort the fabric.
Prewashing
fabric: The process of rinsing fabric in hot water to
preshrink it and remove sizing.
PWF:
PreWashed
Fabric
Quarter
inch foot: A sewing machine attachment designed to allow
scant quarter-inch seams to make a quilt.
Quarter
Inch Seam Allowance: The standard seam allowance used
to make a quilt.
Quilt:
A bedcover made of two pieces of fabric with a filler between
them.
Quilt
back: The lower layer of a quilt.
Quilt
blocking: Process of flattening and squaring up a quilt
to create a more uniformly shaped blanket.
Quilt
Sandwich: The there layers (backing, batting, and top)
that make up a quilt.
Quilt
top: The upper layer of a quilt.
Quilter's
Candy: A piece of fabric (11" x 18") that
is half of a fat quarter (18" x 22").
Quilter's
Guild: An organization made up of quilters.
Quilter's
knot: A knot used for most hand-sewing tasks.
Quilting:
Small running stitches that hold the three layers of a quilt
together.
Quilting
frame: A freestanding floor apparatus that holds the
layers of a quilt together during quilting.
Quilting
guild: Community of quilters formulated to encourage
quilt making as an art, and to promote fellowship and quilting
activities.
Quilting
hoop: A small circular apparatus that holds the layers
of a quilt together during quilting.
Quilt
label: Piece of fabric with information printed on it.
The label is typically stitched to the back side of the
quilt as a way to preserve a quilt's history for future
generations. Labels usually include the quiltmaker's name,
the date it was made and any other pertinent information.
Quilt
marking: Procedure of chalking a design onto the quilt
top prior to quilting in order to provide a stitching guide.
Quilt
show: Local, national or international shows where quilts
are entered in contests and judged based on predetermined
factors.
Quilting
thread: A heavier cotton or cotton-covered polyester
thread used for hand quilting.
Raw
edge: The unfinished edge of cut fabric.
Redwork:
Embroidery using red thread.
Reverse
appliqué: The technique of turning under the
edge of one fabric to reveal the underlying fabric.
Right
side: The front or top side of the fabric that usually
has a print on it.
Rotary
Cutter: A tool with a circular blade that is used to
cut through multiple layers of fabric.
RST:
Right Sides
Together
Running
stitch: A handstitch used to temporarily sew pieces
together. Running stitch can also be used to baste turned-under
seam allowances for hand appliqué.
Sampler
quilt: A quilt that is a collection of different blocks.
Blocks may or may not be the same size.
Sandwich:
The quilt backing, batting and top.
Sashing:
Fabric strips that separate the blocks in a quilt. The sashing
frames the blocks and makes the quilt larger.
Satin
stitch: A closely spaced zigzag stitch that can be done
by hand or machine. The stitch resembles satin.
Scant
1/4" seam: A seam allowance that is 2 or 3 threads
less than 1/4".
Seam:
The meeting of two pieces of fabric that is held together
with stitching.
Seam
Allowance: The fabric between the seam and the raw edge
of the fabric.
Selvage:
The lengthwise finished edge on each side of fabric.
Set-in
seams (also y-seams): Seam intersections of three fabric
pieces that form a Y-shape, also called set-in piecing.
Setting-in
piecing: The process of stitching a piece in a opening
between previously joined pieces.
Sharps:
General all-purpose sewing needle.
Slipstitch:
Another term for blindstitch.
Square
corner seam: A seam that is made when one border is
stitched past another at a 90 degree angle. The seam runs
parallel to a side of the quilt.
Squaring
Up: This is when you use a square ruler to assure all
the corners of a block are right angles. This also removes
any fabric ears that may be left over from making the block.
Stash:
A collection of fabric acquired by quilting enthusiasts.
Stippling:
Very close random curved quilting lines. This can be done
by hand or machine. This dense quilting flattens the quilted
area and leaves the unquilted area raised.
Stitch
in the ditch: Quilting stitches sewn along a seam line.
Swaps: Exchanging of blocks or fabric with other
quilters.
Template:
A firm pattern that can be used as a guide for marking and
transferring shapes onto fabric. Templates can be made of
paper, cardboard or plastic.
Thimble:
A metal or leather finger shied to protect the tips of the
fingers while sewing.
Tied
quilt: A type of quilt in which yarn or thread ties
are used to secure the layers of the quilt.
Trapunto:
A design technique where the batting is thicker in selected
areas of the quilt, creating an elevated or stuffed appearance.
One method for creating a trapunto effect is to cut a small
opening on the backing fabric underneath the desired area
of the quilt, stuffing in a small amount of batting and
stitching the backing fabric back up to hold the extra batting
in place.
Traveling:
A method for moving the quilting needle from one point
to another through the batting.
UFO:
UnFinished
Object
Walking
foot: A sewing machine attachment designed to move the
top fabric through the sewing machine at the same rate that
the feed dogs move the bottom fabric.
Whipstitch:
An overcasting stitch. This method is use to join pieces
in english paper piecing.
Whole-cloth
quilt: A quilt that is made from one large piece of
fabric. The design is in the quilting.
WIP:
Works In
Progress
WOF:
Width Of
Fabric (from selvage
to selvage)
WOW:
White On
White
Wrong
side: The back or bottom side of the fabric. The side
opposite that has the print on it.
Y-seams:
Another term for set-in seams.
Yardage:
The amount of fabric measured in yards.
Yo-Yo:
gathered circles of fabric.
Zigzag
stitch: A side-to-side machine stitch that is used to
cover the raw edge of appliqué pieces.
|