November 19, 2012

Crepeline

Crepeline is a super, super fine silk that is used by conservators to protect and stabilize worn textiles.  I buy both the natural and the brown.  You can see that, while they change the color of my hand a bit, they are still incredibly sheer.  The words "gossamer" and "fairy wings" come to mind.


True conservators, which I am not, or people who are good at fabric dying, which I am not, can dye their crepeline to match the fabric being covered.  I experiment with the dark or light, and choose the one that alters the look of the original fabric the least.

I just bought a new yard of brown from Talas, a conservation supply store.  It is far from inexpensive.  I think it is totally worth the cost, because it is virtually invisible when applied.  This is the second yard of brown I have bought in a couple of decades of repairing quilts, and I'm on my second yard of the natural.  A little goes a long way, in other words.  Thankfully.  Most people send quilts to me for restoration, i.e. patching, and not stabilizing and conservation.

It's a good idea to prewash the crepeline, to remove the sizing and any extra dye.  I've heard it recommended, and totally agree, that it's best to fold the fabric up and baste it before wetting it.  Otherwise, it turns into a lump of very limp fabric, stuck to itself by the water, and is easily pulled off-grain while trying to flatten it out.

Here's my little packet of silk soaking in the sink.

And now, on to the process of stitching it onto a quilt.  This quilt is a marvelous collection of early-mid and mid 19th century fabrics.  It's owned by a collector who understands the historical value of these fabrics and chose to cover them with crepeline rather than patching over them.

Here's one of the blocks that needed help.

Here's how it looks with the crepeline pinned over the worn triangles.  I cut the crepeline very large, and cut to size as I stitch.  Silk in general, and especially a gossamer silk like this one, is notorious for scuttling away from the scissor blades, almost impossible to cut straight.  This is even more of an issue in applying to patchwork, where there are pretty much always going to be some bias edges.  So I give myself plenty of lee-way fabric.

I gently cut the silk back to a generous 1/4" as a go along each side.  That gets turned under and stitched with a running stitch, no less than 1/4" long under the old weak fabric so the stitches don't catch just a few threads and break them.  It's very fussy work, especially on those bias edges.  Be careful and gentle with the fabrics.

I use extra fine 100% cotton machine embroidery thread, a small quilting needle (which is easier than usual to thread, what with the finer embroidery thread!), and "insect pins", the slender pins museums use to mount insects in display boxes.

 Here's the finished look.  


As you can see, the end result doesn't look very different then the original look.  The dark crepeline has the nice side effect of dulling out the white of any batting that's showing through.
  

The other work this quilt required was stitching closed many seams that had come open due to a disintegrating sewing thread.

I pinned the patch back down while the quilt lay flat to avoid introducing any puckers....

....and then I stitched with a ladder stitch, one half of the stitch into the background and one half running through the fold of the appliqué.  These stitches also are sewn larger than what quilters are used to doing, to avoid breaking the fabrics.

Photos of this entire quilt and its wonderful collection of fabrics can be found here.




6 comments:

  1. Came over from Jude's...so hello! This was an interesting post. I have a very old quilt that could use repairs like these, so it was nice to learn something new. Thanks.

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    1. Hello, and welcome to my blog! I visited yours as well. Your photography is wonderful. And I do appreciate your use of pomegranates and those gorgeous red seeds to symbolize how creativity works.

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  2. Hi, Ann. Just came over from Spirit Cloth to enjoy your blog. It's so pleasant to find someone restoring quilts instead of cutting them up. I'm slowly working on several of my grandmothers quilts that my mother used to put in the washing machine. On one of them, I picked out the machine zigzag stitches where she tried to close a hole! I've enjoyed visiting your blog--it's interesting and well-written.
    best from Tunisia,
    nadia

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    1. Hello! Yes, I'm pretty much forever and always against cutting up old quilts. And yes, washing machines are one reason some quilts end up in the state where someone would like to cut them up. ;-) And yes, zig-zag stitching can hold rips together, but is far from the most aesthetically pleasing way to do so.

      Thanks for the positive comments on my blog, and thanks for adding Tunisia to my list of countries. Your work is lovely, and I also appreciate seeing your photos of your Tunisian world. That's one of the best things about the Interwebs, bringing folks around the world so close together - inexpensive armchair travel.

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  3. Hi Ann, I have an old "feed sack" quilt with a couple of small tears and wondered what could be done. Appreciated your article with the how-to. Mary

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    1. Hi, Mary. I'm glad I could help. If you want more specific advice, you can send me a couple of photos of your quilt.

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