Normally I would hesitate to bust apart an antique, but the top was warped & water stained with pen doodles all over the design. And the bottom is just lovely.
Materials:
Antique wood card table (or at least a wooden table base)
rubber mallet
pliers
soap, water & wash rag
measure stick/tape
1"x 2" board OR L-shaped oak/maple trim (if you want it fancy)
pencil/pen
Saw
sand paper
8 clamps (plastic tips, not metal as these will touch your fabric).
Step 2: Using the rubber mallet "gently" hammer off the cardboard top from the underside.
I turned the table on its side & went around the edges until it was free.
Step 4: wash all those years of dust off the upper part of the table.... and while you're at it, you might as well wash the whole thing. Now that's the power of Pine-Sol baby!
Step 6: Cut some 1x2's to match those measurements. I had one board that would work, but the sides ended up being a little short. This will be fine as I just want to hold the fabric, not stretch it. More importantly I don't want to compress the corners & accidentally stretch the fabric.
Step 7: Sand all rough edges.
You can stain the boards, but I'm leaving them for now.
Now clamp the back, lightly pulling the quilt straight.
Clamp each side to make it lay flat with no sagging. Do not pull it tight.
I may be able to wind it around some tubing hung from the underside of the table frame. Setting it on the floor is not an option.
This table folds up and stands on it's own. I think it will still work with the petticoat attached.
It doesn't tip, and I'll comment on how comfortable it is to use.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhaIsCXb1qJIsBHUaxmQdtkR1FtzqyFbkFAMlv-AiaE7T3URcpB0wr5C3i42YSdU1X99vENM2uVaJG1VnlloVHA2ppdL1pS87jaw7DcWXOUJbWT8GfjkDsB_UsjpTk54DG0coVyIM2Z_HU1/s320/Amish+quilt+frame.jpg)
5 comments:
It stands up well on it's own as long as nothing touches it. I've decided to take the petticoat off the table when I'm not working on it.
The quilting goes much faster with the table than it does with the hoop, and it's more comfortable to work on. I can quilt for about 3 hours with the flat table vs. 1 hour with the hoop in my lap.
I highly recommend a quilting frame of some kind if you plan on doing a lot of quilting.
Interesting re-use. I have a card table rather like that. I like it, because it is much lighter than the steel ones, but it is rather wobbly. I suppose the table is not really damaged, it could always have a new piece of cardboard put on it. The top is in pretty bad shape on mine too.
Here are plans for building one of saw horses.
Joe Sladky's Quilt Frame
Your idea is quite ingenious! Do you know how a quilter in the 18th century, colonial america, would quilt a petticoat in a shop, if this were her profession? Would she use a large frame, a smaller one like yours, or something hand held like a hoop?
Carla,
As far as I know 18th c. professional quilters worked on a large open table frame with the petticoat strung on the frame... several women worked on the quilt at once. I've seen some images of smaller hoops, or 18" hoops on a stand-arm, but I'm not sure how common that was.
Look into the Spittalfields (sp?) industry, there should be loads of info about that.
The few images of quilting I've seen from America show a large quilt frame with the quilt laced on.
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