I discovered dupioni silk while preparing to make my wedding
dress--I was learning all about different silks trying to decide which one
would give me the look I wanted. I went
with the traditional satin for my dress, but fell absolutely in love with the
texture, the shine, and the body of the dupioni.
So one day over 10 years ago, my casual "window
shopping" in a fabrics store turned into a rather pricy dupioni silk
shopping spree. I decided to make a
quilt out of fabric squares--a simple pattern, but one that could take
advantage of the fabric's distinct directional shine.
Unlike silk satin, the dupioni silk is much more forgiving to work with--no need to worry about pin marks or chafing. So the quilt came together very quickly. Unfortunately, in my quest to make the quilt
extra warm I doubled the batting. As a result,
the quilt turned out to be too thick for the sewing machine I was using then. This blunder left me with only
one way out--hand quilting, which requires significantly more patience than I
will ever have. And thus the quilt has been
left virtually untouched for all these years.
What saved this luscious quilt is my decision is to get a
sewing machine for my mother. While
shopping for her, I could not resist replacing my from-craigslist
never-quite-working-right machine with a new one. My almost one-year-old Janome Magnolia 7318
deserves its own blog post. All I will
say here is that this workhorse was more than capable to easily sew through my
quilt, allowing me to finally finish this project.
Now the quilt spends its time in a place much more
appropriate for it--my parents' living room couch.
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