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Applique Fabric — You’re Only Limited by Your Imagination

Zone of Truth right here, right now…

I’m not going to do this topic justice. 

Yup.  That’s right.  Because technically, all fabric can be applique fabric.  Any fabric.  Silks.  Satins.  Fleece.  Lace.  Applique is the unifying quilting technique which brings all fabric under the quilting umbrella.  Unlike piecing, where the quilter is strategically positioning lights, mediums, and darks for the best results, the applique quilter is going for effect – what fabric will give the best representation of what I am trying to convey?  So applique is a wide-open field for all fabrics.  The trick is knowing how to handle them and what fusible to use (if you’re machine appliqueing). 

But before we delve into what makes good applique fabric, I’d like to stress four points:

However, also because of the manufacturing processes, Batiks can feel stiff, which makes them difficult to hand applique or use for prepared edge machine applique.  But if you wash them in hot water and allow them to air dry before using, the fabric takes on a silky feel, and makes them ideal for hand or prepared edge machine applique.  Not all batiks need this treatment, but for those particularly stiff ones, a little time in some hot water may allow you to use them as needed.

If you are like me and are an avid pre-washer, there is one time you may want to avoid it and that’s for the background of a hand applique project.  After the applique square or project is complete, then immerse it in water and allow it to dry.  The background fabric will shrink slightly and pull those tiny hand stitches just a bit tighter under the applique fabric, rendering almost invisible. 

This is definitely not my favorite piece of fabric and if I were piecing a quilt, this fabric would be completely overlooked.  But you know what this would be good for?

A bird’s wing.

Looking at fabric this way takes time, experience, and practice.  A good way to practice this would be to look at your own stash and see what objects it could work for. Or Google ugly fabric swatches and pull up those images (yes, this is a thing) and think how those swatches would work for applique.

The Pros and Cons of Applique Fabric

Let’s talk about the good things about applique fabric first. 

Now let’s talk about the not-so-good things about applique fabric.

That’s right.  The pros and the cons are the same.  All of this wonderful fabric that manufacturers make has immense potential, we only need “bits and bobs” of it, and even that ugly-hasn’t-sold-in-years fabric at our LQS has promise.  Which means we can easily overwhelm our stash with fabric to the point we don’t know what we have and what we need.

So what should we do? 

It’s impossible for me – or anyone else – to give you a list of what applique fabric you need.  Most of it depends on what you like to applique.  My applique quilts tend to be flowery (if you can’t grow ‘em, sew ‘em – that’s my motto).  For this reason, I have a rainbow of fabric colors for any type of flower my heart desires, lots of yellows for flower centers, and a seemingly endless array of greens for leaves and stems.  However, if landscapes or seascapes were my applique of choice, I’d have fabric which could pass as wood, stone, or brick texture.  I’d need blues, grays, and blue-greens for water.  Light blues for skies, whites and grays for clouds, and even more greens for grass.

Your favorite applique subject essentially chooses what fabrics you have in your stash. 

It’s also important to remember that items – living, such as flowers, and non-living, such as buildings – aren’t all one solid color.  As light hits the object, the colors change.  The area where light hits directly is lighter than the other areas.  The places furthest from the light source are the darkest.  Flowers higher up on a stem are lighter than those closer to the bottom.  So, let’s put this into perspective.

Let’s say I want to applique a purple coneflower.  From past observations, I know purple coneflowers aren’t colors of solid purple.  Coneflowers have petals with streaks of color and a large center.  I set aside my solid purple fabric and begin to look for purples with splotches or streaks of color in them.

This will work for those petals closest to the front viewing area (those nearest the light source).  Those behind will need to be a bit darker, so I find this:

Now for the center.  Coneflower centers can be brown, green, or pink, with brown being the color center we’re most familiar with.  And the center is kind of fuzzy, not a solid ball, with the brown speckled with flecks of yellow and orange.  The search for a brown fabric should include those browns which are mottled with other colors.

Applique Fabric Tools

I would like to introduce you to a couple of tools which may help you as you choose your fabric.  The first is a template.  Take a piece of paper, mylar, or cardboard and trace the shape you want to find fabric for.  Then cut the shape out, leaving the paper, mylar, or cardboard intact, so you have a negative of the object, like this.

Take the negative and place it on the fabrics being considered.  This negative will help you in your search for the best fabrics for flowers, bricks, stones, etc.

The second tool is this:

A flower catalog.  Since most applique patterns are overwhelmingly floral, a seed, bulb, or flower catalog is very helpful in your flower study.  There are closeups of the petals, centers, and leaves, giving you lots of hints about what colors can be used and how and where they change from light to dark.

As a matter of fact, magazines or Google images are great places to start your fabric search, no matter what you want to applique.  If it’s buildings, an Architectural  Digest would probably be a great help.  And nothing beats going for a drive or a walk with the camera on your phone ready to take pictures of what’s tickling your applique itch. 

Once the applique fabrics are chosen, it’s important that the background fabrics support the applique fabrics well.  Personally, I even like applique fabrics with a small tone-on-tone print – they’re just more interesting than a solid piece of fabric.  What you want to look for is a background fabric that enhances your applique.  Backgrounds can be colors other than white or ecru.  I love to use black as a background fabric (even though it’s hard on the eyes when you sew), but if I do this, I need to make sure the applique fabrics are bright and bold.  Pastels may “washout” with a dark background.  Audition your background fabric just as thoroughly as you do your applique fabric. 

Before I close out this blog, I would like to leave you with a few additional applique tricks I’ve learned from almost forty years of loving and using the  art:

By this I mean, where’s angle the sunshine/lamp shines from?  If it’s on the left side of the image, that side will be lighter than the right side.  And keep the light angle in mind as you work on the right side of the image – that side will be just a shade or two darker than the left.

Right Side of Pink Fabric
Wrong Side of Pink Fabric
Tula Pink Elephant Fabric
Fussy Cutting the Elephant Ears into Flower Petals

In so many ways, this blog is only scratching the surface of what can be used for applique fabrics.  Developing an “eye” for what would work best takes time and practice and…mistakes.  Give yourself time.  Don’t be afraid to consider fabrics you normally wouldn’t give a second glance at.  Think outside the box.  You’ll only be limited by the boundaries of your imagination.

Love and Stitches,

Sherri and Felix

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