Quilted Jacket 3 (and done!)

IT IS DONE. I will now smile beneficently at Harrison Ford and crumble into dust. Actually, more realistically, I’ll spill tea on myself and then weep salty tears, but my QUILTED JACKET IS FINALLY FINISHED.

Thank you everyone for humoring me on this journey – I’ve spent so many hours exclusively on this one piece over the past month and a half, I think I’d pop if I couldn’t talk about it! This is the final stage, quilting + construction.

First, quilting! As I mentioned last time, I was worried about the stress of hand quilting, but I made two significant discoveries: 1., I didn’t like the look of machine quilting on this. Commenter Elizabeth suggested checking if my machine could mimic hand stitching. Brilliant idea; sadly it doesn’t have that functionality, and the one-thread stitching looked kind of wimpy, while the idea of double-stitching all those lines (what if one wobbled!!) also made me want to cry salty tears (this post co-hosted by salty tears). Still, I machine quilted the whole back panel before jumping ship. Luckily I then discovered:

2., I had been hand quilting wrong. Not horribly wrong, but I had been working on my lap instead of a table. It was much more comfortable and sustainable at a table! I usually worked in 15 minutes – 1 hour increments, which was a little challenging because it turns out hand quilting is pretty hypnotic and more-ish (especially with TV on). There is now a little flocked pattern where I gouged our soft pine table with the needle over and over, so maybe throw down a magazine or something first if you’re trying this on an Ikea Ingo.    

Some of my knots are definitely secured better than others. I confidently expect having to re-do some lines as they work themselves loose, but I have plenty of extra thread. Also, only a small proportion of my stitches actually show on the backing, so I guess despite the table scarification I wasn’t sticking the needle through enough. That said, I’m super happy with the final look! It’s wrinkly and uneven but it plays so much more nicely with my imprecise piecing than the machine stitches. And the doubled thread is punchier.

Also, I decided to keep my second belt! Redemption!!

You know people who are like “Oh I’m much more comfortable in stilettos, something something arches”? I’ve never really felt in my bones how that could be true. However, I’m ready to believe now that I’ve melded with my thimble. At first it felt ungainly, but I got to the point where I forgot I was wearing it and only noticed when I went to do something else and felt it clack against the oven handle or a doorknob. I nabbed one at a local swap (well over a year ago now) and it’s just been sitting. Why was I ever hand-sewing without it?!

After the quilting, the jacket was practically done (which is different than actually done, as it turns out). Still, I let the pieces sit for a while as I thought about how to handle the shawl collar/back neck junction, and eventually I decided to figure it out on the day. It’s obvious in retrospect but without a facing the bound center-collar seam shows at the back! I had a belated “duuuh” moment, but in a garment with so much visible binding, I wasn’t going to quibble about a little peek at the neck.

I couldn’t figure out how to bind the shoulder and neck seams so I just shoved them under a yoke-ish facing – it’s machine sewn along the back neck, and hand sewn along the shoulders and bottom hem. I had to clip into the corners of the front panels and clip away the corners of the back panels to fold them down but everything is nice and tucked away inside.

I also had to ease the back shoulder seam to match the shorter front shoulder seam but I’m not sure if this is a pattern feature or a me-adding-a-shawl-collar bug.

I forgot to show you the pockets last time! They have a batting layer and are lined with the background ‘Putty’ cotton. My only serging is inside these pockets – the top edge is sewn to the lining right-sides-together, then flipped and understitched, but the other three sides got the zoop. These are indeed machine-sewn in place, but there’s a non-zero chance I’ll go back and sew them invisibly instead. We’ll seeee.

I made oodles of bias tape that was a little skinny so I bound seams separately as much as possible, which led to a slight sequencing issue at the side seams. Ultimately I sewed each side seam from the underarm to an inch above the pattern notch (so on my version, to the top yellow horizontal stripe), bound everything, and then sewed the rest of the side seam, including sewing over the finished binding. I deeply covet the squared-off binding finish used by Studio Quirk used on her drop-dead-beautiful Tamarack, but I couldn’t work it out (and oddly I can’t leave a comment on her blog to ask, I always get an error message). I sewed one edge of the bias tape by machine, and the other by hand. This involved further television.

I had enough binding fabric left to cut two extra-wide strips to go around the armscye seam allowances – 2” wide, as opposed to the 1.25” wide I used elsewhere, which had no chance of covering all the layers there – and then – I was done?!

A mere 48 or so hours of sewing later. I could have cried salty tears – twist – OF JOY!! This is the only thing I worked on in February and part of March. I think it might have been worth it. I learned a ton and I really enjoyed myself, and the time was going to pass whether or not I used it. I can see errors in the quilting, the piecing, wrinkles in the construction, and why why why did I not use neon green binding, but I really don’t care. I intended this as a warm stylish house jacket but I am definitely going to take this show on the road. Jacket, prepare to get worn everywhere!

Also, I’m not sure if you can tell, but I’m slightly favoring one arm – I got my first vaccine shot! No side effects except for a sore shoulder. I’ll be fully vaccinated in mid-April!

Thanks for reading!

Pattern: Grainline Tamarack

Pattern cost: NA

Size: 12, with added shawl collar

Supplies: .5 yards binding, 2.5 yards backing, 2 yards batting, 5 1/3 yards various cottons, Gather Here, $108.49; thread, Sewfisticated and Michaels, $5.39

Total time: 49 hours

Total cost: $113.88

32 thoughts on “Quilted Jacket 3 (and done!)

  1. It’s brilliant and I absolutely love it!!! Certainly not a house only jacket, it deserves to be seen everywhere and will probably be a conversation starter too.
    I also find that I miss a lot of stitches on the back when hand quilting. I am hoping it’ll get better with practice ánd I should really get a thimble.

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    1. Thank you! 😀 At first I wasn’t even sure what finger to wear it on, but I’m definitely a thimble convert now! So far nobody on Zoom has said anything, I’m waiting. 😉

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      1. I did a handquilting workshop with my guild a couple of weeks ago and there is also a tool that you can put on the fingers of the hand that is below the quilt, aunt becky’s finger saver. It’s not really a thimble but a piece of metal that helps you push up the needle. I’ve been thinking of getting that too because I am most likely to stick the needle in that hand I’ve found.
        Zoom probably does not properly convey the magnificence of your coat. I occassionaly work in my sewing room and my design wall is then my background. No one has commented on any of the various quilts in progress that have been on display so far.

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      2. If you stab your hand as often as I stabbed my table, ouch! Chain mail wouldn’t be an overreaction! How much do you use the thumb on your needle hand? I started developing callus there (which is fine – love a handy callus) but it made me wonder if I was still gripping the needle strangely. Also, I guess Zoom people are just looking at themselves, and missing your quilts…silly Zoom people!

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      3. I think I mostly use my thumb to pull the needle. No callus here yet, but I only hand sew in short increments of time. I just ordered a thimble and aunt Becky, really curious to find out how much of a differece it’ll make!

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    1. Oh thank you so much! 😊 I got lucky that I could find colors in person! Ordering online would have been hopeless.

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  2. You should be proud of your quilted jacket it is a masterpiece. Wear is everywhere proudly! I’ve been sewing & quilting for more years than you are old so believe me you have done a fabulous job. I really enjoy your blog, your beautiful creations & your wonderful quirky sense of humor which to be honest is the reason I began following your sewing exploits. You are a rare light in this over serious world & your sewing skills are fantastic. Thank you for this glimpse into your fun creative life.

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    1. Thanks so much! ❤ I really enjoyed making it – it's not practical but I kind of want to make another, to be honest! 😬

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  3. Work. Of. Art. It definitely needs to be shared with the world! By the way, you’ve outdone…pretty much everybody…
    With Tamarack pattern to hand, I wonder if I could simply sew the neck and front body and lining together (RST vs bias binding) and then finish the ‘cuffs’ and the bottom edges with bias binding. (Wow, run on sentence…)
    But if I were you, I’d revel in the glory that is your technicolor dream coat, and not answer my silly question!

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    1. I think you’d need to reshape the side seam to meet in a gradual curve instead of a sharp point, but otherwise yes, I think that would work beautifully! That would also help reduce bulk at the underarm – it’s a loose style, so it’s not really a problem, but who doesn’t prefer a nice streamlined armpit? ^^ Thank you so much for your kind words! ❤

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  4. Oh my!! You imagined it, and then you made it, and wow!! What a success story 🤩🤩🤩 You are an inspiration. Not surprisingly, it suits you perfectly. Congratulations!

    My mom quilted for years and years, taught many a quilting group, and won prizes for her quilts. I have a much-loved flannel quilt on my living room sofa, originally made by her for a cabin we no longer own. This winter I spent a day under the quilt, repairing broken quilting threads, and noticed that many but not all of the quilting lines went through to the backing fabric. Made me love and appreciate that hand quilting even more.

    One of these days I’ll have to attempt a quilted jacket of my own.

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    1. I completely recommend it! I never would have guessed quilting would be so much fun (I learned to sew just to make garments, but I’m really glad I tried). Plus a jacket has smaller pieces so the quilting lines don’t have to be very long. And thank you! ^^

      A handmade quilt is such a wonderful heirloom – and flannel! That sounds beautifully cozy. And good for you for repairing it, what a great way to add to its life and story! I have a quilt from my mémé with shattered blocks and I only just realized I could patch it.

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  5. Stunning! That was definitely worth all the effort. I’m now wishing I could wear one of the quilts I poured all that time into years ago…

    Now go wear your jacket until it falls to pieces and people start calling you the crazy bull quilt lady. You earned the right!

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    1. Thank you! ^^ I haven’t worn it to work yet (the only place I go during a pandemic) because our playground is essentially a marsh and it’s mud season…I’m looking forward to getting some child feedback (read: criticism) as it’s dry enough outside though, ha!

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  6. Enjoy your fabulous creation – it looks absolutely brilliant! Remember finished is better than perfect and 99.99% of people will never know what went wrong!!

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  7. I like your jacket. You did well. If you can find some quilters in your area. They will teach you some shortcuts and give you tips about quilting jackets or whatever you make. You obviously have talent. Also, check out online Modern Quilt Guild. I think you’ll like that style as it gives you a chance to express your artistic talents. Keep it up!

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    1. Thank you so much for the kind words and the tip! I’d love to find some sort of local sewing group, but I suppose now I should wait until spring when people can gather outside. In the meantime I can explore that link and daydream about cozy quilts, perfect for winter. 🙂

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