I recently became aware of a product that is designed to make it safe and easy for a person to use straight pins for basting a quilt instead of thread or safety pins. This method saves time over basting with a needle and thread, and foam-capped pins are far easier to remove as you go than safety pins, which can be a bit fiddly to unclasp.
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| Quilt in progress, pin-basted using my home-made anchors |
These little guys are super useful, and I realized that I had the tools and materials already available in my apartment to create my own version for almost no money. Plus, as an added bonus, this may be the easiest tutorial I ever share! If you do not have the materials to make your own foam anchors,
you can purchase them quite easily here.
Materials:
- dense foam about 1/2" thick (I use the edge-remnant pieces from a set of interlocking foam floor tiles, but there are tons of sources of dense foam in the world!)
- scissors
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| Foam floor tiles that came with extra bits on the sides |
Here's what you do:
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| This foam cuts easily with scissors. Simply snip into bits about 1/4" square, or whatever size you want! |
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| A small amount of foam will make A LOT of little perfect sized pieces |
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| As you pin your quilt layers together, simply slide a piece of foam onto
the end of each pin. The foam grabs the pin nicely and will stay on
there until you remove it as long as your quilt doesn't get too much
rough handling. This method may work best for small to medium sized
quilts. |
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| As you quilt, simply pull the foam piece and pin apart and toss into containers. Much easier than undoing a safety pin! |
And that's all there is to it!