The holiday festivities are over, and I finally have time to get back to work on the Paris hexagon quilt. Unfortunately, there is nothing exciting or romantic with what I am doing now. I’ve stitched all the blocks into rows, and now I am stitching the rows together. As you probably know, you can only stitch one side of a hexagon at a time, so I’m just plugging along.
However, I thought I would share with you my method for putting quilted fabric photos in wood frames. Marv and I are especially fond of the way fabric photos look in rustic (or barn wood) frames, and I did several of them for the craft fair we had a booth at in December.
The first step is to cut a piece of 1/4 inch foam board to fit the opening in the back of the frame. You don’t want it too tight, it needs to fit easily. Then I center the piece of foam board on the back of the quilted photo and trace around it. I stitch through the layers on this line, and trim the piece about 3/8 inches from the stitching. Then I separate the front and backing and trim the batting to the stitching. This makes for less bulk at the edges.
I like to use microfiber suede cloth as the final layer that will show on the back of the frame, but I also use muslin frequently. I layer the right side of the final layer with the right side of the photo and stitch them together on three sides about 1/8 inch outside the stitching line I did in the last step. Then I trim the corners diagonally, again to reduce the bulk.
The next step is to turn the quilted photo and the back layer right side out and slide the foam board into it, just like a pillow into a case. I slip stitch the open edge closed. Then I insert the stiff photo into the frame, and fasten it with small brads. This process is easy to do and results in a nicely finished back. Here is a photo of the front and back of one of our recent pieces. Let me know if you’d like more explanation or photos of the process.

Framed photo

Back of framed photo















