First of all you need to cut your binding strips. I used strips that were 1 7/8" wide but if it's your first time you should probably use 2 1/4" or 2 1/2" strips. You'll have to figure out how many strips you need to go all the way around your quilt with several inches to spare. You can use math, or cut the strips and physically lay them around the edge of the quilt until you have enough. I've done scrappy quilt bindings before using several different fabrics, and used the physically-laying-it-out method for those quilts.
Using the angle lines on your ruler or mat, cut the ends of the strips to a 45 degree angle.
Cut both ends the same way so the strips are very long parallelograms.
To get them ready to piece together, set two strips next to each other.
Then, flip one over on top of the other so the edges line up for sewing. You will sew a 1/4" seam, so they need to line up 1/4" in from the edge. Pin it.
Sew it. Sew all the strips together this way. The diagonal seam here helps spread out the bulk of the seam, since you'll be folding the binding strip over itself a couple times.
Go to the ironing board; press the binding seams. I press to one side, you can press them open if you want but that's more work.
Now press the entire binding strip in half the long way.
Next, find the end of your binding strip. If your parallelogram went the opposite way from mine, cut the corner off so it points the way mine does in this picture. Press the short edge in 1/4".
Fold it in half lengthwise and press this end again.
You can't really see it in this picture, but I'm leaving it anyway. Lay out the binding around the quilt, with the end you just fiddled with in the middle of one of the sides. Check the seams on the binding to make sure there aren't any of them on the corners of the quilt. If there are, adjust your starting position. Pin the binding in place at the starting position and go to your machine.
For the entire perimeter of the quilt, you need to match up the binding and quilt edge and sew 1/4" in from that edge. I leave the extra backing and batting until after the binding is sewn on. To begin, you will be making a little slot to put the end of the binding in when you get back to your starting place. Open up the fold of the binding and sew down just the bottom layer for about 2 inches. Stop sewing and cut your threads.
Now fold the binding back up and start sewing both layers of the binding down, about 1 3/4 inches down from the beginning.
Sew the binding down that first side. I found that it helped if I pulled the binding a bit taut while sewing. When you get to the corner, stop sewing 1/4" from the edge of the quilt top. Backstitch and cut your threads.
Now, turn the quilt 90 degrees, and fold the binding straight up. Hold that diagonal fold with your finger.
And now, fold it down. You might want to pin.
Start sewing the next side at the edge of the fabric; stop 1/4" from the edge and do the corner thing again. Repeat until you've done all 4 corners.
When you get back around to where you started, you need to trim the end of your binding strip so it will fit in the little pocket you made at the beginning. I trimmed the end of my binding strip so about 1/2" of it went into the slot area past the angled part of the beginning of the binding. You have to look closely to see it in this photo.
Now you get to trim the quilt. For the 1 7/8" binding, I needed to cut the backing and batting right up to the edge of my binding. For wider binding strips, leave a little bit of batting beyond the edge. I have had a couple quilts in quilt shows and one of my judging sheets once explained that it's better (in official quilt world, I guess) to have the binding kind of puffy and nicely filled out than to let it be saggy, limp, and empty. In other words, I got bad marks for not having puffy binding, so learn from my mistakes.
I hand sew the binding to the back of the quilt. I use a ladder stitch, it's my main hand sewing stitch that my mom taught me when I was little. You can use whatever stitch you like. I try to sew the binding down far enough to cover the machine stitching that sewed it to the front of the quilt.
When you get to the corner, trim the seam allowance a bit more than you did on the straight edge.
(I'm left handed. If you aren't, this picture may not look quite right. I sew from the left to the right.) I try to fold the binding down on the top side of the corner, and sew it down past where the seam turns the corner.
Then, I fold the next side down and stitch it in place. I usually put a couple stitches in the binding where it folds on top of itself (the mitered corner), and then continue sewing down the next side of the binding.
All done! I hope this make sense. As always, comment or email me at vickivictoria at the google email service if you have questions or comments!

17 comments:
Your quilts are amazing. I look and wonder if I could ever ever do that...... that is beautiful!
Carolyn
One more question, do you are can you! :) do a tutorial on a simple 6.5" quilt top? I"m not even sure how to sew the squares together.... and how to get the outside edges... or have you dont this and I couldnt find it?
Thanks!
is this Carolyn75?
I'd be happy to email you about how to do this... I could do a tutorial too but my sewing schedule is kind of full for the next few weeks.
yes it is me! ;) followed your link from your siggy!
my email:
carolyna75 @ earthlink.net
thank you thank you! these squares have been here forever!
I just stumbled on your blog yesterday and I just wanted to tell you that your tutorial for how to apply quilt binding is the best I have seen yet. I have a quilt ready to be bound,but am scared of the binding. You make it look achievable with your tutorial. Thanks so much for taking the time to write it and post great pics for this "very visual" sewing person. : )
Cheryl
Great tutorial on binding! I am adding a link to this post in one of my posts about making bibs. Thanks for the help!
A friend pointed me to your quilting blog. Too late for the advice on quilting (I've completely fluffed that) but just in time to do the border as per your tutorial. You've explained it beautifully and it will be on my screen as I sew. I'm a beginner and a great believer in getting it wrong before I get it right! Thankyou.
This tutorial was awesome! Directions and pictures together were so simple, I was pretty proud of myself :) It's so easy to have right on my screen next to the machine so I can make sure I'm doing everything right. I'm bookmarking this one, thanks so much!
~Kristin
Thank you so much for this tutorial, it was so well explained, I can finally make the binding on my quilts look great, and not like my three year old did them!!! This really was a great tutorial. Thanks.
You may have already posted this, but I cannot find it; I was wondering if you can post a pattern or steer me in the right direction of a pattern for that amazing quilt that you use in your banner, the watercolour quilt. I just love it, it is so gorgeous. Perhaps you can post it in a follow up comment? I think your website is wonderful, I love your work, you are an inspiration.
Jessie.
I have done a couple of projects now using books that were great for the sewing of the quilt, but I could NEVER get the binding to look right! Now looking at your instructions I know EXACTLY what I was doing wrong. Thank you very much!
Thanks Vicki! I was working between your how to and the heather bailey tute, but I had a hard time visualizing my ends coming together with hers. It seemed like I had something wrong... so I worked a little backwards to do it your way. Much easier! I should have just did it your way in the first place... if only my dh didn't have my laptop I wouldn't have to keep running upstairs to print these out... LOL
I just wanted to say thank you thank you! I had remembered seeing you post the link to this at SM and looked it up yesterday to do my first real quilt binding. It went along beautifully, your directions were perfect and I'm THRILLED with my results. Thank you SO much!
Great tutorial! Very clear and understandable, with the photographs to help! I just am finishing up a binding having used your tutorial. Thanks for taking the time to help out!
I have just found your tutorial and it is the best I have ever seen. Thank you so much, you make binding seem so much less scary than some other sites!
Just discovered your tutorial when I was looking for directions on how to bind a quilt. They are fantastic! I am such a "visual" person that I know this will make my binding task so much easier. Thanks so much!!
Jessie from Nova Scotia, Canada
i have had this tutorial bookmarked for 2 years...it helped me when making my first quilt for my daughter. now i am making one for my son,and am using store-bought binding. can you tell me what i need to do differently when using this kind? i dont know if it gets sewed on different than your directions. thank you!!!please email me at nocurtain@yahoo.com
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