Patterns that are sewn into the mattress ticking. For surface softness, many manufacturers quilt the ticking to soft urethane foam of varying thickness.
stitching through layers of fabric and a filling so as to create a design
a material used for making a quilt, or a quilted fabric
in general, the process of making a quilt; in specific, the stitching of patterns into the quilt layers to add strength and decoration to the quilt.
The top few layers of upholstery that are stitched together with a backing material. Simple quilting may consist of backing material, 1/4" of foam, and the fabric cover. Upper-end quality mattress may have multiple layers of foam and various fibers, synthetic and/or natural.
The process of making art using two or more layers of fabric that are then stitched in a pattern through all the layers.
or quilted embossing - Embossing which gives the general impression of a quilt, usually by incorporating pattern features which suggest a network or lattice of continuous or connected stitching lines, and with open areas between the stitch lines that appear to puff up as a quilt often does. Quilting is often combined with spot embossing. Also see overall embossing and micro embossing. Bottom
Patterns that are sewn into the mattress ticking. Quilting does not go through all layers of upholstery/fabric.
Specifically, a needlework process in which layers of a quilt are attached to each other with continuous stitches, either by hand or with a sewing machine. More generally, the term refers to the entire process of making a quilt.
The process of the face fabric, fill and lining going through a quilting machine.
Polyester wadding is sandwiched between two layers of fabric and a quilted pattern is machine stitched through all the layers.
Created when a layer of padding, fiberfill or down is placed between two layers of fabric and held in together by stitching or sealing.
The stitches that hold together the three layers of your quilt.
In general, the process of making a quilt. Specifically, the small running stitches that hold the three layers of a quilt together.
Created by placing a layer of down or some other fill between two layers of fabric. It's all held in place by a consistent, product-wide stitching pattern or other sealing technique.
A fabric construction in which a layer of down or fiberfill is placed between two layers of fabric, and then held in place by stitching or sealing in a regular, consistent, all-over pattern on the goods.
The small, running stitches made through the layers of a quilt -- top, batting and backing -- to form decorative patterns on the surface of the quilt and to hold the layers together.
Quilting is a method of sewing where a needle (usually with a very small eye) and a specially made strong thread is used to sew through all three layers of the quilt: the top, the batting and the backing. A running or straight stitch is used. The quilter typically passes the needle from the quilt top all the way through to the bottom layer and then pushes the needle back up.