geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
Bluegum Mic wrote:Sorry Orion. I shouldn't write posts early in the morning(I never make sense that time of day lol). I meant if you had an unstitched footbox and you had the quilt open flat. If there were a diff cut it may sit up a little at the feet. But if a sewn footbox its all good
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
Orion wrote:
If the quilt is differentially cut but the baffles are flat a tightly wrapped quilt will compress the insulation near the baffles but not in between them. I can visualize this but not perfectly. And I can't figure out how much it will matter. It's tempting to just sew the whole thing flat as that's so much easier. But the materials are expensive.
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
Macca81 wrote:I don't know if you have considered going down the Karo step path, but it makes sewing differentially fairly easy, and still being able to sew flat. Use a pattern for where the baffles go on the inner, then just increase the pattern size for the outer. Baffles are all just rectangular pieces and it's the gaps between the baffles on 2 axis' that makes it all work flat or curved.
If you want, I'll try and dig up the pattern i used and take a pic to give an idea on what I'm trying to say :p
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
Bluegum Mic wrote:Well done Orion. I posted the other day but the post didn't work (tapatalk does weird things sometimes). What I did post was I hadn't found the link but Im still looking. I was googling something strange at the time and can't for the life of me remember what it was. Im designing a pack atm that I want to make and it may have been to do with fabrics but??? Sorry.
Did you go with a differential cut in the end? Can't wait to see the pics:smile:
Macca81 wrote:Stuffing individual boxes? No, just one giant box! I went the way I did to avoid having to stuff multiple baffle tubes! Weigh out the total amount of down needed for the entire quilt, then stuff it all at once.
Orion wrote:So Karo step implies open baffles? Both horizontally and vertically?
I'm intrigued, but it's too late to explore the possibility. And it's very unlikely that I will ever do this exercise again.
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
Macca81 wrote:Spot on. The down is free to be shifted to any point you want, while the baffles still prevent it from migrating on its own. It is this vertical and horizontal open sections that allow it to be curved in any direction or laid flat while maintaining loft. The fact that it curves up in all directions from my bum in the hammock was the very reason I went with this design.
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
Orion wrote:I was careless and tore a very small hole in the fabric where it's sewn together near my knees. I knew that was a stress point. A piece of tape covered the hole well enough to keep the down from escaping. I'll have to sew on some sort of fabric reinforcement for that area.
geoskid wrote:nothing but the best of several brands will do :)
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