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I'm working on a project and need some advice. My goal is to find the
cheapest and easiest way to "laminate" two sheets of fabric together with a sheet of netting sandwhiched in the middle. Still with me? For example.. I'll put a yard of ripstop nylon fabric on the table. Then I'll lay a same size piece of netting down - similar to this but made of small wire.. http://www.usnetting.com/HTML/all-purpose.html Finally I'll put a second yard of ripstop nylon down. Then I want to glue or heat seal all three layers together. I can use any type of fabric but I'd like the finished product ( all three layers fused together) to be somewhat water resistant. Also the fusing method should be easy to do without an expensive machine. Think epoxy cement or home clothes iron. The best I can come up with on my own is to use : Heat Sealable Oxford 200 Denier, 6.5oz/sq yd. This fabric has a special coating that makes it possible to be heat-sealed, coated side to coated side, using a household iron. Perfect for dry bags, spray skirts and all water sports for which you need a waterproof bag. Width: 58" Colors: Nickel Gray, Yellow, Royal, Red, Fl. Orange, Black $13.25/yd The netting I'll be using will be thin and will form roughly 1inch by 1inch squares. It should be tough enough to withstand heat or epoxy. Anybody have any other ideas? If I used glue I'd be able to use cheaper fabric. Jay .. |
#3
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On Dec 11, 3:23 pm, wrote:
I'm working on a project and need some advice. My goal is to find the cheapest and easiest way to "laminate" two sheets of fabric together with a sheet of netting sandwhiched in the middle. http://www.dritz.com/brands/showcase...ITEM_NUM=11079 won't work with nylon - the nylon will melt before the fusible material will. spray adhesive - the grade they use for vinyl tops - should do it, and will give you more latitude in the fabric you can use. 3M 8090 is the absolute shizz, but it's spendy. Almost any brand or grade of spray adhesive, applied to BOTH surfaces should work. |
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