The American term for wadding.
See workroom materials.
Alternative Meanings:
- BATTINGOr wadding Describes any material with a degree of resistance, spring, or bounce and thermal qualities used to pad out or thicken. Here are some of its common types and uses in interior furnishings: 1. Polyester wadding: broadly speaking is the easiest to use and the least expensive. It can be bought in rolls of varying widths and weights, used in all modern upholstery over foam. It is, but shouldn’t really be, used over traditional upholstery. 2. Wool wadding: is either woven and brushed or lightly felted and stitched, and is available in varying widths and weights. It’s the most ,luxurious and the most expensive, but the best. We always use wool wadding for the things that matter – when the fabric is costly and the time given to it extensive, for example hand quilting and all patch - working, then the difference in cost is well worth considering. If there is a drawback it is that it isn’t as ‘puffy’ as polyester wadding, and therefore arguably less obvious, it looks less ‘quilted’. 3. Cotton wadding: may be woven and brushed as for bump or interlining, or as supplied as a loose fibre held between paper for upholstery. Quilting Cotton, wool or polyester is used to interline quilts. The depth and spring of the wadding, along with the fibre content determines the warmth of the quilt and the appearance of the design, which is showcased by the stitches: wadding that is too thin makes the stitches look flat and disappear, too thick and the pattern becomes hidden and somewhat confused. Padding Any type of wadding can be used to pad, soften and add depth –e.g. the overlayer of bedheads and stools. For small and odd shapes, it can be laid down in sections,built up in layers or rolled to fill corners and holes if necessary to achieve the required form. To create a soft edge, polyester wadding needs to be feathered out at the edges by tearing the edges in uneven layers. Upholstery For seats and arms and backs - cotton wadding as loose...