Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Latest Forum Posts
Collapse
-
I like it, but you also have to make a quilt that you like.
-
It looks like a bright and happy quilt to me!
-
I’m thinking my background fabric is too busy.
-
I love your creative applique. I so enjoy looking at the different ways people adapt their designs
-
Here are the final 2 blocks, November and December....
-
Helen W, Beautiful work! I really like the combination of embroidery panels and pieced blocks. The different size and shaped...
-
Month 3 of my green quilt done. I have never used this method and really liked it....
-
I like your floral fabric!
-
The Autumn and Spring versions are different. HelenW used the Autumn version....
-
Month 3 blocks done for both the Grandmother and Granddaughter quilt. Got started last month using Lynn's instructions on...
-
I believe that the blocks you put in the corner are supposed to be next to the other like it, so one block up. I think...
-
I love blue, so I really like the fabrics that you have chosen. I am going to try arranging my blocks like this for the...
-
I have finished my month 3 blocks. They were fast and easy, but I am still proud of myself for getting these done so early...
-
What is the name of the glue pen Lynn Wilder is demoing with the Laurel Ridge BOM2?...
-
The Parchment Blue is a cream Background with very small blue motifs. Use the sketches of the blocks to see what the fabrics...
-
To the person with EQ7, It took me several days to make my layout in EQ8. I used the Layout Custom and set the size for...
-
Thank you. That makes sense. Glad I asked....
-
Marti, I would use the picture of the block provided in the print out and pick solid colors from
that. The column... - Loading...
- No more items.
Trending Forum Posts
Collapse
-
Home from the Maine Quilts show where my Color my World quilt, rename ‘Home,’ received 3 ribbons. I’m overwhelmed...
-
Well, here it is, the end of 2022, and I finally have finished my 2021 BOM quilt! I apologize that the photo is not centered....
-
Hi There,
I hope you can help me. I know I'm very late in getting to this point but life is finally allowing... -
I'm quite behind on my BOM, but now have all the tall buildings of the outer ring done. I would like to add some house...
-
Hi all.. I am behind in my Color My World and just starting the skyscrapers... Does anyone have the finished size (with...
-
My quilt is finish
-
For anyone paper piecing, is your quarter inch a tiny bit larger? When I’m trimming up the finished building, I line...
-
I decided early to do paper piecing instead of the wax…I’m more comfortable . However, I have a few questions…anyone...
-
Will we have access to the Color My World videos after December 31st? I can't seem to find info on this.
-
I am BRAND NEW to the Quilt Show and fell in love with this pattern. I downloaded all of the instructions. My concern is......
-
I'm a new-ish star member and would like to download the "Color My World" pattern...but I can't find where to...
-
See how I quilted Color My World and the added surprise quilting in Wendy’s border:
https://bbquiltmaker.b... -
Hello - I know someone has solved this problem...I seem to remember a question arising when we put the inner circle together...
-
Cap'n John showed me a new feature--you can see all the photos posted on any particular topic--at once.
Open... -
I know Barbara has reminded us to download all files prior to the end of the year. I finished my downloads today and decided...
-
Please use this topic to share your FINISHED top or quilt here. This will make it easy to see all the great quilts everyone...
-
Sunday Sew and Sews met today. Pam R. came up with a brilliant way to make One World—she used striped fabric!...
- Loading...
- No more items.
Free Motion Quilting. Do you use a frame or not?
Collapse
X
-
-
-
-
Filter
-
Administrative
new posts
-
Free Motion Quilting. Do you use a frame or not?
I'm a little confused about terms and applications I guess. Since I'm in the very beginning stages of learning to machine quilt, I am wondering if FMQ is only on the machine bed and holding your hands like Ricky does when he demos.
Or is it also using a frame and a domestic machine (or I guess a LA) like I see with the frames like New English Quilter, or Flynn Frame?
Which do most of you do? And why?
LynnTags: None
- IP
-
Lynn, I"m in the process of learning to machine quilt as well. I bought a ream of cheap printer paper and every day for the past five days now, I have been filling about 25 sheets with drawings....doodles, stippling, feathers, just whatever. And I don't think about it, but try to do it free form like I would if I were machine quilting. I plan to use my Bernina and do it just free motion like Ricky does, with no hoop or frame. I am quite pleased with how much I see my drawings change for the better every day. I think the secret will be practice, practice and practice some more.
Dana in Olive Branch, MS where the fireworks at the park were beautiful.
- IP
-
Free motion, to me, means that you're not using the feed dogs on the machine, and that there's no pattern drawn on the quilt that you're following. I'm doing it on my treadles, using Sharon Schamber's hoop with the Supreme Slider under the quilt, and also using the Magic Bobbin thingie. YMMV.
Pat in Rockport, TX
- IP
Comment
-
As I learned to machine quilt I tried various ways of quilting. Since I'd been a hand quilter my thinking was way different than it is now, four or five years later.
I tend to do the same kinds of things Ricky and others do, no marking however there are times when I do need to mark and then I use the freezer paper and an empty needle technique I learned at the machine quilting class I took.
Doodle on scraps of paper to your hearts content, that will get you lots of places on your quilts. Make practice quilts with odd blocks or left over decent size pieces of fabric and practice technique on those. The more I move the fabric under the needle the better feel I have for free motion quilting.
Judy with the BSR drop the foot tension (the tension disc on the left side of the machine) and the machine tension down to at least 1.5 and that should help as well.
I don't use a frame, I don't have the space for one and I'm not sure what I would get if I did. My suspicion is that given space and cash I'd probably purchase a longarm and leave my domestic for piecing. I read recently where Libby uses her domestic, sets the settings and then turns the machine so that it's perpendicular to herself as she's quilting.
Be mindful of your posture, if your table is too high get a seat cushion and raise the foot pedal to match the height. Relax your shoulders, for the first 6 to 8 months my shoulders and ears were constant companions making any kind of machine quilting painful!
TeriTeri
Quilting is a Beautiful & Complicated Art!
- IP
Comment
-
When you say you are doodling do you mean with the machine or with a pen/paper?
Yes, I can understand how we have to give our brain something to 'look toward' with the doodle, but that doesn't solve the problem of making your machine go where your brain/hands want it to go. I have the Sharon Schamber hoop and the Supreme slider. I use feed dogs down. I have the darning foot to the 6600 Janome. Don't yet have the new FMQ foot and bobbin, but don't think that matters until I get better control.
One of the issues is that the back of the presser foot where the Accufeed is attached hits the back of the red Schamber hoop because it's low. I guess maybe this is another instance of practice, practice. I still find I have difficulty getting the fabric to move exactly where I want it to go.
This is another lesson in patience!
Thanks for all your comments.
- IP
Comment
-
I began by doing the four basic shapes that Sharon Schamber shows on her beginner's free motion video. I did 3 baby quilts using those shapes, and three more charity quilts, then branched out into feathers and stuff. It really is a matter of repetition and practice. I hope to attain adequacy someday.
Pat in Rockport, TX
- IP
Comment
-
Lynn,
Actually the advice I have seen more than one longarm quilter give (and domestic quilters that are good at free motion) is that by practicing with pen/pencil and paper that it does train ur hand eye coordination and that skill transfers to the actual quilting process. I think that beyond that what I struggle with is getting the smooth speed down (don't have a BSR here or the ability to have one on my machine). I have to remember to relax, breath and not try to run like a jack rabbit!
Carla
- IP
Comment
-
Judy, I have a Bernina 150 which is eleven years old, so I don't have a BSR. I have told myself for the past several years that I cannot machine quilt, and I have lots of reasons for it in my mind :roll: , and since I won't be getting a new machine for a while, I didn't want to wait any longer and just keep adding excuses to my list. :roll:
At retreat, Ricky did demonstrations and talked about it with such ease....of course one of the attributes of a great teacher is that they make you feel like you can certainly do it too. I thought about it a lot after I got home, and so last week I decided to work on it every day for a month and see if I improved. So this first week, I only drew designs on paper (25 pages a day), and then last night I put my first quilting on fabric. It felt very different, especially in being able to move my hands like my mind was wanting to. I know that doesn't make a lot of sense, but there really was a huge difference after only one week. For the first time, I feel like I can learn to do this. I know there's a lot of different ways to go about it, and I think each person has to find what's comfortable and then do it over and over and over....
And like Teri said, keep those shoulders down....I have a sticky on the front of my machine that says "Breathe" and "Keep Shoulders Down".
Dana in Olive Branch, MS
- IP
Comment
-
I started to play with free motion quilting 1 year ago after I got a new sewing machine.....my old 22 year old Husqvarna didnt like free motion at all :wink:
I did some practice with pencil on paper and found it very usefull, mostly because you will sew yourself into a corner no matter what pattern you are quilting. So by doing the pattern on paper I could make a plan on how to tacle that problem, or any problem, before I went on to do the free motion on my quilts.
BUT, I really do think that anyone can do the free motion if they dare to...you just have to make yourself do it. The first thing I quilted by machine was a single bedspread...I didnt like it at all so I unsew it all before starting all over again :cry: :shock: :lol:
AND, remember when you are quilting free motion you will not be able to make it look like mine does..or anyone elses eighter, its like handwriting, you will make it with your own signature.
So just go head and play, I promise you its real fun!!!! :lol:
- IP
Comment
-
When I started free motion on my bernina I made some practice sandwiches with muslin and batting, about 20-25". and I quilted the heck out of them. I would practice different backgrounds, and write messages, and draw designs and stitch on them. It took alot of practice for me before I felt comfortable actually doing a quilt. (I do not have a BSR). Now when I want to try a new design I draw it out on paper or a dry erase board and practice til I feel comfortable. It's like if I can draw it, I can sew it-- trains the brain or something.
- IP
Comment
-
What Teri, Dana and others are talking about is muscle memory. Moving your hand over the paper for practice is great. When you sit down(or stand) at your machine, your muscles will remember how they moved.
I can do free motion on the LA but not on my domestic. I think I'm going to learn so that I can quilt on both machines without having to take anything off in order to do my own stuff.
eileenkny
from the beautiful Hudson Valley of NY
Gammill Classic Plus w/IQ
- IP
Comment
-
I like it, but you also have to make a quilt that you like.
-
It looks like a bright and happy quilt to me!
-
I’m thinking my background fabric is too busy.
-
I love your creative applique. I so enjoy looking at the different ways people adapt their designs
-
Here are the final 2 blocks, November and December....
-
Helen W, Beautiful work! I really like the combination of embroidery panels and pieced blocks. The different size and shaped...
-
Month 3 of my green quilt done. I have never used this method and really liked it....
-
I like your floral fabric!
-
The Autumn and Spring versions are different. HelenW used the Autumn version....
-
Month 3 blocks done for both the Grandmother and Granddaughter quilt. Got started last month using Lynn's instructions on...
-
I believe that the blocks you put in the corner are supposed to be next to the other like it, so one block up. I think...
-
I love blue, so I really like the fabrics that you have chosen. I am going to try arranging my blocks like this for the...
-
I have finished my month 3 blocks. They were fast and easy, but I am still proud of myself for getting these done so early...
- Loading...
- No more items.
What's Going On
Collapse
There are currently 5127 users online. 406 members and 4721 guests.
Most users ever online was 20,162 at 02:06 PM on 02-20-2024.
Forum Stats
Collapse
Topics: 8,301
Posts: 156,008
Members: 27148
Active Members: 1,682
Welcome to our newest member, Peggee Frost-Pefro826.
Latest Topics
Collapse
Trending
Collapse
There are no results that meet this criteria.
Working...
X
Comment