Friday, February 14, 2014

Pause after battle


taming the bedquilt
Quilting this monster bedquilt was like doing battle: fierce fighting in the middle and a few skirmishes elsewhere.

I'd walking-footed along both sides of major seams and fmq'd in the ditch within each nine-patch triangular block. As Cindy Needham says, stitch E-S-S (every stinking seam).
laid out on my bed for inspection
I've learned . . .
  • the open toe walking foot lets me see enough for straighter and truer stitches;
  • using the fmq foot is like driving a sports car instead of a moving van; and
  • when restarting, take a stitch in place and relax the finger hold so that the first stitch is not tugged awry. 
wool batting puffs up each triangle
Quilting is on pause as I contemplate motifs: may leave the printed triangles as is, and add feathers and swirls in the larger solid areas. 

2 comments:

  1. The comment in your last bullet point is similar to the "needle up" concept that I use and teach. Get everything smoothed and stabilized, then "needle up" to relax the thread and avoid the jerk of the thread and fabric when you resume stitching.

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    Replies
    1. Ah! I forget and have to re-learn. Doing the two steps back dance.

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