thank you so much. I wish I had the confidence you do when I first started. I was in my 30's...and I quit. I am now in my 70's and I've almost finished my second quilt and I'm loving it! Your tips are so well explained.
The hardest part about quilting, in my opinion, is learning to live with mistakes. I feel every quilt I have made has some issue, but when others look at them, they can never find the "mistakes" I see. Just enjoy the process and don't worry about perfection.
I love this comment!! I've been hand quilting for decades. Now at age 65 I'm about to embark on my first machine quilted quilt. (Fortunately it's wall hanging size.). These tips are enormously helpful.
Thanks for the encouragement! I am finally getting to the place where it doesn't have to be perfect. I also do not point out my mistakes to anybody who receives one of my quilts. Blessings to you!
Your tips are very helpful. I have the portable table and try to make open space. I have to focus to on speed. I end up with wide stitches on top and bottom.
Great tips! I especially appreciate “planning out the path”! I’ve saved the extra cut off quilt sandwich from my long armer for practice. Thank you for sharing!!!
Hello! I have been entertaining grandkids and having a fun summer but life is getting busier thru August. I hope you have a joyful week ahead! Thank you for posting your video and for all that you do for the quilting community!
Thanks for these great tips! Also, I so appreciate your video about the Angela Walters FMQ challenge. I’m using this month’s Open Gates large project to practice a different filler in each section. Your tips in this video are the icing on that cake!
Thank you so much for these tips. I'm a beginner quilter and yesterday I started the machine quilting part which I've never done before. I'm having trouble with it but some of your tips have solved the problem. Thanks for giving me my confidence back!
You are so encouraging! Definitely subscribed to your channel. I'm starting my journey making a tiny quilt for my granddaughter's doll. No one will critique it but me but it's helping me learn a lot.
Thank you for the great tips🙂 I quilt on my domestic machine but only straight line quilting with the walking foot. My FMQ skills are not great at all but to be fair I don't practice enough🙃 As always thank you for sharing
This is the first time I’ve watched one of your videos and I found it very encouraging. I taught myself to quilt this past year and I definitely learn something new with every quilt. I tend to be too picky per my oldest daughter and lately I’ve had to let some of my “perfectness” go. She also reminded me that none of them sew so they wouldn’t even know if it had errors or not. So that being said, I have two more to go out of 16 that I’m making for family for Christmas 2022! Two weeks to go and those two tops are already done. I’m looking forward to seeing what you do with the UGLY Christmas material. I haven’t made a Christmas quilt yet.
16! Wow that is incredibly impressive! Your daughter is so right! They won’t notice! But it really is so hard for us! We sit so close to the project and see it all! Thank you so much for watching one of my videos before my quiltmas video premieres!
Thank you! I practice quilting on inherited terrible-looking or poor-quality fabric. Later those practice pieces become the batting for hot pads, totes and such. No one will ever see what lurks behind my beautiful patchwork...or will have a good laugh!
Enjoyed your video. I needed to hear this to continue journey of free motion quilting. I was frustrated and quit but I now feel like I want to try again Thank you
Love this video. Thank-you for sharing your knowledge. I will keep your steps in mind as I’ve been trying to talk myself in quilting my quilts on my machine
This is exactly what I needed to hear today. I am so afraid to start quilting cotton fabric to cotton batting that I will be inserting into a self-binding baby blanket for a gift. I just pulled out some muslin and the batting that I will use on that quilt to practice with. Thanks for the encouragement❣️
Thank you for the tips! I am making my second quilt and it is a Queen size. I was looking for suggestions on how to deal with the size of this quilt while working on it. You answered my questions. Thanks😊
I have done as large as a super king size on my domestic Janome 4800. I divide my quilt into fourths in my mind. I start in the center and quilt the lower right hand quarter first. When that fourth is done I turn my quilt so that the section that was at right top of quilt is now down in right lower quarter. start at center and quilt this quarter of quilt. I continue in ths way till all of the quilt is finished, turning it after each quarter is done. Doing this I never have more than half of the quilt under the arm of my machine and at least half of it is to back of machine. I hope this makes sense and that it helps you to put your quilts through your machine and get them quilted in an easier fashion.
Hi there i luckily just spotted your video with all your most valuable tips. I'm a new old age wannabe quilter. I have just acquired a walking foot. Now for the really daft question - do i drop the feed dogs whilst using the walking foot for straight line quilting. I did try this but the fabric did not move so lifted the feed dogs and machine did perfect straight line quilting. Is this correct. I hope you will help. I have subscribed and will keep a look out for your videos. 🌻 Calling from South Africa
Good Morning Fallon, I do the same things as you do. I do have a few more feet you might like for FMQ, I have a stitch in the ditch for that has a thin metal piece that goes down the middle of the foot that works great. It separates those seams pretty good and hides those stitches. I have a hopping foot, I didn’t like it at first but I kept trying it and noticed that when it hops upward, it allows the fabric to relax in its natural position and not bunch up, I like it now, really helpful. I’ve also slowed down while FMQ, my stitches look much nicer and the results are worth it. I do have a question, what type of thread weight do you use? I’ve been using 50 weight. But sometimes, I’m not happy with the way the thread looks on the back of the quilt. Afterwards, ironing helps it look better but I was thinking maybe a thinner thread would look better. Do you have any thoughts on that? One other issue, my machine ties a knot on the back and it leaves a tail for each thread. That drives me crazy and I have to clip each one to remove any tails, not the knots. Does your machine do that too? And how do you handle that? Have a nice relaxing day with your family. Love your videos very much. You are very inspiring. Take care, 🥰 Chris
I have the stitch in the ditch foot for my Bernina and I love love loved it! There are a few feet I would still like to get for my new machine if they have them! I usually use a 50 wt as well. I don't think I have tried using any threads thinner. What don't you like about the way it looks on the back of the quilt? Oh my machine doesn't tie knots. My Bernina did, but I never used the feature. Yes, that would drive me crazy!
Hi Fallon, Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts. The thread on the back of my quilts just looks to thick to me. Once I’ve clipped the tails and I usually wash the quilts give them away and I don’t really pay any attention to them after that.. I’ve given most of my quilts away and now I’m trying to build up some for myself. 🤣😂🤣 I’m bad. Thanks again. Have a good evening, 🥰 Chris
Glad it was helpful! I understand how you feel! It is really hard to think about how much work you put into the top and you don't want to be unhappy with the quilting. But, give it a try! Straight line quilting can be just as beautiful as fancy designs and much easier. Then you can enjoy those beautiful quilts you made!
Great video. Love the video of you sewing. Your chair is high enough that your arms are in the correct position. My chair is too low and I need to sit on a pillow right now until I get a higher chair. I’m doing my first FMQ quilt right now and jump in is right! Another good tip for beginners is not to worry about your stitch length in the beginning - that will come. So don’t start on a quilt that you spent a lot of money and time on or totally in love with. I’m working on a couch blanket and most of the front material came from a yard sale. I’m having so much fun trying all kinds of different designs on different squares. Since I’m not emotional attached to this quilt, I’m not fretting about all the mistakes. I’ll end up giving it to someone who thinks it’s great.
The stitch length tip is so so good! You are so right. And also everyone is going to have a different preference so learning the skill should really be the first focus then figuring out your stitch length preference when comfortable.
Thank you for your very helpful tips. I am a new person to seeing so found this very helpful. I have just put a quilt for my son and daughter in laws new puppy. Sadly I send it by turning it inside out !hence closed edges. Tried quilting sadly it has gone a bit bulky. Think this was a result in the first place because I just used my normal foot. Not knowing best how the others worked. I have put the walking foot on but the damage is done sadly. Any suggestions how best to correct this a bit.. it not to important as only for a dog, but but like it not to bunch up at least any more. I had thought about cutting the sewn edges off then replacing with a border , but I don’t think it will make much difference. Please help hehe. I have learnt my lesson the hard way. Thank you in advance
I have a Singer Featherweight machine, but also a Necchi 525 FA (older machine) but all metal, and also Baby Lock that is older Grace ALine series that they say you definitely can’t use a walking foot with). I basically have acquired these from my mom and mother-in-law. I am a beginner at sewing in general, much less at sewing a quilt. So, one question I have is - do they make walking ferry that can be used with older machines, and is a walking foot necessary? I’ve just been watching some videos about servicing your machine and about quilting, so I will take any tips you have!! 😊
I am not sure about the walking foot for older machines, but I will say that I know a lot of people who quilt on the featherweight and they love it since it is a nice sturdy workhorse of a machine! I say, use what you have, I think you will be pleasantly surprised with how well you do on your machines. Just go slow and take your time!
Get in touch w your sewing machine repair person…not one that sends out but does there own repairs. They can tell you if they can get you those feet for those machines. You may be very surprised what you may find out…..good luck
Hi, Just came across your channel. Good advice. I have a question and hope you can help. I started quilting a queen quilt after basting it and lots of work etc. Put in my free motion quilt foot, new needle etc....Started about in the middle and began. Had my gloves....etc....It looked ok and I was ok pleased and continued for a few minutes. I checked the back of the quilt after a few minutes and saw that it was not turning out good. It was loose, and the stitch did not look good. Don't know how to explain it....not loopy, but just not a good straight stitch. Seemed somewhere in the tension etc. Took off the foot, put back basic one just to sew and it was fine....what the heck....put backon quilt foot and NO it was messing up again....Oh my gosh what could it be. Made sure it was quilting thread etc....continued on sample areas and played and played with tension....top was good, back looked so so bad....UGH.....I am new and not a professional, but have done it before....Not sure what it could be. Seemslike if it was tension, it would look awful with all feet. Any thoughts....I'd appreciate it. Also, can you talk about color thread one side vs the other side when quilting.
It sounds like your tension is off somewhere. Are you free motion quilting? If you are you may just need to get your speed right. Sometimes the needle can’t keep up with how fast you are moving your hands. The crafty Gemini has some great beginner free motion quilting videos on her channel here on RUclips that have helped me a lot with troubleshooting these issues. I like to take a scrap piece of batting and make a sample quilt sandwich to test my stitches on before quilting. Test out different speeds and see what stitches look best. You can use different top and bottom thread colors. I typically use the same just because you often see a tiny speck of the other thread color on the front and back and I prefer they blend together.
Do you quilt all on your sewing machine or do you have a quilting machine also? I got garden gloves at the dollat store 4 when I get the nerve to quilt. I have a little black Singer and don't know if I can quilt on it. Also how do you baste all 3 layers together of a quilt? Thank you you make it sound so easy.I have always quilted by hand, but in the last few years not done any quilting since arthritis had hit my hands. Thanks so much Fallon
How do you finish off your borders? I'm trying straight stitch in rows on the body of the quilt, but don't want the borders included. How would you suggest finishing the borders separately?
I’m new to machine quilting, so my question might sound silky to more experience quilters. I threaded my domestic sewing machine with the regular spool of thread with no problem but when I tried to thread my machine with the quilting thread, I ran into problems. Initially, the bobbin winder was running smoothly, but then it stopped and started making loud noise. I’m using a Juki HZLG220 domestic machine with a horizontal yarn spool inside. What am I doing wrong?
I am trying to quilt a simple twin size patchwork quilt and it seems like it gets caught in front of the machine even though I have it over my shoulder.
Great tips, thanks. But your machine isn’t a domestic machine, it’s an entry level industrial machine with a wider throat than a lot of domestic machines, but I know that most of your tips aren’t using the machine.
thank you so much. I wish I had the confidence you do when I first started. I was in my 30's...and I quit. I am now in my 70's and I've almost finished my second quilt and I'm loving it! Your tips are so well explained.
The hardest part about quilting, in my opinion, is learning to live with mistakes. I feel every quilt I have made has some issue, but when others look at them, they can never find the "mistakes" I see. Just enjoy the process and don't worry about perfection.
I love this comment!! I've been hand quilting for decades. Now at age 65 I'm about to embark on my first machine quilted quilt. (Fortunately it's wall hanging size.). These tips are enormously helpful.
TY for the advice,,mississipp girl here,,lol,,66 years old and just starting to sew
Thank you for watching!
Thanks for the encouragement! I am finally getting to the place where it doesn't have to be perfect. I also do not point out my mistakes to anybody who receives one of my quilts. Blessings to you!
Thank you for this! Your “Just. Do,It,” speech at the end after giving us such specific tips is inspirational!
I agree with you!! I have 3 sizes of folding tables for quilting. I quilt at my dining room table with a small table to my left.
Your tips are very helpful. I have the portable table and try to make open space. I have to focus to on speed. I end up with wide stitches on top and bottom.
Speed is so hard to control! I love sewing fast. I really have to remind myself to slow down.
Great tips! I especially appreciate “planning out the path”! I’ve saved the extra cut off quilt sandwich from my long armer for practice. Thank you for sharing!!!
You're welcome!
Great video. I’m a beginner and this was great information. Thank you!
Hello! I have been entertaining grandkids and having a fun summer but life is getting busier thru August. I hope you have a joyful week ahead! Thank you for posting your video and for all that you do for the quilting community!
Thanks for these great tips! Also, I so appreciate your video about the Angela Walters FMQ challenge. I’m using this month’s Open Gates large project to practice a different filler in each section. Your tips in this video are the icing on that cake!
Great tips. Thanks. Watched you while trying to quilt a twin quilt on my domestic quilt.
I hope the quilting is going well! Those larger quilts can be a lot of work to quilt by machine but the finished quilt is so rewarding!
❤ you are so right just jump in and people really love it
Thank you for this! I'm new at quilting and I seem to be my biggest enemy on all the tips you've shown! I will refer to this often!
Thank you so much for these tips. I'm a beginner quilter and yesterday I started the machine quilting part which I've never done before. I'm having trouble with it but some of your tips have solved the problem. Thanks for giving me my confidence back!
Thanks for those helpful hints, Fallon. Love that blue quilt top too. Xx💜🇦🇺
You are so encouraging! Definitely subscribed to your channel. I'm starting my journey making a tiny quilt for my granddaughter's doll. No one will critique it but me but it's helping me learn a lot.
Thanks! Great tips! I’m going to share your video with out Alaska guild members. Many have been wanting to learn domestic machine quilting.
Glad it was helpful! It has always been a dream of mine to visit Alaska!
Thank you for the great tips🙂 I quilt on my domestic machine but only straight line quilting with the walking foot. My FMQ skills are not great at all but to be fair I don't practice enough🙃 As always thank you for sharing
This is the first time I’ve watched one of your videos and I found it very encouraging. I taught myself to quilt this past year and I definitely learn something new with every quilt. I tend to be too picky per my oldest daughter and lately I’ve had to let some of my “perfectness” go. She also reminded me that none of them sew so they wouldn’t even know if it had errors or not. So that being said, I have two more to go out of 16 that I’m making for family for Christmas 2022! Two weeks to go and those two tops are already done. I’m looking forward to seeing what you do with the UGLY Christmas material. I haven’t made a Christmas quilt yet.
16! Wow that is incredibly impressive! Your daughter is so right! They won’t notice! But it really is so hard for us! We sit so close to the project and see it all!
Thank you so much for watching one of my videos before my quiltmas video premieres!
Thank you for inspiring and encouraging us. I will do MORE. Thank you for sharing this with us.😊🎉❤
I'm loving all your tips mine looks terrible but I myself I keep getting stuck in a corner or oh wait missed this area 😅thank you Girl
Hi thanks for your video and all your tips for quilting.
You’re welcome 😊
Thank you! I practice quilting on inherited terrible-looking or poor-quality fabric. Later those practice pieces become the batting for hot pads, totes and such. No one will ever see what lurks behind my beautiful patchwork...or will have a good laugh!
That's a great way to repurpose fabric and keep practicing your quilting skills!
you don't have a thumbs up? I subscribed to your channel.... I'm 70yrs old been sewing since I was 6yr.old. Never to late to learn something new!🙂
I have a Walmart mas.. and just used some of them fancy sticks and it was really nice
Those stitches add a lot of fun to a quilt!
Thanks for builting my confidence 😊
Always love my Fallon 😊great teaching method❤
Enjoyed your video. I needed to hear this to continue journey of free motion quilting. I was frustrated and quit but I now feel like I want to try again Thank you
Thanks for sharing these great, handy tips! 🤩🤩
You’re welcome!
Very helpful.
Thank you for this helpful information. I haven’t done a lot of my own FMQ, but plan to start and practice, practice, practice! 😊
Thanks alot for your words
Great tips, well presented. Thank you!
Love this video. Thank-you for sharing your knowledge. I will keep your steps in mind as I’ve been trying to talk myself in quilting my quilts on my machine
This is exactly what I needed to hear today. I am so afraid to start quilting cotton fabric to cotton batting that I will be inserting into a self-binding baby blanket for a gift. I just pulled out some muslin and the batting that I will use on that quilt to practice with. Thanks for the encouragement❣️
So smart to practice with some muslin! You can do it!
Thank you. You are an inspiration!😊
You are so welcome!
Thank you for the tips! I am making my second quilt and it is a Queen size. I was looking for suggestions on how to deal with the size of this quilt while working on it. You answered my questions. Thanks😊
I am so glad my tips were helpful!
I have done as large as a super king size on my domestic Janome 4800. I divide my quilt into fourths in my mind. I start in the center and quilt the lower right hand quarter first. When that fourth is done I turn my quilt so that the section that was at right top of quilt is now down in right lower quarter.
start at center and quilt this quarter of quilt. I continue in ths way till all of the quilt is finished, turning it after each quarter is done. Doing this I never have more than half of the quilt under the arm of my machine and at least half of it is to back of machine. I hope this makes sense and that it helps you to put your quilts through your machine and get them quilted in an easier fashion.
Thank you for another great video with tips that I need to hear.
You are so welcome!
Love tips 9 and 10, thankyou
You’re welcome!
Great tips 🤩. Thank you for the video 😊👍💕
You’re welcome 😊
Hi there i luckily just spotted your video with all your most valuable tips. I'm a new old age wannabe quilter. I have just acquired a walking foot. Now for the really daft question - do i drop the feed dogs whilst using the walking foot for straight line quilting. I did try this but the fabric did not move so lifted the feed dogs and machine did perfect straight line quilting. Is this correct. I hope you will help. I have subscribed and will keep a look out for your videos. 🌻 Calling from South Africa
Yes, keep your feed dogs up when you are straight line quilting with the walking foot.
Good Morning Fallon, I do the same things as you do. I do have a few more feet you might like for FMQ, I have a stitch in the ditch for that has a thin metal piece that goes down the middle of the foot that works great. It separates those seams pretty good and hides those stitches. I have a hopping foot, I didn’t like it at first but I kept trying it and noticed that when it hops upward, it allows the fabric to relax in its natural position and not bunch up, I like it now, really helpful. I’ve also slowed down while FMQ, my stitches look much nicer and the results are worth it.
I do have a question, what type of thread weight do you use?
I’ve been using 50 weight. But sometimes, I’m not happy with the way the thread looks on the back of the quilt. Afterwards, ironing helps it look better but I was thinking maybe a thinner thread would look better. Do you have any thoughts on that?
One other issue, my machine ties a knot on the back and it leaves a tail for each thread. That drives me crazy and I have to clip each one to remove any tails, not the knots. Does your machine do that too? And how do you handle that?
Have a nice relaxing day with your family. Love your videos very much. You are very inspiring. Take care, 🥰 Chris
I have the stitch in the ditch foot for my Bernina and I love love loved it! There are a few feet I would still like to get for my new machine if they have them! I usually use a 50 wt as well. I don't think I have tried using any threads thinner. What don't you like about the way it looks on the back of the quilt? Oh my machine doesn't tie knots. My Bernina did, but I never used the feature. Yes, that would drive me crazy!
Hi Fallon, Thank you so much for sharing your thoughts. The thread on the back of my quilts just looks to thick to me. Once I’ve clipped the tails and I usually wash the quilts give them away and I don’t really pay any attention to them after that.. I’ve given most of my quilts away and now I’m trying to build up some for myself. 🤣😂🤣 I’m bad. Thanks again. Have a good evening, 🥰 Chris
All great advice from someone who 8s a self taught free motion quilter .. just do it. It will come better.
Practice definitely helps, and the only way to practice is to just do it.
Well done!
I really enjoyed the content of this video. I have made some tops, but am so afraid that I will ruin them by trying to quilt them.
Glad it was helpful! I understand how you feel! It is really hard to think about how much work you put into the top and you don't want to be unhappy with the quilting. But, give it a try! Straight line quilting can be just as beautiful as fancy designs and much easier. Then you can enjoy those beautiful quilts you made!
Great video. Love the video of you sewing. Your chair is high enough that your arms are in the correct position. My chair is too low and I need to sit on a pillow right now until I get a higher chair. I’m doing my first FMQ quilt right now and jump in is right! Another good tip for beginners is not to worry about your stitch length in the beginning - that will come. So don’t start on a quilt that you spent a lot of money and time on or totally in love with. I’m working on a couch blanket and most of the front material came from a yard sale. I’m having so much fun trying all kinds of different designs on different squares. Since I’m not emotional attached to this quilt, I’m not fretting about all the mistakes. I’ll end up giving it to someone who thinks it’s great.
The stitch length tip is so so good! You are so right. And also everyone is going to have a different preference so learning the skill should really be the first focus then figuring out your stitch length preference when comfortable.
Great tips thanks
Thank you for your very helpful tips. I am a new person to seeing so found this very helpful. I have just put a quilt for my son and daughter in laws new puppy. Sadly I send it by turning it inside out !hence closed edges. Tried quilting sadly it has gone a bit bulky. Think this was a result in the first place because I just used my normal foot. Not knowing best how the others worked. I have put the walking foot on but the damage is done sadly. Any suggestions how best to correct this a bit.. it not to important as only for a dog, but but like it not to bunch up at least any more. I had thought about cutting the sewn edges off then replacing with a border , but I don’t think it will make much difference. Please help hehe. I have learnt my lesson the hard way. Thank you in advance
I have a Singer Featherweight machine, but also a Necchi 525 FA (older machine) but all metal, and also Baby Lock that is older Grace ALine series that they say you definitely can’t use a walking foot with). I basically have acquired these from my mom and mother-in-law. I am a beginner at sewing in general, much less at sewing a quilt. So, one question I have is - do they make walking ferry that can be used with older machines, and is a walking foot necessary? I’ve just been watching some videos about servicing your machine and about quilting, so I will take any tips you have!! 😊
I am not sure about the walking foot for older machines, but I will say that I know a lot of people who quilt on the featherweight and they love it since it is a nice sturdy workhorse of a machine!
I say, use what you have, I think you will be pleasantly surprised with how well you do on your machines. Just go slow and take your time!
Get in touch w your sewing machine repair person…not one that sends out but does there own repairs. They can tell you if they can get you those feet for those machines. You may be very surprised what you may find out…..good luck
Thanks for useful tips!
Thank you!
Great tips thank you.
Hi, Just came across your channel. Good advice. I have a question and hope you can help. I started quilting a queen quilt after basting it and lots of work etc. Put in my free motion quilt foot, new needle etc....Started about in the middle and began. Had my gloves....etc....It looked ok and I was ok pleased and continued for a few minutes. I checked the back of the quilt after a few minutes and saw that it was not turning out good. It was loose, and the stitch did not look good. Don't know how to explain it....not loopy, but just not a good straight stitch. Seemed somewhere in the tension etc. Took off the foot, put back basic one just to sew and it was fine....what the heck....put backon quilt foot and NO it was messing up again....Oh my gosh what could it be. Made sure it was quilting thread etc....continued on sample areas and played and played with tension....top was good, back looked so so bad....UGH.....I am new and not a professional, but have done it before....Not sure what it could be. Seemslike if it was tension, it would look awful with all feet. Any thoughts....I'd appreciate it. Also, can you talk about color thread one side vs the other side when quilting.
It sounds like your tension is off somewhere.
Are you free motion quilting?
If you are you may just need to get your speed right. Sometimes the needle can’t keep up with how fast you are moving your hands.
The crafty Gemini has some great beginner free motion quilting videos on her channel here on RUclips that have helped me a lot with troubleshooting these issues.
I like to take a scrap piece of batting and make a sample quilt sandwich to test my stitches on before quilting. Test out different speeds and see what stitches look best.
You can use different top and bottom thread colors. I typically use the same just because you often see a tiny speck of the other thread color on the front and back and I prefer they blend together.
Do you quilt all on your sewing machine or do you have a quilting machine also? I got garden gloves at the dollat store 4 when I get the nerve to quilt. I have a little black Singer and don't know if I can quilt on it. Also how do you baste all 3 layers together of a quilt? Thank you you make it sound so easy.I have always quilted by hand, but in the last few years not done any quilting since arthritis had hit my hands. Thanks so much Fallon
I do all my quilting on my sewing machine. I don’t have a long arm.
I typically spray baste my quilt.
Can the walking foot go backwards? I am afraid to use mine thinking I will break it. Thank you for sharing.
How do you finish off your borders? I'm trying straight stitch in rows on the body of the quilt, but don't want the borders included. How would you suggest finishing the borders separately?
Thanks!
Thank you so much Jeannie!
I’m new to machine quilting, so my question might sound silky to more experience quilters. I threaded my domestic sewing machine with the regular spool of thread with no problem but when I tried to thread my machine with the quilting thread, I ran into problems. Initially, the bobbin winder was running smoothly, but then it stopped and started making loud noise. I’m using a Juki HZLG220 domestic machine with a horizontal yarn spool inside. What am I doing wrong?
Is the free motion foot the same as an embroidery foot?
I am honestly unsure if they are the same. I dont have a machine with an embroidery option.
Curious what table you have
My two tables pushed together are just cheap Ikea tables! They work really well though.
I have a huge question when I see straight line fabric seams to gather toward the end of the row. What am I doing wrong😢
I am trying to quilt a simple twin size patchwork quilt and it seems like it gets caught in front of the machine even though I have it over my shoulder.
Where does one start seeing. Middle, top, or side?
Martinez Donna Anderson Margaret Allen Cynthia
Great tips, thanks. But your machine isn’t a domestic machine, it’s an entry level industrial machine with a wider throat than a lot of domestic machines, but I know that most of your tips aren’t using the machine.
Thanks for the info!