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Tuesday, April 22, 2014

LAQ#25 Still Learning and Quilting Encouragement

At our LQS sewingroomtucson.com, folks gather monthly to make quilt tops for charity and then have Longarmers volunteer to do the quilting. What a great way to practice your quilting! You can test out different techniques and designs you've been wanting to try and the customer is always happy.

This is only the 25th item I ever did on my Longarm, and I wanted to be brave and try some fancier quilting. So I made a quilting plan to do separate designs in the blocks and inner and outer borders.


I did a wavy paisley “vine” along the large outside border and half feathers in the inner border.

I had recently watched Pam Clarke’s Designs with Lines DVD, homestitches.com and thought this was a perfect quilt to try special designs in each block. (They would probably have looked better if I had chalked some lines using Pam’s stencil, which I bought later.)

Encouragement:
·         You gotta start somewhere or you’re never gonna get better.
·         Nobody was born a perfect longarm quilter!
·        You WILL get better with practice

  • Keep previous quilting samples so you can see your improvement (don't compare your quilting to others)

Ewww, maybe I shouldn’t show you the back, but I'll share my bobbles; everybody bobbles.



Here are the half feathers I quilted on this charity quilt:

And here are half feathers I did on a top about 40 quilted items later:

Hopefully, they look more consistent and like I have better control of the machine! I do get frustrated with my slow progress, especially when I look at the work of Judi Madsen of www.greenfairyquiltsblog.com or Angela Walters at quiltingismytherapy.com. Man, oh man, do they do aMAZing work!!!  (Oh yeah, don't compare your work to others, pout).  But I have to remember that they've done hundreds of quilts, i.e., tons of practice; and I'm not at 100 yet.  Your quilts will always look better after you wash them and put away the magnifying glass! lol.

You just have to keep trying :)



Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Longarm Quilt 27 Tomato Basil: A problem and a question.

For this quilt, I used a pattern called Streakers by black-cat-creations.com



I love the colors on this and looking back I seem to use orange in a lot of my quilts – who knew?

Problem: towards the bottom of the quilt I ended up with wrinkles in the back L!

a big wrinkle

I basted down the sides & did stitch in the ditch down all the columns on the entire quilt first, then went back and quilted the details. I used my ruler and extended base to do the SID.  During the detail quilting, as I got towards the right border, I noticed I was getting some pleating in the back. I was able to rip out some but part of it was forming between the rows that were already sewn down by SID. Thankfully, this quilt was for me so some of the wrinkles stayed in; but it was really upsetting and I still don’t know what I did wrong.

I think I left the extended base on while I did the detail quilting. I had used it to do the SID and just left it on. Was the extended base too close to the quilt back & pushing the backing into wrinkles?

Normally I quilt my way across and down the quilt. But if I’m using 2 different threads, I’d like to quilt with 1 color all the way down, roll back to the top and quilt with the next color. Does that increase the chance for wrinkles in the back?

Question: When using a Longarm, what order do you quilt your tops?

I did a different quilting design in each wide column and a wavy line in the skinny rows using So Fine thread in Hawk.

quilting designs from the back
curly leaves and half feathers


a wavy leaf  border
I'd like to use this pattern again with a bolder print broken up by the narrow streaks of color. Fun!



Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Longarm Quilt 29: New quilting techniques


This is a cute panel I got from my local quilt store that is now closed. L  See my post on 3/26; that’s where I took my first quilting class.


Besides taking classes at local shops, I have learned so much about quilting from the internet. I often stay up too late on a work night drooling over all the fantastically creative people who are willing to share their ideas. The net is where I first heard about McTavishing and ordered a couple of Karen’s books, designerquilts.com. I practiced a lot on paper, saw this cute panel and decided it would be a great place to try some McTavishing.


A panel is really a great place to test quilting designs on something useful. They’re usually pretty small so it doesn’t take as much time to complete some intricate quilting; and they make a nice finished piece to give as a gift or to decorate your home. This panel is 24x43.





I also tried out micro stippling and pebbles:



 I love the texture the McTavishing added to the background. One more look:

Great texture!



Tuesday, April 1, 2014

LAQ87 Floating Rectangles Quilt – A Modern Quilting Design

When my friend, Susan, asked me to quilt this, I was excited because I’d been reading Angela Walter’s book, "In the Studio With Angela Walters", on quilting modern quilts (quiltingismytherapy.com)]; and had some ideas I wanted to try.


Planning the Quilting
I took an excellent online class from Carla Barrett at featheredfibers.wordpress.com called Tablet Design Class for Quilters and we used a Bamboo tablet to create a quilting line drawing on top of a quilt photo in Photoshop. By the way, I highly recommend her classes.

Since getting my snazzy cell phone, I’ve recently incorporated Carla’s method for sketching the quilting in the Sketchbook Mobile app on my phone. I can then e-mail the plan(s) to my client so we can agree on the quilting design up front.

Here's where I doodled different ideas:
quilting design ideas

Then I settled on 2 different plans; a fancy allover (a lot of modern quilts have allover straight or curvy lines) or a semi custom (different designs in separate areas of the quilt).
allover quilting design
allover

semi-custom quilting design
semi custom

This way Susan could see the difference and decide which she liked the best. It’s easier to spend the extra money for custom quilting when you can compare the two results up front.

We went with the semi-custom, and I’m really glad because it enhances the modern feel of the quilt. I quilted random-sized pebbles in the background:



an oval meander in the rectangles and a straight line just outside the skinny strips to separate and bring them forward:

Details
·         Size - 58x59
·         Thread - Omni black walnut and Omni mahogany; So Fine buffalo in the bobbin
·         Batting- Hobbs black 80/20
·         Backing - same as the background fabric

Strategy
·         Used Omni thread which is thicker than So Fine so the quilting showed a little more.
·         Used So Fine in the bobbin – waaaayy less bobbin changes and the color worked with both top threads.
·         Loaded the quilt so the rectangles ran parallel to the Longarm table. Then I could quilt across the background, change the      thread and quilt inside a row of rectangles, change thread and quilt more background, roll the quilt and repeat.

Thanks to Susan for letting me quilt her cool modern quilt top. ;)  I love this quilt!