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