Saturday, July 23, 2011

Stop, Drop and Roll Quilt Along, part 8.3

Welcome to week 8 of the Stop, Drop and Roll Quilt Along! I am hosting this for the Old Red Barn Co. Flickr group.

Week 1: We made our blocks.
Week 2: We assembled our quilt tops.
Week 3: We basted our quilts.
Week 4: We practiced some straight line quilting patterns.
Week 5: We practiced some C curve quilting patterns.
Week 6: We practiced some loopy quilting patterns.
Week 7: We practiced some S curve quilting patterns.

This week, all of the free-motion quilting patterns are based on a swirl.

The machine:
I used my Janome 6600 for this video. I used the darning foot on the machine and I dropped my feed dogs.

The thread:
For the top thread, I used Tutti from WonderFil, color TU31 Evergreen.
For the bobbin thread, I used DecoBob. by WonderFil, color DB501 Evergreen.

The video:
Today's free-motion quilting pattern is a spiral feather design.

Grab some scrap fabric sandwiches and practice this design:



The finished pattern:


The hints:
  • When I retrace, I don't try to retrace my lines exactly. I like the whimsical look of crossed lines.
  • When I need to stop the machine, I stop in a corner or where two patterns overlap. If I stop in the middle of a design, the stop/start will leave a visible jog.
  • Even though my first machine quilting teacher told me to "quilt fast and don't stop," I quilt rather slowly. I set my machine to the speed I want to quilt, and then put my pedal to the floor. This helps keep my stitches a consistent length.
  • I stop frequently while quilting. This keeps me from getting a sore neck, allows me to reposition my hands, and gives me time to figure out where to place the next design.
Check back tomorrow for the final swirl design!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I love this design so much I want use this swirly/feathery motif in my current quilting project. I did have a question for you...perhaps you can lend some perspective. My border is a braided border and goes clockwise on the quilt. The way the design would go on the quilt based on how I do that type of design and not having the bulk of the quilt rolled up in the throat of my domestic machine would be counterclockwise. Since the braid has a direction, would a counterclockwise design look stupid?

I love your tutorials! I look forward to the next installment!

Natasha
scraps-a-plenty.blogspot.com