Best sewing machine for quilting
#1
Best sewing machine for quilting
I am thinking I would like to try machine quilting. I don't need anything big and fancy. I am a beginner and have lots of ideas, but just barely enough time to do even the piecing. I have several tops started and none finished. I don't think there is enough time in my lifetime to do by hand all that I want to do. So I am thinking maybe to machine quilt is my solution.
I piece with a Featherweight, which I have been told is not good for machine quilting. True? What would be a pretty good, reasonably priced sewing machine for quilting?
Thanks,
Gloria in Kansas City
I piece with a Featherweight, which I have been told is not good for machine quilting. True? What would be a pretty good, reasonably priced sewing machine for quilting?
Thanks,
Gloria in Kansas City
#2
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Canyon Lake, Ca.
Posts: 188
The new Juki is suppose to be a great machine for FMQ and under $1000.00 but only sews straight stitch. I just purchased an Elna 7700 that only does straight stitch and it works great. I also have a Bernina 230 that is wonderful.
#3
Thank you CaroleLee...but I am hoping I can find something that does an adequate job in the $300 range. Maybe there is no such thing. I don't mind used equipment. I love my little featherweight. I am too much of a beginner and don't spend enough time at it to invest much in my machines right now. I thought perhaps there was something cheap enough that I could give it a try, maybe learn a little and some day when I am retired and have had a chance to find out if I will stick with this, then buy better equipment.
#4
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Outer Space
Posts: 9,319
It's not that the FW isn't good for quilting, it's that it is not easy or enjoyable about the small throat and forcing a quilt through that tiny opening. There is no "best" quilting machine. There is only the better machine for you. Everyone's different. Go test drive machines at your dealer to find which one you like best.
#5
Power Poster
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: East Oklahoma - pining for Massachusetts
Posts: 10,477
I have recently started quilt-as-you-go and have had good results with my Brother SQ9000. Jim bought it for me two years ago and it was just $199.00 at that time. As far as trying to do a whole quilt with a regular machine, I think that would come down to how it was folded or rolled. I wish you luck.
#6
I recently took a workshop with Rita Fishel at Shipshewana, she uses her FW for FMQ; she has a generic low shank darning foot, leaves the feed dogs up, turns the stitch length to "0" , adjusts the top tension by using that little metal button on the top of the machine (sorry don't know it's name), I haven't tried it yet, but it sure was working well on her sample. It was only about 12" square and she says she doesn't use it for anything larger than a baby quilt. I think this is the shop she's from, at least they have some of her patterns. http://www.creationssewclever.com/
#7
Good luck and let us know what you come up with.
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Cadillac, MI
Posts: 6,487
I love my Singer 301 for FMQ. They can be found on ebay fore much less than your limit, though they are going up. Not many under $100 anymore. I've heard a Singer 15 does a good job, too, though my first attempt wasn't successful. Any vintage machine with a vertical bobbin is worth a try (the 201 is horizontal).
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10-07-2012 10:20 AM