Foundation / paper piecing: curves in Judy Niemeyer patterns
#1
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Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 9
Foundation / paper piecing: curves in Judy Niemeyer patterns
Hi,
Pardon the long post - I'm very new. However I have enough fabric to start a quilt store and tons of ideas without the skills to execute any of them! Actually I have done parts of projects - I have finished about half of the blocks for a drunkards path quilt, pieced by hand (and the curves didn't bother me a bit), and I made the pattern/templates for a castle wall block scaled to fit a gorgeous French border print fabric I spent way too much on - sample block (hand done) came out perfectly! But I long to FINISH SOMETHING and that means I need to use the sewing machine.
I have the original fabric kit for Judy Niemeyer's "Hawaiian Star" and was scheduled to attend one of her retreats in Montana (with Judy as the teacher) a few years ago over my birthday. But I got really sick several days before the retreat and couldn't go. Now I just look at the fabric a lot, and also have added more special Hoffman batiks to the kit as I find them. Probably have enough fabric to make the quilt twice.
I know virtually nothing about paper piecing and plan to either find some kind of class OR do a lot of practice before I ever touch that precious kit, but I was surfing the web and saw a statement in a preview of a book called "A Passion for Piecing: Breathtaking Quilts from Easy Paper-Pieced Units" by Claudia Clark Meyers. In the excerpt she says "I'm sorry to have to tell you, but it is virtually impossible to paper piece a curved line." She is telling people they will have to make plastic templates or use freezer paper for the curved part in her patterns.
?????? What ???? Don't almost all of Judy Niemeyer's patterns incorporate curved paper piecing?? If I had gone to the retreat I would have been taught how to deal with the various parts of my quilt pattern, plus I didn't know it was hard. They told me I could do Hawaiian Star, no problem. Now I am freaked out about all the curves!!
What do you all know about foundation/paper piecing curved seams?
Thanks!
Pardon the long post - I'm very new. However I have enough fabric to start a quilt store and tons of ideas without the skills to execute any of them! Actually I have done parts of projects - I have finished about half of the blocks for a drunkards path quilt, pieced by hand (and the curves didn't bother me a bit), and I made the pattern/templates for a castle wall block scaled to fit a gorgeous French border print fabric I spent way too much on - sample block (hand done) came out perfectly! But I long to FINISH SOMETHING and that means I need to use the sewing machine.
I have the original fabric kit for Judy Niemeyer's "Hawaiian Star" and was scheduled to attend one of her retreats in Montana (with Judy as the teacher) a few years ago over my birthday. But I got really sick several days before the retreat and couldn't go. Now I just look at the fabric a lot, and also have added more special Hoffman batiks to the kit as I find them. Probably have enough fabric to make the quilt twice.
I know virtually nothing about paper piecing and plan to either find some kind of class OR do a lot of practice before I ever touch that precious kit, but I was surfing the web and saw a statement in a preview of a book called "A Passion for Piecing: Breathtaking Quilts from Easy Paper-Pieced Units" by Claudia Clark Meyers. In the excerpt she says "I'm sorry to have to tell you, but it is virtually impossible to paper piece a curved line." She is telling people they will have to make plastic templates or use freezer paper for the curved part in her patterns.
?????? What ???? Don't almost all of Judy Niemeyer's patterns incorporate curved paper piecing?? If I had gone to the retreat I would have been taught how to deal with the various parts of my quilt pattern, plus I didn't know it was hard. They told me I could do Hawaiian Star, no problem. Now I am freaked out about all the curves!!
What do you all know about foundation/paper piecing curved seams?
Thanks!
#2
Super Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: S. Texas
Posts: 2,337
My friend has finished 2 Judy N patterns with curved seams. She is an experienced paper piercer and she also took the workshop and still had difficulty with the second one. I suggest you get lots of experience or go to one of her workshops before attempting that pattern.
#3
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 1,812
http://www.jodieandcompany.com/patterns.htm
http://www.paperpanache.com/howto/machcurv.htm
These are 2 good sites to learn curves. I have tried both, and have a long way to go to get it to look like I want it to. I think a workshop with hands-on would definitely benefit you for Judy's patterns. Hope you are able to attend one.
http://www.paperpanache.com/howto/machcurv.htm
These are 2 good sites to learn curves. I have tried both, and have a long way to go to get it to look like I want it to. I think a workshop with hands-on would definitely benefit you for Judy's patterns. Hope you are able to attend one.
#4
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Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 41,538
Welcome from Ontario, Canada. Start with some beginner paper piecing blocks off the web and get a feel for the process with some inexpensive fabric. Once you get a few blocks done, see how they look. Try to find some beginner classes at your local quilt shop too. You can learn most everything off the net nowadays so give that a try too. Judy patterns are, in my opinion for experienced quilters.
#5
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 9
Thanks for advice!!!
http://www.jodieandcompany.com/patterns.htm
http://www.paperpanache.com/howto/machcurv.htm
These are 2 good sites to learn curves. I have tried both, and have a long way to go to get it to look like I want it to. I think a workshop with hands-on would definitely benefit you for Judy's patterns. Hope you are able to attend one.
http://www.paperpanache.com/howto/machcurv.htm
These are 2 good sites to learn curves. I have tried both, and have a long way to go to get it to look like I want it to. I think a workshop with hands-on would definitely benefit you for Judy's patterns. Hope you are able to attend one.
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Illinois
Posts: 9,312
Yes curves are the very hardest part of paper piecing. Do some basic , no curve , piecing before attempting the curvy ones. I prefer Carol Doaks method , and her instructions are very good. I think she had a tutorial on her site, along with some free patterns for you to practice.
#8
I'm working on a JN pattern right now, and it's the first one I've done with curved piecing. I've never done any curved piecing, in fact. However - IT'S NOT HARD!!! You don't actually paper piece the curved seams. Instead you paper piece each side of the curve, take the paper off the piece on the outside of the curve, and sew the two together. I use lots and lots of pins, but some people are able to do the sewing with just one pin at each end (at least I've heard that). I will take some pictures of what I'm doing and post them later (probably tomorrow) if you think that would help.
#9
Be very careful with a JN quilt. Have done a couple and have two in my UFO pile. I WOULD NOT do the curves the way she says unless you are a professional quilter. She has you trim then piece. Take my advice....you can see the piecing in my avatar....piece then trim.
#10
Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 9
Interesting! Haven't looked at video links from NanaCsews2 yet so don't know if others do curves a different way -- I have read through the JN pattern (it's been a while though) and I know she advocates using a glue stick (not sure if that means zero pins) - but of course if you are removing the paper before sewing the curve, you would need pins there. If you get the time to take pics I would love to see, I think it would be helpful! (And with or without classes I will be practicing, need to find some fun learning projects!)
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