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How to quilt my first donation quilt?

How to quilt my first donation quilt?

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Old 09-05-2011, 05:24 PM
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I am ready to pin and quilt but I am not sure how I should quilt this kids quilt. The directions for the donation is to machine quilt tightly because it will go through lots of washings. When finished I will be sending it to Oregon. This is one of the kits that I picked up at the quilt show in Sisters Oregon. I have only done sid and stipple. I do not have a long arm, I am using my Juki. Thank you for any help given.

first donation quilt
[ATTACH=CONFIG]252214[/ATTACH]
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Old 09-05-2011, 05:34 PM
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I don't know but the quilt is really cute.
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Old 09-05-2011, 05:59 PM
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What a cute quilt! I am going to tell you how I would quilt it, though I am
not an expert at this, having only been quilting 2 years, and mainly using SID.

First, I would SID. Then I would stitch from one side to the other....half way through your large focus fabric. Then I would do the same thing lengthwise.
Then I would stitch in the middle of your border, dividing it in half, like another frame. I'd use blue painter's tape as a guide line.

I have never done stipple, and barely know what that is. Maybe that is the way to go...but I can do straight lines. I will be reading what others suggest, hoping to learn more, as I always do from this site.
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Old 09-05-2011, 06:33 PM
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What Dina said would work fine.

You can also cross hatch - draw a diagonal line from corner to corner both directions then using those lines as a guide sew parallel lines about 3" away from the first ones. That makes diamond shapes in the quilting which looks cool.

I've made a few quilts for Quilts for Kids and I've done some as Dina said and some using the cross hatch.

Really cute quilt. I know some child will love it.
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Old 09-05-2011, 07:24 PM
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Thank you for the help. I'll sleep on it and keep looking at it. I might try the cross hatch and do something different in the boarder. Thank you again.
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Old 09-05-2011, 08:32 PM
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Great idea! Wonder if there's skinny blue tape to cross hatch??
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Old 09-05-2011, 08:58 PM
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Originally Posted by JanTx
What Dina said would work fine.

You can also cross hatch - draw a diagonal line from corner to corner both directions then using those lines as a guide sew parallel lines about 3" away from the first ones. That makes diamond shapes in the quilting which looks cool.

I've made a few quilts for Quilts for Kids and I've done some as Dina said and some using the cross hatch.

Really cute quilt. I know some child will love it.
After I draw my first line... is there something you use to guide your sewing of parallel lines? Blue painters tape would work (I think) if I wanted 1 inch lines and wanted to take it off after every two lines sewn.
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Old 09-05-2011, 09:22 PM
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I have a little gadget called a "quilting guide". It fits through a hole in the back of the thingy that holds the foot and is good up to 3". Got it at Amazon.com - it showed up as a "you might also like this" selection. But ... I'm wondering if you could tape on anything - a craft stick or anything that gave you the right size. I have a friend that marks all the lines with chalk - using 3 yd sticks taped together. Another holds a small clear ruler next to her foot as she sews.
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Old 09-05-2011, 09:29 PM
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I have done stipple on my donation quilts, SID is good too. Do what. Is easier and fun for you. The kids will love it. If you Sid just across all rows one direction it will be plenty of quilting and hold up in washing cause your sashing appears thin, smaller than 3inches.
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Old 09-05-2011, 09:57 PM
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I would do as trif says or maybe a small zigzag across the seams. Do whatever is fun for you. :)
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