Why make quilting so hard?
#31
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 835
Look at the quilts you made when you first started then at the quilts you make now and think how much better the next group will be. If you don't start and learn you will never get better. i do love some my first quilts as much as the later ones because of the memories and the lessons.I had never sewn before I was invited to a quilters meeting and saw what they were doing and now 8 years later I do consider myself a quilter. It's the love put in them that counts.
#32
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 16,032
I don't have puckers or cut off points and my seams match. Doing it easy doesn't mean doing it messy. Making easier choices that gave the same results as the hard ones was my ah ha moment.
#33
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 16,032
I usually trim the batting a little before I put on the binding, but leave an inch or so of batting and backing. Then I sew the binding onto the quilt with the usual 1/4 inch seam. Now I put my ruler on the sewing line and measure from there. Usually 3/8 of an inch will fill up a 2 1/2 inch binding. If your binding was three inches, you need more on the outside of your sewing line. By measuring from the sewing line, the binding always has the same width to cover all around the quilt.
#34
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Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: Long Island
Posts: 24,820
i think some people make it hard. and some make it hard so they can look like a quilting genius.
i make it all look so easy. you are only putting 2 layers of fabric under the needle at a time, and even curves are the straight piece under the needle, it's it before and after that is curved. If you look at it that way, it's all easy.
i was quilting before i knew it was quilting. i started at 7 with my grandmas scraps. I was doing yo yos as my grandma taught me and sewing squares together. it was all easy then.
i make it all look so easy. you are only putting 2 layers of fabric under the needle at a time, and even curves are the straight piece under the needle, it's it before and after that is curved. If you look at it that way, it's all easy.
i was quilting before i knew it was quilting. i started at 7 with my grandmas scraps. I was doing yo yos as my grandma taught me and sewing squares together. it was all easy then.
#37
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 1,857
I tell my students that one of the reasons we ALL have UFOs is that the project stopped being fun and became work. One of the easiest ways to keep it fun is to look at it in segments (especially T-Shirts quilts) and as each thing is done (cutting, piecing, layout, etc) congrats yourself on the job done. We all work better when we give ourselves an occasional high five! Precise cutting and stitching come with practice and the only way you get practice is to do the job. If you get frustrated and put it to the side, you will not get better - simple. Too often you see someone get hung up on 'quilt rules'. With the exception of how fabric works or if you are submitting the quilt to be judged, YOU get to make the decisions and the rules. And, sometimes it won't work out and that's ok. It can be a wonderful donation quilt or just think of it as having 'unique design elements'.
#39
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: Cedar Falls, IA
Posts: 918
People vary about what they will accept in their own work. Some are definitely perfectionists and some aren't (I am in the latter category). I look at the first quilt I did, and I just smile. The seams aren't straight, there are a couple of points cut off, and it is very pinky/girly (something I am NOT). However it is now with the baby daughter of one of my son's friends, and they love it. It is used all the time, and it holds up to washing well. I told them to just wear it out because it wasn't very good, they laughed, and they do. Note that I didn't give myself permission to gift that first quilt for at least 8 years, but I realized life is too short for obsessions LOL!
These days I am more careful with cutting and piecing because it makes the assembly job much easier. I give myself a lot of leeway on the quilting because the unevenness of the stitch length isn't really noticeable after washing anyway. My stitches are getting much better just because of practice, and the last quilt I made went together without a single issue. I was never interested in competition quilting, which is a good thing since mine will never get admitted! I do enjoy quilting though.
Pam
ETA link to the little quilt I talked about. Done and loved is better than perfect.
http://www.quiltingboard.com/picture...s-t261656.html
These days I am more careful with cutting and piecing because it makes the assembly job much easier. I give myself a lot of leeway on the quilting because the unevenness of the stitch length isn't really noticeable after washing anyway. My stitches are getting much better just because of practice, and the last quilt I made went together without a single issue. I was never interested in competition quilting, which is a good thing since mine will never get admitted! I do enjoy quilting though.
Pam
ETA link to the little quilt I talked about. Done and loved is better than perfect.
http://www.quiltingboard.com/picture...s-t261656.html
Last edited by CanoePam; 01-05-2017 at 09:15 AM.
#40
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2016
Location: Belen, NM
Posts: 1,353
Onebyone, your post brings up an important aspect of quilting. I quilt to be happy. Therefore, if I make choices along the way that are not mainstream it doesn't matter, because I am happy. If I were quilting to show off, I would never be happy. I use recycled materials because I am comfortable with the cost and feel good about the ecological issues that matter to me. I am never so true to myself as when I am working on a quilt and it feels sooooo good!
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