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    Old 10-10-2011, 08:00 AM
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    Joy.lynn's Avatar
     
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    I am quilting a quilt with alternate rail fence blocks and squares. The mother asked for sid around the blocks. She would like the rail fence blocks quilted sid. I will pull up the bobbin thread to start, but how is the neatest way to end at the end of each small strip?
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    Old 10-10-2011, 08:29 AM
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    I always pull up my bobbin thread, tie the threads in a knot and bury the knots just as though I was hand quilting the quilt. Having a "self-threading" needle makes this job much easier and faster! I have a long arm and this is how I choose to do it because I don't like the look of going back and forth over my starts and stops.
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    Old 10-10-2011, 09:27 AM
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    I just stitch closer together real tight stitches for the last four or five and they lock so tight the don't come undone. But that is on a long arm. I think you can do the same on a short arm. I start the stitches the same way, real close and tight for about 5 stitches, and it looks uniform even when repeated all over the quilt.
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    Old 10-10-2011, 12:40 PM
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    Originally Posted by katrbee
    I just stitch closer together real tight stitches for the last four or five and they lock so tight the don't come undone. But that is on a long arm. I think you can do the same on a short arm. I start the stitches the same way, real close and tight for about 5 stitches, and it looks uniform even when repeated all over the quilt.
    I do this the same way on my regular sewing machines. Works fine.
    Marilyn
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    Old 10-10-2011, 01:40 PM
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    I try to stop as little as possible to avoid having a bunch of ends to tie off and bury after. I will even go over the same line twice if needed to keep going in a continuous line.
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