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I really need some quilting advice from you ladies! >

I really need some quilting advice from you ladies!

I really need some quilting advice from you ladies!

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Old 04-14-2013, 07:19 AM
  #41  
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You are very brave to attempt to quilt with a minky backing. Next time, think curved safety pins versus straight pins. Your arms must be battered up and sore.
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Old 04-14-2013, 07:31 AM
  #42  
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Beautiful quilt, minkee is the problem. I use the thin cotton batting all the time, why not use a muslin behind the batting and then if you want the minkee pillowcase it after wards.
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Old 04-14-2013, 07:33 AM
  #43  
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It will be a beautiful quilt! You are a brave person, I wouldn't even try!
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Old 04-14-2013, 07:41 AM
  #44  
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I can't imagine quilting anything...now...without a walking foot. Years ago I made my son a Spiderman wall hanging and "quilted" it on my DSM with my ordinary sewing foot. The thing was a tucky foldy mess, and, bless his heart, I'm sure he has thrown it away by now. I would have! I was amazed, when I got a walking foot, at what a difference it makes.

Never used minky so can't comment, but from those who have, I'd change that out and use something else, if I were determined to quilt this beautiful quilt myself. And last but certainly not least: replace those straight pins!

Your quilt is absolutely gorgeous! Good luck with it!
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Old 04-14-2013, 08:02 AM
  #45  
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I recently used spray baste with minkee and it worked fine (other than the overspray on everything!). You might want to try that. The quilt is just gorgeous!
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Old 04-14-2013, 08:03 AM
  #46  
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I did a baby quilt with Minkie and had to increase the stitch length. Used a walking foot with gentle curves vertical and horizontal. Came out nice. Spray basted it too.
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Old 04-14-2013, 08:19 AM
  #47  
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Speaking of working with minkee, when spray basting do you find the spray baste doesn't hold on the minkee side?
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Old 04-14-2013, 09:38 AM
  #48  
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It's good you're getting a walking foot. Make sure you get the right one, high shank or low shank. Your quilt is very pretty, best of luck! I just read an article about using tissue paper for slippery fabrics but I don't think it would help since your project is so bulky.
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Old 04-14-2013, 02:43 PM
  #49  
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I don't quilt anything larger then a single bed quilt on my home machine. I would rather quilt by hand if it is larger or take it to someone and have it quilted. also if you can use a spray baste " its much easier then the pinning method. good luck"
Originally Posted by Brazen View Post
I normally send out my larger quilt tops to long-armers, but this time I got overly ambitious.... and now feel really stuck. I've done things the hard way, I think.

This top is 84" x 84". I used 500 straight pins to baste it. (I now REALLY regret that decision). I used a natural cotton batting. The back fabric is that incredibly soft/fuzzy Minky. The end result is REALLY HEAVY and the straight pins poke me constantly.

But anyway, I rolled the two sides in towards the middle, leaving the center strip open and ready to start the quilting sewing. I had my son hold the heavy log behind me, to help me feed it thru the machine. I'm VERY inexperienced at this, as I normally quilt crib size down to placemat size, and I've never used Minky before.

When I tried sewing, it barely feeds through the machine, and my stitches are very tiny and close together. I don't like how it looks and am afraid this isn't going how it's supposed to.

Do you all have advice for me on how to proceed? I'm attaching a photo of it still laying out on the floor..... 500 pins and all. LOL! The picture is a little fuzzy, but you get the idea!

Thank you for any help!
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Old 04-14-2013, 02:48 PM
  #50  
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If you don't have "quilting gloves" get some. They are great for helping you get control of the quilt.
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