Quilts made using vintage machines!
#191
Originally Posted by Muv
Hello Linda - This is how to do it:-
In the top half of a piece of paper write out your word, actual size, making sure that you take one continuous line with as few changes of direction as possible.
Fold the paper in half beneath the writing, so the writing shows on top, and insert a blank piece of paper, half the size of the first piece, between the the two folded halves. It should fit snugly inside.
Now make sure your sewing machine is unthreaded, and sew along the writing. The inner piece of paper will stay in place once you have done the first few blank stitches.
When you have finished you have the writing transferred onto the inner paper as a line of perforations.
Use this second, smaller piece of paper as your pattern. Thread up your machine, pin the paper pattern to your material, and sew along the line of writing. When you have finished the paper comes away fairly easily because it has now been perforated twice.
The advantages of this method is that you do not need to use any fabric marker, and you do not risk transferring any pencil or biro etc. from the paper you first wrote on. Also, the first time you do the blank sewing on the paper you have a practice run before doing the real thing.
I've tried it once on a treadle and it drove me nuts. I've done it twice on a hand machine and it was ideal, because it is so much easier to go extra slow.
In the top half of a piece of paper write out your word, actual size, making sure that you take one continuous line with as few changes of direction as possible.
Fold the paper in half beneath the writing, so the writing shows on top, and insert a blank piece of paper, half the size of the first piece, between the the two folded halves. It should fit snugly inside.
Now make sure your sewing machine is unthreaded, and sew along the writing. The inner piece of paper will stay in place once you have done the first few blank stitches.
When you have finished you have the writing transferred onto the inner paper as a line of perforations.
Use this second, smaller piece of paper as your pattern. Thread up your machine, pin the paper pattern to your material, and sew along the line of writing. When you have finished the paper comes away fairly easily because it has now been perforated twice.
The advantages of this method is that you do not need to use any fabric marker, and you do not risk transferring any pencil or biro etc. from the paper you first wrote on. Also, the first time you do the blank sewing on the paper you have a practice run before doing the real thing.
I've tried it once on a treadle and it drove me nuts. I've done it twice on a hand machine and it was ideal, because it is so much easier to go extra slow.
Thanks for this info. I will give it a try. I love your doll quilt!
#192
Originally Posted by Muv
Hello Linda - This is how to do it:-
In the top half of a piece of paper write out your word, actual size, making sure that you take one continuous line with as few changes of direction as possible.
Fold the paper in half beneath the writing, so the writing shows on top, and insert a blank piece of paper, half the size of the first piece, between the the two folded halves. It should fit snugly inside.
Now make sure your sewing machine is unthreaded, and sew along the writing. The inner piece of paper will stay in place once you have done the first few blank stitches.
When you have finished you have the writing transferred onto the inner paper as a line of perforations.
Use this second, smaller piece of paper as your pattern. Thread up your machine, pin the paper pattern to your material, and sew along the line of writing. When you have finished the paper comes away fairly easily because it has now been perforated twice.
The advantages of this method is that you do not need to use any fabric marker, and you do not risk transferring any pencil or biro etc. from the paper you first wrote on. Also, the first time you do the blank sewing on the paper you have a practice run before doing the real thing.
I've tried it once on a treadle and it drove me nuts. I've done it twice on a hand machine and it was ideal, because it is so much easier to go extra slow.
In the top half of a piece of paper write out your word, actual size, making sure that you take one continuous line with as few changes of direction as possible.
Fold the paper in half beneath the writing, so the writing shows on top, and insert a blank piece of paper, half the size of the first piece, between the the two folded halves. It should fit snugly inside.
Now make sure your sewing machine is unthreaded, and sew along the writing. The inner piece of paper will stay in place once you have done the first few blank stitches.
When you have finished you have the writing transferred onto the inner paper as a line of perforations.
Use this second, smaller piece of paper as your pattern. Thread up your machine, pin the paper pattern to your material, and sew along the line of writing. When you have finished the paper comes away fairly easily because it has now been perforated twice.
The advantages of this method is that you do not need to use any fabric marker, and you do not risk transferring any pencil or biro etc. from the paper you first wrote on. Also, the first time you do the blank sewing on the paper you have a practice run before doing the real thing.
I've tried it once on a treadle and it drove me nuts. I've done it twice on a hand machine and it was ideal, because it is so much easier to go extra slow.
:thumbup: Thanks! :thumbup:
#194
Here is a little girl I made on my 301. A lady on the quilting board made one of these and told us where to get the pattern.
She is a Sunbonnet Sue Door Stop. Her body is a 2L. bottle filled with sand. She will be my christmas present to a secret pal in the qult club.
The pattern doesn't call for her to have a face, but I think if I make another I will make a face and put long hair on her.
She is a Sunbonnet Sue Door Stop. Her body is a 2L. bottle filled with sand. She will be my christmas present to a secret pal in the qult club.
The pattern doesn't call for her to have a face, but I think if I make another I will make a face and put long hair on her.
#195
Super Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Round Rock,Texas
Posts: 6,135
I made this quilt using my Singers 201K treadle and 1957/51 featherweights; I quilted it on a long arm machine. The pattern is "Double Sawtooth Star" 90" x 103". Its made with lots of woven plaids and striped fabrics and Civil war reproduction shirting prints. There is no quick piecing done, the vintage straight stitch machines are wonderful for piecing triangles, no zig zig hole to eat the points. The binding was sewn on with my older Pfaff 1222E, about 1978 vintage. It belongs to my son, he loves his new quilt.
This weekend it won a 3rd place ribbon at The Chisholm Trail quilt show, in Round Rock,Texas. My first ribbon ever!
Sharon W. in Texas
This weekend it won a 3rd place ribbon at The Chisholm Trail quilt show, in Round Rock,Texas. My first ribbon ever!
Sharon W. in Texas
Steve's Manly quilt
[ATTACH=CONFIG]265978[/ATTACH]
1936 Singer 201k treadle
[ATTACH=CONFIG]265992[/ATTACH]
#200
Hello Purplefiend Sharon,
Your quilt is really lovely - many congratulations.
Thanks also for enlightening me...I always wondered why people went on about pieces disappearing down the hole. I've never owned or used a zigzag machine, or any electric machine, unless you count ten terrifying minutes in a needlework class at school in the 1960s. I enjoy living in a technological time warp.
Your quilt is really lovely - many congratulations.
Thanks also for enlightening me...I always wondered why people went on about pieces disappearing down the hole. I've never owned or used a zigzag machine, or any electric machine, unless you count ten terrifying minutes in a needlework class at school in the 1960s. I enjoy living in a technological time warp.
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