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Old 11-27-2010, 06:56 AM
  #56  
patdesign
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Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: So. Fla now, Va orig
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Originally Posted by fleurdelisquilts.com
I'm stressed just reading this thread. Here's the thing: if it's a beginning quilt, chances are it won't last for 100+ years. That isn't meant to hurt anyone's feelings, it's just how it is. My first quilts were far from perfect in every way. The very first one I made lived through only 15 years of abuse from my boys, not bad in my opinion.

The point is that while you still consider yourself a beginner, you can't expect your quilts to last forever, you're learning. So do the best you can at every stage, but don't stress yourself. When you're a better quilter, you can fret about the things that will mean the difference of your quilt lasting for years after you're gone. I started fretting about that after I won a ribbon in a local show. That event was my way of knowing that I'd improved to the point that I was on par with other quilters. And it meant that my quilts were perhaps valuable enough that I'd want them to last for much longer. That's when I started to worry about where backing seams go, which batting was better, etc.

But this is just my opinion and my way of judging the value of MY work. You need to set your own standards for your quilting.
Sorry you were stressed, however, it helps a beginner just as much as a pro to know the proper way to do things, then it is up to them to decide whether they want to do this or that. If we aren't exposed to the right techniques early on we will just make things harder for ourselves. So hooray for this board and all the willing posters who make it a great learning tool. :-)
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