I'm so glad my detailed post seems to be helping! I will add that I do dilute the glue to make it "squirtable" from it's own bottle without a special tip but no more than 50/50, usually less (more glue than water). The reason I want to restate this is because I've noticed that some folks do not dilute the glue at all and use dots. This also works but with my impatient wild slinging of glue everywhere I would probably have a hard time quilting through full strength glue dots because they can get very hard. I do have "blobs" but I can quilt through them without problems, probably because my glue is diluted at least a little bit.
I'm working on a quilt right now that is pieced on both front and back. I did not want either side to even THINK about moving on me when I started quilting it. I have a small DSM with a 6.5" throat and hate wrestling with the quilting part. So I was already going to use fusible batting (Foo-si-boo cotton/bamboo that I got on clearance) and thought, hmmm...adding a little Elmer's on top of the fusible would really keep it clamped together.
Yes, I really did use glue AND fusible batting and am quilting it now. Not a flinch. No puckers, no movement whatsoever and it's staying together even through all the wrestling around with my small machine. I did put a heavier-duty needle in first which I don't know if it is making any difference or not but I'm having no problems. I am running over some blobs but again, it feels like going over a thick seam and nothing more. I was really concerned about the piecing of both sides and getting it quilted but so far it's working great! I'm doing straight line criss-cross quilting because SITD would look good on one side and stupid on the other so I did something that would work on both sides.
It will still take some time to get this one done, but...I'm also doing another experiment with this particular quilt that I will report on when I get this out of the dryer after washing it and have the final results. I'll start a new thread when I have the answer to that one so stay tuned! I like to push the envelope and I'm glad that you all can benefit from my experimentation!