Old 07-05-2013, 03:07 PM
  #15  
alisonquilts
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Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Winston-Salem NC
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Originally Posted by happyquiltmom View Post
... I have an extra large table for resting the bulk of the quilt (both on the left and behind the machine) so that there is no drag, and I use Machingers gloves. Harriet Hargraves' book, Heirloom Machine Quilting, is a very helpful resource, as are Diane Gaudynski's books.
Definitely get some Machingers gloves (or similar) - they will make a HUGE difference to how sore your shoulders get! And I second looking at Diane Gaudynski's books.

Originally Posted by nativetexan View Post
using a walking foot is an easy way to make easy curves. just move the quilt to the left then the right as you sew along. have fun!!
And I second nativetexan's point about walking feet - much much easier to work with than leaping straight into free motion quilting, and you can do quite a bit of curvy quilting with a walking foot.

You can definitely make a beautiful quilt with two plain sheets, some thin batting and a bunch of straight lines: simple, clean, elegant. If it were me I would do that, and then (if I liked machine quilting) I'd move on to experimenting on a smaller quilt, where there isn't as much bulk to fight!

Alison

PS And I do all my machine quilting on a Kenmore mechanical domestic machine from the early 1980's - I have done several king size, quite a few queens and countless little 'uns - and I am entirely self taught. You can so do this!!
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