Old 10-22-2021, 05:12 AM
  #24  
SuzSLO
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Join Date: Oct 2020
Posts: 706
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Originally Posted by platyhiker View Post
That vinyl practice idea is very clever, Fabric Galore! It's perfect for learning the route of new quilting design. The one thing it doesn't really include is the whole stitch length issue of coordinating your hand speed with the needle/foot pedal speed. For cheap practice that includes stitch length, I learned here on the forum the trick of using paper towels instead of a quilt sandwich. I find the the store brand version of the Bounty quality paper towels (rather than the cheapest and thinnest ones that are much more papery) handle a lot like cloth. I'll often draw out a design on the paper towels and then practice stitching it. (I use my drawing as a general guide line, not really trying to stay exactly on the lines.) I like being able to practice without having fabric and batting go to waste.
Paper towels are a brilliant idea to work on consistent stitch length. I liked the vinyl idea as well, but I think it is of somewhat limited utility.

I am a new FMQer working on my standard throat DSM and taking Hollyanne Knight’s FMQ Academy. We start by doodling each motif (most do that on paper; I use my Notes app on my iPad). Then move to a scrap sandwich to test tension, then to a practice sandwich and finally to a lap size sampler quilt.

2 of the hardest things for me are maneuvering around the space I’m trying to fill and wrestling the bulk of the quilt. I don’t think that the vinyl with pen would help me with either. But everyone learns differently, so it make encourage a breakthrough for some.
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