Free Motion Quilting, Stitch Problems
#12
Some of your problems look like what I call the swoop factor on curves. There seems to be a natural tendency to swoop on curves. That is to go faster -- I think if I were drawing I would do that to try to keep the curve consistent and smooth. That spells a lot of eyelashes and inconsistent stitch lengths in FMQ. Fight the swoop.
By the way, some of your stitching is quite nice and you are doing very well for such a novice.
Keep up the good work!
By the way, some of your stitching is quite nice and you are doing very well for such a novice.
Keep up the good work!
#14
I think your problem is two-fold. Upper tension may be an issue, but I think the biggest problem is your hand and machine speed.
Looking at the very first photo, the curves on the top are nice and flat and the stitches are of good length and uniform. Now compare the length of the stitches on the curves on the bottom. They are all larger, and not uniform in length.
I think your hand speed is too fast for your machine speed, especially on the curves.
Speed your machine up a bit, slow your hands down a bit. And remember, when you are on the curve you need to slow your hands down even more.
I would fiddle with speed first on practice sandwiches before I change the tension. And try EVERYTHING else first before you even think about changing the bottom tension, and even after that ... try them all again.
Looking at the very first photo, the curves on the top are nice and flat and the stitches are of good length and uniform. Now compare the length of the stitches on the curves on the bottom. They are all larger, and not uniform in length.
I think your hand speed is too fast for your machine speed, especially on the curves.
Speed your machine up a bit, slow your hands down a bit. And remember, when you are on the curve you need to slow your hands down even more.
I would fiddle with speed first on practice sandwiches before I change the tension. And try EVERYTHING else first before you even think about changing the bottom tension, and even after that ... try them all again.
#16
IMHO, I found that if the tension/stitches are ok when stitching a straight line, the tension is ok.
If you start having problems when you do curvy lines it tends to be a speed of machine vs speed of operator problem. Either the speed of the machine is not fast enough for how fast you are moving the fabric, or you have to slow down the movement of the fabric to catch up to the speed of your machine.
This sometimes shows up when you start getting more confident and start moving faster without speeding up the stitch speed.
Keep practising. It gets easier.
If you start having problems when you do curvy lines it tends to be a speed of machine vs speed of operator problem. Either the speed of the machine is not fast enough for how fast you are moving the fabric, or you have to slow down the movement of the fabric to catch up to the speed of your machine.
This sometimes shows up when you start getting more confident and start moving faster without speeding up the stitch speed.
Keep practising. It gets easier.
#17
Thank you for all of the help... I think I finally got it!
It was a combination of a little of this and a little of that. I cleaned the machine (found a lot of fuzz and even thread wrapped around an axle). I also did the bobbin tension test in my hand and the "yo-yo" tension test and tightened it up a bit. I have really sped up the machine, and I think it is consistant with the pace I'm moving the fabric now. I have practiced on the scrap sandwhiches and I think I'm ready to tackle the quilt again!! Thanks again!
It was a combination of a little of this and a little of that. I cleaned the machine (found a lot of fuzz and even thread wrapped around an axle). I also did the bobbin tension test in my hand and the "yo-yo" tension test and tightened it up a bit. I have really sped up the machine, and I think it is consistant with the pace I'm moving the fabric now. I have practiced on the scrap sandwhiches and I think I'm ready to tackle the quilt again!! Thanks again!
#19
Originally Posted by Scissor Queen
You do not have a tension problem! The very first thing people do is start goofing around with the tension and get the machine all out of whack. Look at the length of those stitches!! You're moving the machine way too fast for the speed of the needle. Slow down!!
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
craftybear
Links and Resources
2
10-26-2011 07:16 PM
twinstitches
Main
65
07-18-2010 02:28 PM