Meandering - It exhausts me!
#41
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: South Central Missouri
Posts: 333
Check this thread out. I've not tried it yet but everyone on the thread that has seems to say it works for them.
http://www.quiltingboard.com/tutoria...g-t177072.html
http://www.quiltingboard.com/tutoria...g-t177072.html
#42
Check this thread out. I've not tried it yet but everyone on the thread that has seems to say it works for them.
http://www.quiltingboard.com/tutoria...g-t177072.html
http://www.quiltingboard.com/tutoria...g-t177072.html
#43
Junior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Clifton NJ
Posts: 129
Hint:
If your machine is setting on a table not in a table- put a rubber wedge type door stop behind it. By tilting the machine slightly your stitching is more visible and also less strenuous on your arms. Also take a break every 20 minutes.
If your machine is setting on a table not in a table- put a rubber wedge type door stop behind it. By tilting the machine slightly your stitching is more visible and also less strenuous on your arms. Also take a break every 20 minutes.
#45
I don't like the curved bumps and the don't cross your lines type of meandering. Paisley or any of that type of rocking back and forth designs seem so much more natural to me. Check out DayStyleDesigns for tons of ideas for quilting designs.
#46
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Indiana
Posts: 450
I have done the method mentioned in that thread. I don't have many problems getting myself stuck anymore. I only did this type of meandering because that is what my son thought the quilt needed and it is for HIS son. I have six quilts waiting to be quilted. Going to do something I enjoy more for the next one!
Then I will do something to "teach" me something new on the next. I try to alternate so that I can still enjoy my hobby while learning new things.
Then I will do something to "teach" me something new on the next. I try to alternate so that I can still enjoy my hobby while learning new things.
#47
Love, love, love it! But yes, a big investment. I debated home improvements vs quilting machine, and decided I'd get a lot more enjoyment out of the quilting machine I find it interesting how my thinking has changed - what seems like an easy design on a home machine (eg, stitch in the ditch) is more complicated on a longarm (starting and stopping all those straight lines? No way). And vice versa - I'm loving pantographs and custom quilting now, designs that were too complex to do on the little machine. But meandering works for both
#48
[I also test drove both the HQ16 and the Tiara (same machine - different badge) and LOVED it and want one!![/QUOTE]
I am getting to like stippling and am a little nervous about making larger quilting look even. I've commented here several times how much I love the HQSweet16 that I've test driven several times. Keep hoping the universe will find a way for me to get one, though I don't know where I'd put it. A nearby longarmer has one - she's a sales rep, so next time I have something to quilt I'm going to go there and use it.
I am getting to like stippling and am a little nervous about making larger quilting look even. I've commented here several times how much I love the HQSweet16 that I've test driven several times. Keep hoping the universe will find a way for me to get one, though I don't know where I'd put it. A nearby longarmer has one - she's a sales rep, so next time I have something to quilt I'm going to go there and use it.
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