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michelleoc 01-26-2015 02:36 PM

Is EQ7 worth it?
 
For those of you that use EQ7, do you find it to be worth the money? Do you use it a lot? Do you use it to design quilts or just for calculating yardage? If it's actually good for designing quilts, that might be right up my alley. Thanks for any information that you could provide.

PaperPrincess 01-26-2015 02:53 PM

Put "Rhonda's Electric Quilt Class" in the search box in the upper right of this screen. There are over 20 lessons. You can look thru them and see what the program can do.
If you do decide to purchase, get it thru the Quilt in a Day site. The price will not be shown until it's in your cart, but it is the lowest one out there.

QuiltnNan 01-26-2015 03:26 PM


Originally Posted by michelleoc (Post 7064972)
For those of you that use EQ7, do you find it to be worth the money? Do you use it a lot? Do you use it to design quilts or just for calculating yardage? If it's actually good for designing quilts, that might be right up my alley. Thanks for any information that you could provide.

i use my EQ5 constantly!!! but i do find that EQ does not estimate yardage all that well... but it overestimates which is better than underestimating. :thumbup:

if you feel the EQ7 price is out of your budget, look for a used EQ5... not an EQ6 because that version has limited lives.

Onebyone 01-26-2015 03:31 PM

I've had EQ since it was on floppy disc and ran on MS Dos. I've kept up the upgrades so never have to buy full price new program. The features I use the most are the block library, changing block sizes, import and trace, and converting to paper piecing. There are many many features I don't use simply because I don't have time. It's an advanced computer program but easy for beginners too.

Grammahunt 01-26-2015 04:12 PM

It was for me. I love it and frequently use my EQ7.

ManiacQuilter2 01-26-2015 04:59 PM

1 Attachment(s)
I have EQ5 and love it but I bought EQ7 on eBay and paid a little over $100. There is such a bigger nicer fabric selection. I am always redesigning patterns and I don't think a day goes by that I am not printing out a design or something. Just design this today for a friend as a surprise. The geese are 1"x2" and I just printed the PP printouts off of EQ7.

Onebyone 01-26-2015 07:12 PM

Most all quilt pattern designers use EQ, especially the patterns for magazine submission.

beaqltr 01-26-2015 07:54 PM

I don't know what the full price is. I purchased one of the older versions and the upgrades are cheaper than buying the current version.

I think it is worth it. I use the block library and a few easy design features.

racerh 01-26-2015 08:57 PM

I love EQ 7and use a lot!! I see quilts and often go home and create it in EQ7. If you are totally insane like me you even use it to create something like this - http://www.quiltingboard.com/picture...ml#post7064941

I use the fabric feature a lot which makes it so nice to see how your quilt will really look whe done.




Originally Posted by michelleoc (Post 7064972)
For those of you that use EQ7, do you find it to be worth the money? Do you use it a lot? Do you use it to design quilts or just for calculating yardage? If it's actually good for designing quilts, that might be right up my alley. Thanks for any information that you could provide.


mom-6 01-26-2015 09:05 PM

I haven't used it as much as I thought I would, but do find it helpful. Part of my not using it as much had to do with not always being where my laptop could connect to wifi in order to revalidate my program at the specified intervals.

AudreyB 01-26-2015 09:22 PM

I use it a lot. I agree it overestimates fabric yardage, but I use it as a starting point. It does a lot of things I don't do, but then so does my phone. I love it for what I use it for.

NJ Quilter 01-27-2015 03:39 AM

I have EQ5. For the amount and purpose that I use v5, I have no need to upgrade. I agree with the suggestion to go through Rhonda's tutes. Will give you good insight into it's abilities and if it might be the right fit for you.

Sandygirl 01-27-2015 04:50 AM

I have EQ6. Never use it. Learning curve is steep, time consuming, etc. I don't aspire to be a designer. Too many patterns are available in the marketplace. How is this for my "opinion"? If you are technical and think like an engineer (detail minded, computer savvy, etc) the go for it! I like the QUILT WIZARD for my easy projects. $30. Owned by Electric Quilt. And I am computer savvy and time challenged.

My 2 cents
sandy

Sewnoma 01-27-2015 06:33 AM

I like it and use it quite a bit, but there are some things I can't quite figure out how to draw in there so I still use graph paper and color pencils too. Probably use EQ7 more than paper though; and even if I start on graph paper I often duplicate my final design into EQ7 as a way of keeping a record of it and also for easy fabric yardage estimates. I let the computer count squares for me. :) It's also fun to just PLAY in, I love drawing up a new block then throwing it into a quilt and twisting it around different ways to see what sort of patterns emerge. Easy to change colors, etc.

It's not easy to learn but oddly enough I think the less computer-oriented you are the easier it is; the difficulty I have with EQ7 is that it doesn't behave the way most standard programs do in a lot of respects, and since I DO use a lot of software on a daily basis (I'm a programmer) I keep expecting EQ7 to do things that it doesn't; or keep expecting it to do them in a certain way that doesn't match what the program actually does. If you don't come with those built-in expectations I think it's easier to learn and use. The tutorials here from Rhonda are fantastic, too.

I almost never buy quilt patterns. I enjoy drawing them up myself. So if I see a quilt I like, I draw it up and figure out the best assembly method myself rather than buy a pattern. I do mostly simple quilts though, so it's really not difficult and I really enjoy that phase of quilt making. I've "designed" about 10X more quilts than I've actually sewn up!

michelleoc 01-27-2015 01:00 PM

thank you everyone! I'm going to go check out the tutorials and then research Quilt Wizard as well!

cindi 01-27-2015 03:10 PM

If you've never had EQ, allow me to give you some words of advice. There are a few different quilt design programs out there. Look at EQ as a college course, not a grade school class. This isn't a hook-it-up-and-it-miraculously-works program, and - like college - the teacher doesn't care whether you do your homework (i.e. learn the program) or not. It's your responsibility to learn it. You paid for for your course (the program), and unless you study (i.e. read the book, take online courses, etc) and do the homework (practice what you learn) you're going to fail the class and hate the teacher (the program). This advice isn't to keep you from buying it. It's absolutely the BEST quilt design program out there! It's just to say that it's up to you to make the program work for you.

I've had EQ for years - and I still don't know it as well as I could - but what I do know I love. And I'm well aware that if I really want to learn all the ins-and-outs, I'm going to have to buckle down and really read and practice from the book that comes with the program. My friend Peggi is an absolute wiz at it, and we got it at the same time. She really dug in and learned the program. By the way, the book that comes with the program is a GREAT learning tool. Oh, and the EQ site has great tips, links to lessons, and a forum to help with questions!

Enjoy the program! You're gonna love it!!


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