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Speaking of sending your quilt out to get quilted by a long-arm quilter, can anyone tell me what they pay for this? Is it expensive? Sounds like a nice idea, if the price is right and it sure would save time.
Thanks, Sarah in No. Calif. |
There are sewing machines out there (I have a Janome 6600P) that you can do quilting on that looks just like hand quilting. You use monofilament in the needle and colored thread in the bobbin, tighten the needle tension and voila, the bobbin thread comes to the top of the quilt to make the evenly spaced stitches. Looks beautiful!
Sarah in No. California |
I do both. I don't have a lot of time, so I'm mainly doing machine, but eventually I want to do hand quilting
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I am a hand quilter. I love the calmness of sitting at a quilting frame and sewing. When I am in a hurry and it is a simple project, I will machine quilt - but with a walking foot. I am not quite ready for free-motion quilting.
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I have been hand quilting for over 25 years and love the process and the look.I do machine piece. It is really very personal. I have machine quilted, but just not my cup of tea. But I also would never give a hand quilted piece to someone that would not appreciate it or understand the love that goes into it. I hand quilted for my little nephews and they love their quilts, I don't even care if they get ruined, because by the time they do, they will have loved them to death. Although there mom tries to put them up for them after a time.
I taught my friend to quilt last year and she went directly to machine quilting and has finished 8 quilts to my two, but that is ok, she likes machine quilting and does not like hand work. It took me forever to convince he to sew the binding by hand, but after trying to sew the binding on completely by machine and not liking the look, she has agreed the binding looks so much better when the final stitching is done on the back by hand. |
I know this doesn't sound like fun but doing core exercises not just ab crunches but deep core exercises will strengthen your back as well as your abs. Most women have very weak core muscles. It will help, I just went through physical therapy for lower back issues and that has helped me. It only takes a few minutes a day 2-3 times a week. dsj
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I have done both but I hand quilt more. The fancy machine quilting leaves me in awe but I doubt I could ever do that. It does take a long time to have to quilt something and you have to enjoy it to put in the time.
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I do both hand and machine quilting. I like to relax of an evening in front of the telly with hubby and do some hand stitching.
I also like to machine quilt to get projects finished more quickly. I quilt them myself on my Janome machine - not a long arm - and it is too expensive here to send them out to a long armer. I usually have both hand and machine projects going at the same time. It depends on the project which method I use for piecing and quilting, but I always hand sew my binding at the back of the quilt. I also like to hand embellish with beads, buttons and textured threads. |
I usually hand quilt. However, there are some cases when it is necessary to use the machine. The current Quilts for Kids project mentioned in another thread, for instance, requires the quilts be machine quilted. Those will be washed daily, I understand, and need to stand up to a lot of wear and tear. Having said that, I admit I will be honing my machine quilting skills as quilt them.
My reasoning for hand quilting - it relaxes me. :D |
Originally Posted by Sarah CA
Speaking of sending your quilt out to get quilted by a long-arm quilter, can anyone tell me what they pay for this? Is it expensive? Sounds like a nice idea, if the price is right and it sure would save time.
Thanks, Sarah in No. Calif. |
well i hand quilt and wouldnt have it no other way! give me a needle and thread and i ferget everything and everybody. :)
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That is exactly what I do, It's the life!
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I hand quilt and machine piece. I love being able to sit and watch tv while quilting, but also I tried machine quilting in th ditch and I can not sew straigt enough. I have 2 quilts (1 full size and 1 queen size) my first ones ever just about done quilting even though its been 3 years when I started. One day I will try to sit and at least work on my machine quilt in ditch. This was a great questions with a bunch of good answers for both sides.
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Originally Posted by Loretta
A tip for stitching in the ditch. Practice on SMALL pieces like table runners before you tackle a large quilt. I figure I will have to make about a hundred t toppers before I tackle a full sized quilt. LOL!
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Your santa quilt is really cute. Merry Christmas.
dsj |
I do both machine and hand quilting. I let the quilt tell me which one is needed. Some quilts just require hand quilting to get the look I want them to have. I always have a quilt on the farame and I love to hand quilt in the evenings after work. It is a great way to relax and unwind. Eventually, I have something beautiful to show for my time. Other times, the quilt tells me to machine quilt it and I do. I have found that quilt tops will "talk" to you.
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Oh boy, I sure hope mine talks to me when it is time!
Thanks |
I either hand quilt or machine quilt, depending on the quilt. It is just one or the other, not both.
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I've done both hand and machine quilting on a single quilt, depending on the quilt. It works great but if you enter it into a show to be judged it drives the people crazy because they don't know what catagory to put it in! :lol:
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LOL! I bet it does drive them crazy. One pet peeve of mine is when they put a hand quilted quilt and a machine quilted quilt in the same class. The two are very different and each deserves their own class. Most shows judge them separatly but some don't. I have an idea for one of my quilt tops and I just may have to do both on it. ( I sure hope spelling doesn't count. HA HA)
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Originally Posted by maryb119
LOL! I bet it does drive them crazy. One pet peeve of mine is when they put a hand quilted quilt and a machine quilted quilt in the same class. The two are very different and each deserves their own class. Most shows judge them separatly but some don't. I have an idea for one of my quilt tops and I just may have to do both on it. ( I sure hope spelling doesn't count. HA HA)
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You are so right there. A professional long armer does beautiful work but I like to think we amatures do too. I do everything on my quilts like you do. I have an idea in my head how I want the finished quilt to look and I can't describe it to someone else and have it turn out the way I want it. It is great to be recognized for my effort being just one person who worked on the quilt. I do feel that when a long armer is hired, that her name should be on the quilt as well. Many times, the quilter will not mention her name. My mom is a long armer and I hand quilt. We have some qreat discussions on which is the better method. HA HA!
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I agree, if you have someone else do the quilting then their name should also go on the label so they get the recognition they deserve.
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