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Tartan 01-15-2013 06:41 AM

Is your sandwich well basted with thread or lots of safety pins? I like 505 spray or Hobbs 80/20 fusible batt to keep the sandwich from getting puckers on the back.
I find it best to stabilize the sandwich with lines of machine stitching in the sashing if possible. I would use my walking foot to stitch down the center sashing line first. I would then stitch the horizontal center line next. I would then stitch the top horizontal line next. After these lines are stitched I would switch to my FMQ foot and start outline quilting the motifs. After they are outline stitched I would use a background FMQ filler like meander.

Delta 01-15-2013 06:51 AM

IF YOU ARE STIPPLING on your regular it would probable be easier to just stipple than try to
go around all the figures. you can stipple up to the caterpillars and not over them if you like.
It is a awesome quilt. nice job.,
Dawn in Waco

HillCountryGal 01-15-2013 06:56 AM

A friend recommended I roll the queen size quilt I was machine quilting. **I just have a regular manual sewing machine. Started in the center and worked my way out. It was well pinned. If I had it to do over again, I'd baste instead of all those darn safety pins. They seemed to forever get in the way. I did stitch-in-the-ditch and cross/diagional.

Love your quilt. Can understand why your daughter is anxious for you to finish.

vivientan 01-15-2013 07:01 AM


Originally Posted by Tartan (Post 5787686)
Is your sandwich well basted with thread or lots of safety pins? I like 505 spray or Hobbs 80/20 fusible batt to keep the sandwich from getting puckers on the back.
I find it best to stabilize the sandwich with lines of machine stitching in the sashing if possible. I would use my walking foot to stitch down the center sashing line first. I would then stitch the horizontal center line next. I would then stitch the top horizontal line next. After these lines are stitched I would switch to my FMQ foot and start outline quilting the motifs. After they are outline stitched I would use a background FMQ filler like meander.

I spray basted my quilt with some safety pins at the sides to stablise the quilt to prevent shifting.

I've done what you had suggested, doing SITD to stablise the quilt. This is another question I have. When doing SITD on a large quilt like this, what's the sequence to go? Horizontal, vertical, then horizontal again? I've read that it's a better idea to always sew straight lines from the centre out. Would it make any difference if I sew all horizontals first, then verticals or vice versa? It's really a tedious job to go centre out horizontally, then vertically & so on for a huge quilt....if you know what I mean!

vivientan 01-15-2013 07:08 AM


Originally Posted by Delta (Post 5787706)
IF YOU ARE STIPPLING on your regular it would probable be easier to just stipple than try to
go around all the figures. you can stipple up to the caterpillars and not over them if you like.
It is a awesome quilt. nice job.,
Dawn in Waco

Is it necessary to do lots of quilting on cotton batts? I've read that they don't bunch up as much as poly batts. Therefore, I only intend to do some meandering or stippling around the sashes and borders and hope this works for me.

Tartan 01-15-2013 07:33 AM

The reason they want you to go from the center out is because if the layers shift a little, it moves the extra out to the edge so you won't get a pucker. It doesn't really matter if you go horizontal or vertical first but I tend to do the longest one first so that any shifting is out to the edge. With any lines that cross over another stitched line, the problem area will be where those 2 lines meet. I am careful to keep the section secured well with my hands (kind of pulling the sandwich outward) as it get close to the needle.
If you decide to stitch across the whole quilt rather than center out, be especially careful where the lines cross. Good luck and with the sandwich spray basted, it should go well!

nativetexan 01-15-2013 08:05 AM

hmmmm, FMQ slowly should give you shorter stitches, not longer.
if you aren't comfortable with FMQ, just do some curvy lines below the catepillar to look like movement and same with butterfly. or echo around them. just something to fill in the background of those large blocks. STID or 1/4 inch stitching around the others should work fine. good luck. cute quilt! just take it slow and go for it.

crafty pat 01-15-2013 08:29 AM

I agree with what HillCountryGal told you. I have RA and when I quilt my back starts hurting so bad when I struggle with a quilt. I have found by rolling it and working from the center out takes a lot of pressure from my arms and back. I love your quilt it is so pretty. Good luck with it.

vivientan 01-20-2013 07:00 AM


Originally Posted by Tartan (Post 5787835)
The reason they want you to go from the center out is because if the layers shift a little, it moves the extra out to the edge so you won't get a pucker. It doesn't really matter if you go horizontal or vertical first but I tend to do the longest one first so that any shifting is out to the edge. With any lines that cross over another stitched line, the problem area will be where those 2 lines meet. I am careful to keep the section secured well with my hands (kind of pulling the sandwich outward) as it get close to the needle.
If you decide to stitch across the whole quilt rather than center out, be especially careful where the lines cross. Good luck and with the sandwich spray basted, it should go well!

I've been getting puckers on my quilt, where the lines cross. Have tried my best to pull the sandwich as I'm sewing. How can I prevent this from happening again?

The other question I have is whether it's possible to hide threads in cotton batting. I find this more difficult than polyester batting.

What's the best method to start/stop stitching for FMQ? I usually start with tiny stitches, and gradually increase. Then I clip the threads at the beginning & end without the need to hide them in the batting. Is this the best way?


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