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ruby2shoes 02-17-2018 03:41 PM

Securing ends.
 
I'm about to start quilting a pattern (walking foot) that requires a gazillion, gazillion arcs, each one being started and finished at a point in the quilt body......not "off the edge". So I need a method for securing all my start stop ends that isn't going to drive me to despair! I have done a search on previous posts and it seems that many of you secure your ends by simply doing a few stitches at length "0" at the beginning and the end and then just snipping the threads. This appeals to me as being a lot quicker than pulling my thread through, knotting and then burying the ends for each arc. Would this method survive on a quilt that is going to be used as a throw quilt and therefore pummeled about a bit?

newbee3 02-17-2018 03:47 PM

yes it will

Prism99 02-17-2018 04:09 PM

I agree that it will be secure. Instead of 0, though, I use a tiny stitch (such as .03). It is just as secure without thread buildup. Just 3 or at most 4 tiny stitches are enough.

ruby2shoes 02-17-2018 06:00 PM

Thankyou both...appreciated.

cashs_mom 02-17-2018 07:02 PM

I also use that method. I do most of my quilting on my Bernina and it actually has a stitch to secure the ends. It works great.

Jingle 02-17-2018 09:57 PM

I go back and forth a few times, start and finish. It holds up on the quilts I keep for myself.

RJLinkletter 02-18-2018 12:10 AM

I'm just going to jump in here - should all machines do a stitch length of 0? On my brother the smallest I can get it to I think is 0.2. I've made a few small pieces recently where I just forward/reversed a few times for the quilting

Prism99 02-18-2018 12:33 AM

Your Brother probably has a slight misadjustment. A stitch length of 0 simply means the feed dogs don’t move at all. The feed dogs on your machine are still moving a little.

joanneg 02-18-2018 09:12 AM

My Bernina has a stitich to secure the end (the scissor icon, right?) but does it also have a stitch to secure at the beginning? I would love to know. Thank you in advance.

Mkotch 02-19-2018 03:18 AM

For quilts that will get hard use and be washed a lot, I start a few stitches ahead of the beginning of the line, pull both threads up to the top, back stitch those few stitches, then start stitching. I backstitch at the end of the line, too.


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