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-   -   Thoughts on Connecting Threads?? (https://www.quiltingboard.com/main-f1/thoughts-connecting-threads-t243616.html)

pegquilter8 03-22-2014 07:38 AM

I have been using for a long time. LOVE it. I change my bobbins and clean after 2. It also seems to last forever. I use silver for all my piecing
Try one spool and you will see.
Pegeth

dianeinsterling 03-22-2014 07:42 AM

I use there thread for piecing and love it.

Tudey 03-22-2014 07:43 AM

It's my preferred brand....and they have new verigates!

mrs. fitz 03-22-2014 07:45 AM

I've never read a word against CT or any of its products and personally have been happy with my purchases. Edie, who commented early in this thread, said the colors are too pretty to use. A few Christmases ago I asked my husband to buy me threads for Christmas. He thought of going to Joann's with me and seeing me buy plain old Coats & Clark and said he didn't think that was a gift. When I showed him the CT catalog he said to pick out anything I wanted. I did, and when they arrived I put them in a basket. They were so pretty it took me a long time to start using them!

RAChhap 03-22-2014 08:29 AM

Neat way to store your thread!!

wraez 03-22-2014 08:35 AM

seems this questions gets asked over and over. I too use CT and love them especially for piecing, tho I also use it for quilting but my bobbin never sees anything but BobbinFil threads from Superior Threads.

terri bb 03-22-2014 08:40 AM

i can't STAND their "egyptian cotton thread" that double mercerized stuff. it's cheap and pretty but you get what you pay for. it does work for straight line piecing and also for applique if you want different colors. but trying to quilt with it is a nightmare. it's too thick. also i just made a basket last week with cording and wrapped strips of cotton with it and zig zaged it. had to rip the whole thing out it was horrible. tension was crap. i put in a thinner thread and no problem. the thinner thread i used was the CONE thread that CT has, the 5000 yards when it was on sale for $5.99. that seems to be good but just very linty. good luck! for quilting, i use nothing but Glide. you can buy a 5000meter spool for about 7 bucks. strong, no lint, beautiful to work with.

Wanabee Quiltin 03-22-2014 09:07 AM

I have used it now for about 6 years and love it. It is linty as others have said, but I clean my bobbin area every time I add another bobbin and it's not too bad. Every 6 bobbins used, I clean the entire machine by vacuum cleaner.

Maire 03-22-2014 09:14 AM

I love their cotton thread, use it all the time, bought all the colors when they had a sale last year. I use it for piecing and machine quilting. I've been in the habit of sweeping out the bobbin case with every bobbin change for years anyway so I haven't noticed a lint problem. Great colors. I have several machines, no problems with any of them with CT thread.

quiltforfun 03-22-2014 09:20 AM

I have been very happy with their products. I have purchased 2 kits, a lot of fabric and some notions. Everything was good and their prices are great. I usually shop at my local quilt store or JoAnn's, and CT is so easy--just look over their catalog, go on line, place my order--can't do better than that. And with the price of gas--need I say anything else...

Roberta 03-22-2014 09:55 AM

It's all I ever use. I buy it when they have the sale such as 5 spools for a very reasonable price. I think I have about every color they have and never have to run to the store for just the right color. I just go to my thread case, love it :-).

JanieH 03-22-2014 10:10 AM

I have been using fabric and thread from CT for years and love it all!

earlori7 03-23-2014 03:24 AM

Thanks for all the great info on threads. I don't have a long arm machine, but know some threads are very linty. I owned and operated a retail monogram shop for 20 years and the thread I used on my commercial machine was very linty. I still have quite a bit and use it sometimes for piecing, but pay the price in lint accumulation.

JoanneS 03-27-2014 11:20 AM

I prefer Aurifil for piecing - much, much less lint. I use Floriana for quilting. I don't like to gunk up my machine with lint. When I used CT, I cleaned the lint often, but I knew there was more lint where I couldn't reach - born out when I had the machine serviced.

maryel 03-28-2014 03:46 PM

I love their thread and it's a wonderful buy to boot!

TeresaA 03-29-2014 07:15 AM

I always talk about my "quilty hiatus" and here's another rip van winkle "story". When I "left" quilting, people never talked about linty thread. It was just thread, and lint was something that came from the combination of fabric, thread, batting. Now I hear about linty thread all the time. I'm not sure why -- given that fabric and batting are at least as likely to produce lint as thread. I suspect it has something to do with the advent of the $25 cone of thread, which came into fruition about the time I left quilting. Salespeople have to find a reason for people to buy that thread. And from what I hear, that thread is probably not all that much better lint-wise, because all cotton thread can be linty.

Pull a thread off your finest fabric and look at all the little tails of lint along it! Use ecru thread and sew a quilt made of dark fabric (all I ever use is ecru thread for piecing so I do this all the time). What color is your lint? Hint: It's only part ecru.

We should all be checking and oiling our bobbin area about every 2-3 bobbin fills to prevent things like thread-tangle or unoiled bobbin kickback-induced tension problems, etc. If a little extra lint prompts us to stop and do that, maybe it's a good thing.

I'm not saying you should buy the very cheapest thread on the market (although it may be fine, I haven't tried it.). I'm saying "linty thread" has sort of become an internet meme. People probably spend too much money seeking less "linty" thread when they are otherwise working with some very linty cotton fabric and batting. And my personal belief is that a $1000+ sewing machine should be able to sew raw wool! The idea that even more expensive machines have to be babied is a real travesty to me.

If people can afford uber expensive thread, that's great! They should keep doing it if it gives them comfort. However, if you need the money for bills, retirement or other things, it's okay to buy other threads. They work just fine.

And from what people have said, the Connecting Threads thread is good quality. I've been primarily using Signature thread for quilting, which works fine, but just for fun I'm going to try the Essentials myself the next time it goes on sale.

BTW, I also use Glide thread, which is 100% polyester, on my longarm quilter. Polyester thread theoretically produces NO lint, but my quilter still drops SKADS of lint out of its circa 80's exposed bobbin area....from the Hobbs 80/20 or the WN batting.

Quiltmaniac2010 03-29-2014 10:31 PM

I love their cotton thread and buy the cones for piecing. I have used it on my longarm too for customers who want cotton thread. A bit linty, but looks lovely and works well on my Crown Jewel.


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