Twisted seams.
How do you prevent seams on the underside from going the wrong way when sewing pieces of blocks together?
I keep having to snip 3 stitches, correct direction of seam and resew that little bit again. THere must be a better way. Thanks for all your wonderful efforts to help each other. Would not have pursued quilting without this board. |
I use straight pins that are removed just before reaching the DSM needle. I have had to clip and resew more than a few times.
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If you mean the seam goes off to the side as you approach the end of the seam, using a stiletto works wonders!
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I had same problem & read somewhere to put a small piece of tape on your machine where the plate & machine meet. It worked wonderful for me!
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Take a careful look at your machine bed. Does the plate stick up, even a tiny bit? Or do you use an extended sewing surface? how does that meet up with your machine? As mentioned, taping over these areas will help. I sew slowly, and as I come to an intersection, I sweep my stiletto under the seam in the appropriate direction.
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I have done as hairquilt says and put tape on the join between machine and insert where my machine is inset into the table. But they still go the wrong direction sometimes. Life is too short. Unless there is a real problem with a dark color showing through a light fabric I just accept that the seam wanted to go the other way and let it. When the quilt is finished no one knows the difference, even me.
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There was a recent thread here on twisted seams with a lot of good posts:
http://www.quiltingboard.com/main-f1...o-t249986.html |
Agree on the ridge between the machine bed and the plate. It can twist a seam.
Because I clean my machine a LOT I don't want to put tape over the seam. So what I do is this .... I can feel a seam coming up (even if there is only a seam on the bottom) with my fingers as I feed the seam into the machine. When I feel one coming up, I slightly lift the piece I am feeding, and if necessary will reach under and flip the seam. I very rarely get a twisted seam. |
Originally Posted by DogHouseMom
(Post 6839178)
Agree on the ridge between the machine bed and the plate. It can twist a seam.
Because I clean my machine a LOT I don't want to put tape over the seam. So what I do is this .... I can feel a seam coming up (even if there is only a seam on the bottom) with my fingers as I feed the seam into the machine. When I feel one coming up, I slightly lift the piece I am feeding, and if necessary will reach under and flip the seam. I very rarely get a twisted seam. |
If the above ideas don't work, you can always machine-baste a few stitches over the spot before sewing the seam. It's faster than unsewing and saves on teeth grinding. I'm doing it now with 2 stretchy, annoying fabrics -seersucker and homespun. Removable tape is helpful, too. I keep some by the machine.
hugs, Charlotte |
glue baste the seams together, it works every time.
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Sometimes I sew the seam going one way, but when I go to sew the other end, it needs to flip if I messed up my sewing order. So I intentionally twist the seam allowance in the middle of the block instead of at the intersection so that there is not so much bulk at the intersection when I go to quilt it.
If it is a case where the machine feed dogs twist the seam, I undo it just a little ways and fix it. |
Years ago I read a hint about taking an old credit card (or those fake ones you get with offers) and cutting a notch on one end, leaving a sharp point. You can slide that sharp point under the fabric at the seam and make sure it flips the way you want it to. The credit card is thin and slide under it quite easily.
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