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mona202 07-21-2011 11:43 AM

1) Since I am fairly new to quilting, I find that alot of the abbreviations people use are confusing to me. Is there a Key somewhere that tells me what abbrev. mean? I grasped DH means dear husband lol! However, some leave me puzzled.

2) I have discovered that LA machines are WAY out of my price league right now and even the quilt frames are. What can I do to quilt the first real quilt I have made (king size for my newlywed daughter) on my home machine? What will make it easier? I roll up the thing but the space between the arm and the needle is not that much and to start in the center, as I am told you should, leaves alot of fabric on the "arm" side of the machine. What can I do? Who do all of you do?

craftybear 07-21-2011 11:45 AM

I have been saving abbreviations and will post the link here for you

http://www.quiltingboard.com/user_page.jsp?upnum=1743

romanojg 07-21-2011 12:01 PM

Check out Lea Day's site; she does all of her free motion on a regular machine. She shows you how to set up tables around your machine to make a work area especially for a large quilt; she doesn't use reall expensive tables either. She has lots of designs and such.

http://www.daystyledesigns.com/

QuiltingJaguar 07-21-2011 12:09 PM

Thank you, Thank you I have been racking my brain on some of these and was not sure where to look and hated to ask on here.

TonnieLoree 07-21-2011 12:18 PM


Originally Posted by QuiltingJaguar
Thank you, Thank you I have been racking my brain on some of these and was not sure where to look and hated to ask on here.

:lol: Now, why in the world would you be afraid to ask a quilting question on The Quilting Board? :lol: No one is going to laugh! Besides, if you ask maybe others can learn too.

romanojg 07-21-2011 12:40 PM


Originally Posted by QuiltingJaguar
Thank you, Thank you I have been racking my brain on some of these and was not sure where to look and hated to ask on here.

Asking should always be alot less stressful than frustrations. None of us have all of the answers and if someone on this board does have them all then we are even luckier to be members here and seek the answers.

dunster 07-21-2011 01:02 PM

Try quilting in sections. I did this on many quilts before I bought a longarm. Marti Michell has a book that explains several techniques, and that book was my bible for a while. (Different techniques work better on different quilts.)

Lori S 07-21-2011 01:29 PM

I like the add the batting as you go method for bigger projects. You add in the next 12 - 18 inches of batting lenght as you are finished with one section or lenght. All that's left to roll under the arm is the backing and the top.

sidmona 07-21-2011 01:33 PM

I don't roll, I scrunch, it works a lot better. I still start at the center, which is a struggle, but once the center is done the rest is a piece of cake.

mona202 07-21-2011 02:46 PM

That is so nice. I will check it out now and become "quilt board enlightened". ha ha I appreciate it as now I will be able to more correctly follow some of the threads.

mona202 07-21-2011 03:07 PM

Wow I cant wait to watch this. Thank you so much. I will grasp it much better seeing it as opposed to reading about it. The visual will be really helpful. I am going to watch it now. There is hope! yay.

Thanks again,

Mona B

mona202 07-21-2011 03:08 PM

I find that this board has an answer for every darn thing I ever ask! I LOVE YOU ALL!

mona202 07-21-2011 03:11 PM

I never thought of that. Doesnt that make the quilt less strong having the batting in pieces or am I misunderstanding the process?

suern3 07-21-2011 03:12 PM


Originally Posted by romanojg
Check out Lea Day's site; she does all of her free motion on a regular machine. She shows you how to set up tables around your machine to make a work area especially for a large quilt; she doesn't use reall expensive tables either. She has lots of designs and such.

http://www.daystyledesigns.com/

Leah has great videos showing how to "scrunch" your quilt, rather than "roll". And many other great ideas, also.

Lori S 07-21-2011 05:23 PM


Originally Posted by mona202
I never thought of that. Doesnt that make the quilt less strong having the batting in pieces or am I misunderstanding the process?

You can use the batting fuse tape or I use a wide zig zag stitch to join the batting sections together.

Robinmg 07-21-2011 05:33 PM


Originally Posted by craftybear
I have been saving abbreviations and will post the link here for you

http://www.quiltingboard.com/user_page.jsp?upnum=1743

Thanks for the site. I too have been confused by some of the abbreviations.

Barb44 07-21-2011 06:10 PM

One of the first quilts I did was a king size. I did lap quilting or quilt as you go. It is just like quilting in sections. I was hand quilting but it would be the same on the machine. A lot of people use the older machines that have a larger harp area for quilting.


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