Problem inherent in strip quilting??
#21
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Piedmont Virginia in the Foothills of the Blue Ridge Mtns.
Posts: 8,562
Try several different stitch lengths on a sample square.
Make them each about 2-3 inches long and about 1/2 inch apart and mark each sample with the setting on your machine that created it.
Measure the different samples and find one closest to about 11-12 stitches to an inch. This is the one you are best using when strip piecing. It will help your seams with other kinds of piecing, too.
If you have trouble getting the tip of our seam ripper under a stitch, try using an Clover brand seam ripper. The one below is less than $4 at Connecting Threads -- so cheap you could order 2-3 at a time! The tip of the Clover ripper is very slender and sharp and works really well. They are one of the tools that you should replace often, as they become dull, just as you would needles or rotary blades.
http://www.connectingthreads.com/cft...paign=PPCgpGen
Jan in VA
Make them each about 2-3 inches long and about 1/2 inch apart and mark each sample with the setting on your machine that created it.
Measure the different samples and find one closest to about 11-12 stitches to an inch. This is the one you are best using when strip piecing. It will help your seams with other kinds of piecing, too.
If you have trouble getting the tip of our seam ripper under a stitch, try using an Clover brand seam ripper. The one below is less than $4 at Connecting Threads -- so cheap you could order 2-3 at a time! The tip of the Clover ripper is very slender and sharp and works really well. They are one of the tools that you should replace often, as they become dull, just as you would needles or rotary blades.
http://www.connectingthreads.com/cft...paign=PPCgpGen
Jan in VA
#22
I always sew my blocks with a smaller stitch. If a thread would ever break after a few years of use, it won't come all undone. I know it's a pain to rip but it sure has made my quilts last better with fewer repairs.
#23
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Victorian Sweatshop Forum
Posts: 1,271
Gosh, now I'm afraid for my previous quilts. Nothing I can do about that anymore but I'll definitely figure out the proper stitch length and use it in the future. I will also get myself a Clover seam ripper. I had noticed some of the seam rippers in my collection seem to have a thinner point, so it wasn't my imagination after all!
Thanks for all the advice. I have learned a lot.
Thanks for all the advice. I have learned a lot.
#25
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Victorian Sweatshop Forum
Posts: 1,271
Try several different stitch lengths on a sample square.
Make them each about 2-3 inches long and about 1/2 inch apart and mark each sample with the setting on your machine that created it.
Measure the different samples and find one closest to about 11-12 stitches to an inch. This is the one you are best using when strip piecing. It will help your seams with other kinds of piecing, too.
Make them each about 2-3 inches long and about 1/2 inch apart and mark each sample with the setting on your machine that created it.
Measure the different samples and find one closest to about 11-12 stitches to an inch. This is the one you are best using when strip piecing. It will help your seams with other kinds of piecing, too.
I was thinking no matter how loosely I stitched my blocks, the quilting would hold everything together in the end. Wrong??
#26
Super Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Central Wisconsin
Posts: 4,391
So THAT'S why you press your seam after you sew them. It sets the thread into the fabric.
And I never realized that cotton would hold better than poly thread.
Learned two important lessons today. Thanks everybody.
And I never realized that cotton would hold better than poly thread.
Learned two important lessons today. Thanks everybody.
#30
Super Member
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: Central Ia
Posts: 1,153
I checked my stitches per inch per Jan's suggestion. Well I found I needed to decrease stitch length from 2.5 to 2.0 (Pfaff). And then I came back to me yes, 2.0 is where it used to be, how, when, and why it got increased I don't remember.
Point being--- another reason I so enjoy QB!
Thanks Jan!
Point being--- another reason I so enjoy QB!
Thanks Jan!
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