Question About Leader/Ender Quilts
#11
I do as feline fanatic posted...i have a couple of bins of colorful 2 1/2” squares at my sewing table to feed through my machine as I am working on other projects. I have made 2 scrappy Arkansas Crossroads quilts with leaders/enders and have a growing pile of 4Ps for another quilt. https://beeinmybonnetco.blogspot.com...-tutorial.html
#14
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 448
I agree the big advantage is that using leader/enders is that you do not have bits of thread to trim and discard constantly. And...you get through tedious tasks easily over time.
I have one friend who cuts all her scraps into 2" squares and keeps a basket of them at machine side. She just stitches two together every time she ends a seam and leaves them under the needle.
I like to make 8 and 16 patch units so my leaders/enders are strip sets (from which 16 patches eventually emerge): I cut a 1" strip and a 1 1/2" strip off every fabric I buy and put those strips into baskets. I sew two strips of the same width together as a leader/ender. They go into another basket and....then I sew two sets of those together. And so on!
I have one friend who cuts all her scraps into 2" squares and keeps a basket of them at machine side. She just stitches two together every time she ends a seam and leaves them under the needle.
I like to make 8 and 16 patch units so my leaders/enders are strip sets (from which 16 patches eventually emerge): I cut a 1" strip and a 1 1/2" strip off every fabric I buy and put those strips into baskets. I sew two strips of the same width together as a leader/ender. They go into another basket and....then I sew two sets of those together. And so on!
#15
Super Member
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Central Wisconsin
Posts: 4,391
Oh my gosh. I thought I was the only one who kept on using the same spider. But sometimes I actually pull some of those threads out. I do that when I'm thinking. Thinking of what I'm going to do next.
#17
doesn't have to be a scrappy quilt on the go, you could just have a stack of whatever size you most often use in quilt blocks in black and white. Before long you'd have a utterly striking inner or outer border all ready to insert.
#18
Junior Member
Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Illinois
Posts: 244
I used to use a leader after it was recommended by "I forget who" but once I found that putting in the single hole needle plate works just as well and without the fuss and bother. I stick with that method and prefer it.
#20
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Valley of the sun, AZ
Posts: 1,070
The way I do "leaders and enders" is I really don't have a "leader". The leader that is in my sewing machine at the start of the project is actually my "ender" from the last project. So every time I finish a sewing session the last thing I do is stitch a scrap "ender". I then cut off my actual project and leave the ender in my machine until the next sewing session. But on the occasions I don't do an "ender", (like when I just attached a binding) I will start my "leader" by physically holding both my top and bobbin thread while taking the first stitch of my scrap leader. This avoids any thread bird nests, which is what I use leaders and enders for. So I can chain stitch without hanging on to those threads each time I start a new unit. My machine typically does not "eat" the first bit of fabric. Even when starting with a triangle. But if your machine typically does that you have few choices. You can get a single hole needle plate, you can religiously, without fail always use an "ender" which then becomes your "leader on the next sewing session, or you can use a spider.
One more option, assume you forgot to use the ender. Start your leader scrap at the midway point to avoid the fabric munch. Then when you need the ender, snip off your half sewn leader and complete it as an ender.
One more option, assume you forgot to use the ender. Start your leader scrap at the midway point to avoid the fabric munch. Then when you need the ender, snip off your half sewn leader and complete it as an ender.
Last edited by love to sew; 12-18-2019 at 06:47 PM.
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10-07-2011 04:58 PM