at the risk of being shot down in flames!!!
#22
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: La Quinta, CA
Posts: 3,918
I appreciate the wonderful quilting from the professional and talented quilters in shows. I keep my quilting simple, mostly because it's what I can do. I consider the use the quilt is likely to be put to when deciding how dense to stitch. I use a tied quilt on my bed and it is so soft and cozy. I never saw a quilt I didn't like.
#24
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Winchester, VA
Posts: 1,552
Originally Posted by mayday
I thoroughly enjoy this board and seeing all the wonderful quilts that you display and have so cleverly and expertly pieced, BUT then see that some have been so closely quilted within an inch of their life, surely this defeats the object of making a quilt as all this close stitching [usually maching ] makes the quilt so flat and any loft that it did have is gone and the thing feels much harder and not as comforting ?.
I did put the title as above and do so hope that I have not offended but would like to know the reason please.
I did put the title as above and do so hope that I have not offended but would like to know the reason please.
#25
There are no "bad" questions or opinions. Just differences.
I quilt depending on the use of the quilt. If it's a cuddle quilt that needs to be cozy and warm, I quilt further apart than if it is an art quilt where the actual stitching is part of the artistic process. It's like comparing apples to oranges, they're totally different.
My mantra is "There are no quilt police" and thank God there aren't!
I quilt depending on the use of the quilt. If it's a cuddle quilt that needs to be cozy and warm, I quilt further apart than if it is an art quilt where the actual stitching is part of the artistic process. It's like comparing apples to oranges, they're totally different.
My mantra is "There are no quilt police" and thank God there aren't!
#26
Power Poster
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Northern Michigan
Posts: 12,861
i quilt according to the batting requirements so if a batting says it has to be quilted up to every 2" then i have no choice but to quilt quite heavily, but when i've used good quality batting even with close quilting when the quilt is washed and dried it fluffs up and is soft. and if you use wool batting it really fluffs! it all depends on the quilt and the batting for me, i've never had a stiff/hard ; cold quilt. mine are all soft, fluffy and warm.
#27
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2010
Posts: 947
I like heavy quilting, and my experience is that my quilts are still nice and cuddly and warm. They drape nicely, and are not at all stiff.
To me, a poofy, loose and saggy quilt is kind of sad looking. I always wonder why someone who lavished so much time and attention on excellent piecing would not want to accent that work with the final step, the part that actually makes it a "quilt" and not a "pieced work coverlet"-- excellent quilting. And STD 10 inches apart just can not float my boat.
RST
To me, a poofy, loose and saggy quilt is kind of sad looking. I always wonder why someone who lavished so much time and attention on excellent piecing would not want to accent that work with the final step, the part that actually makes it a "quilt" and not a "pieced work coverlet"-- excellent quilting. And STD 10 inches apart just can not float my boat.
RST
#28
I honestly never gave it much thought. I have seen pictures of very heavily quilted quilts, very impressed by the work and skill it takes to make those look that way.
I guess because I don't intend for anything I make to be something that special I align myself more to some nice swirls and a few pretty feather patterns and call it done. :-)
I think it was a very good question for you to ask, btw.
I guess because I don't intend for anything I make to be something that special I align myself more to some nice swirls and a few pretty feather patterns and call it done. :-)
I think it was a very good question for you to ask, btw.
#29
If we all liked the same kind of quilting, our quilts would look alike and where would be the fun in that? I have noticed over the last couple of years that I have developed an appreciation for the different styles of quilting after seeing pictures on this board and reading comments about them. For example, someone had posted a pic of a quilt that was all right angles, but quilted it with a circular pattern. To my inexperienced point of view, that seemed to 'fight' with the piecing. But someone wrote in a comment that the circular quilting gave movement and softness to the blocks, and all of a sudden that made sense!
What I prefer today is probably not what I'll prefer tomorrow, but that's what keeps this quilting fun!
What I prefer today is probably not what I'll prefer tomorrow, but that's what keeps this quilting fun!
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