Is there some magic spell or fairy dust that'll help with free motion quilting?
#62
Originally Posted by catrancher
Go to Leah Day's website and watch her tutes. If you have a laptop, set it up next to your sewing machine. That's what I did and it helped. I'm not an expert, but I have more confidence than before. If you don't know her site, just search with her name.
#63
I say do your small projects you can handle then find a shop that rents use of their long-arm machine. My shop charges $18 an hour and I just finished a big quilt in an hour and a half. Trust me, I have the same problem you have and this is the answer for me. Most quilts wouldn't take 2 hours to do on their big machine.
#64
Several of my friends took a class from Harriet Hargrove. They have become fabulous fmq. I however was not arround to take the class. I bought her book but I quess nothing beats the personal touch. I am with you wanting that fairy dust.
#65
you'll find your fairy dust in a glass of wine. I'm not Kidding! A little wine, start moving your brain in free motion patterns, then your head. While still in this fairy trance, sit down at your machine, and, voilla, magic.
#66
Originally Posted by catrancher
Originally Posted by Maia B
It must be "try and cry" FMQ day. I've been making quilts for 20+ years, hand quilting and machine quilting straight lines only. So I have great machines with which to FMQ, I've read some recommended books, and I tried it early this morning. Hundreds of thousands of people do this, right? So no tension problems, no eyelashes, but it was just awful. I think everything is set just fine, because the stitch line is great except that it's jerky, ugly, and inconsistent. I could feel the thread's shame and disappointment at being involved. I can't trace a line, make any attractive shape, nothing nice at all. I sewed out a bobbin's worth on a 12"x 18" piece, which I then took directly to the rabbit cage to die the worst death any quilt can as a peed-upon chew rug. I went back to bed. Later, when I opened my thread drawer, the quilting weight threads were all cowering in fear. Even the piecing thread looked nervous. The worst of the whole story is that I was using the Bernina 440 with BSR, which is supposed to help, right? So I know it takes practice, but I'm pretty discouraged. It's also not AT ALL fun. Which is crazy, too...fabric :) + batting :) + thread :) + Bernina :))) = sad and sore like I did too much yard work.
OMG, I laughed until I cried reading this. You have a future in stand up if the FMQ defeats you.
#67
Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: South Central PA
Posts: 275
ROLF, you guys are hilarious!! I am fairly new to quilting (less then 6 mths) & saving $ to buy a nicer machine that I can do FMQ (just now figured out what it stood for). After reading everyone's posts, I at least know what I am in for! Meanwhile I continue to stitch in the ditch...
Sue
Sue
#70
So nice to know it is not just me - I am persevering with the SID untlil I get more courage. I've made a 'wall hanging' (small) for my son in to practice and lots of little things to place warm pots on for the table for my friends - but I just can't follow a curve to save my life. Hoping the wine and fairy dust will help too ! I'm with you sister !
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01-21-2024 04:52 AM