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  • What do you practice your Free Motion Quilting on?

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    Old 07-10-2010, 04:45 AM
      #21  
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    I am always afraid to free motion on a project that I am working on and ruining it. I am a bit of a perfectionist. My mom taught me to rip it out if it wasn't perfect. I have tried working on just muslin but I could end up with a king size quilt and have nothing to show for it. Last week I made myself a tote bag from a pattern on Moda Bake Shop. I wanted to quilt it free motion. I took out the stitches 2 times. I referenced a book put out my Sulky called Weekend quilting by Sulky. There is a wall hanging in book where they show a different style of quilting in each square. It was like a light bulb moment for me. I tended to look at the large quilt it self and not block by block. I went on to quilt my bag which I visually divided into 4 sections. My bag turned out realy nice and I didn't have long loopy stitched. The book says to sew at a slow to med speed. I put on some music and let it set the rythm. I am ready to start another project.
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    Old 07-10-2010, 05:12 AM
      #22  
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    I practice on 'crumb' blocks. I do the blocks quilt- as- you- go and practice the FMQ on them. I plan to put the blocks together with narrow sashings to make a quilt.
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    Old 07-10-2010, 05:29 AM
      #23  
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    I have FMQ'd with the feed dogs up and it worked just fine because the darning foot doesn't put much down pressure on the fabric.

    I would buy some panels or busy large print fabric and practice around the printed designs. They are always cute and a non-quilting person will never know your mistakes and will love the lap quilt, table runner, pot holder or wall hanging you made. By finishing them, It also gives you the feeling of accomplishment and the practice binding them that I know I need.
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    Old 07-10-2010, 05:34 AM
      #24  
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    Originally Posted by aneternalpoet
    i have a Brother , but dont have the model number in front of me. I saw it at walmart here in our small town, but I bought it at a thrift store ( but it was brand new , as the owner had died, and her family donated it without the instruction book, sigh ).. I will check into the foot thing tomorrow if I can.. I really want to learn ( practice, practice, practice !) to do that kind of quilting on my smaller projects..
    I would check into ordering a new book for the machine. Be sure when you are purchasing a quilting foot that it is for machine quilting and not a 1/4" foot. A good way to practice FMQ is to practice on paper first. It helps the brain remember the motion you are trying to achieve.
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    Old 07-10-2010, 05:37 AM
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    I practiced on a couple of pieces of poly/cotton I had lying around. Then I just put in a couple of tops made from crumbs and started quilting. They aren't perfectly quilted, but work great for picnics and camping.
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    Old 07-10-2010, 05:39 AM
      #26  
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    I would check into ordering a new book for the machine. Be sure when you are purchasing a quilting foot that it is for machine quilting and not a 1/4" foot. A good way to practice FMQ is to practice on paper first. It helps the brain remember the motion you are trying to achieve.[/quote]

    Wow, I like the paper idea also. only wasting thread (not other consumables).
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    Old 07-10-2010, 06:54 AM
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    I got a 1/4 inch foot and darning foot for my little Brother CS4000 at a LQS that handled Brothers. They had both the brand name and generic feet and actually recommended the generic saying that it worked fine and was 1/2 the price. I also downloaded a manual (for free) for my machine from online, before I got my machine.
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    Old 07-10-2010, 09:15 AM
      #28  
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    Originally Posted by M.I.Late
    Originally Posted by C.Cal Quilt Girl
    Originally Posted by aneternalpoet
    What is the FMQ that you're talking about? I am new to all the terminology, lol.. and new to the site, too - just a babe in the woods of about a week now here .. loving it though!
    Check the book to see if machine will do first, May only be able to straight, stitch in the ditch,(along the seam), or curved arches, sometimes freemotion looks more like scribbles, (that may be a bad description) has more flow to it. Good Luck and Welcome !! :D
    can go to topics on header and most of the names of things you hear will have topic postings
    I would describe free motion quilting as puzzle quilting - it sort of looks like puzzle pieces but it's continuous.
    Thanks, I knew that didn't sound right , but my minds eye and words didn't connect. :oops: :-D
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    Old 07-10-2010, 09:58 AM
      #29  
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    Originally Posted by Donna - Batiks
    Some one told me to sew the binding on (both sides!) and donate them to the local animal shelter. The dogs don't mind the stitches are perfect! It just gives them a nice place to lay off the cold concrete floors.
    Exactly what I was going to say. Even for the cat cages so they aren't on the metal floors of the cages.
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    Old 07-10-2010, 10:26 AM
      #30  
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    I also practice on my Project LInus quilts. The children who get them never complain. They just snuggle up and hug their blankies. No waste of fabric then.
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