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Painful lessons
Today, I learned that you should use a walking or at least non-stick foot when quilting on a relatively new tee shirt.
In the process or trying with a regular foot, the resulting knots were impossible to get out with a seam-ripper. I'm going to have to cut that square out and QAYG in a replacement. So for today's discussion, what lessons have you learned the hard way? |
Never try to catch a rotary cutter blade that you have dropped!!!!!!!
Hugs Caroline |
Always check where the edge of your backing is before you start quilting a new section.:(
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Originally Posted by ruby2shoes
(Post 7318610)
Always check where the edge of your backing is before you start quilting a new section.:(
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Clean off your table before cutting fabric. I have cut too many extra pieces and templates.:p
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Securely close the plastic box with the thread spools, and bobbins. When a box falls on a dusty floor, the thread picks it up like a magnet, and they roll EVERYWHERE!
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Never let your good scissors fall on a hard floor. I bent the point of my expensive scissors this way. Now I have them on a ribbon that either attaches around my neck or to the machine.
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Always hold on or park the the bobbin thread when starting to quilt.
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Originally Posted by CarolinePaj
(Post 7318606)
Never try to catch a rotary cutter blade that you have dropped!!!!!!!
Hugs Caroline My latest 'learn the hard way' is to always read the specs of what you're buying. I am making my mom a set of 8 placemats and a table runner, and I thought I ordered enough insulbrite (plus some extra, just in case), turns out, it's only 22" wide, so I had enough for the runner and 4 placemats, but had to order more mid project. Still waiting for it to arrive. My most annoying lesson, start any fmq with a sample sandwich, just in case. I had been going right along for a while and my bobbin ran out. While replacing it, I decided to take a peek at the back, and wouldn't you know, the most gigantic rats nest had somehow formed. Ug, that was painful. I took it off the machine, and pulled out another project. I didn't even want to look at that for a month. Finally finished it though. It came out beautifully, but man what a trainwreck. |
Measure twice, cut once. Even more important, check the size you need to cut twice, write it down and then measure twice and cut once.
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