Is quilting becoming to modernized?
#111
Originally Posted by hobo2000
David, I have thought about that too. G'ma used to draw her pattern on cardboard cut it out, stack up fabrics and draw around each template then sit at night and cut them out. She used a treadle, which I now use. I think it would be great fun to get a bunch of us to each make a small quilt not using anything but paper, cardboard, treadle, scissors, etc. We would learn to really appreciate what we have but would know how to do it without the frills.
#112
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Once an Iowan, always an Iowan, but now suburban Chicagoland
Posts: 508
Originally Posted by Jeanniejo
Your grandmother probably made one quilt at a time. Quilters now have several quilts in progress at the same time. Right now I have at least 12 I'm working on. We want to be quicker so we can use all our stash up before we die !!!
#113
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: So. CA
Posts: 1,867
Originally Posted by Grama Lehr
I love all of today's toys for quilting. I think the quilt shows should have a couple of sections, one for 100 % hand quilters, a section for folks who work, have a family and quilt for the pure joy of it and another for the professional quilter, who does it for a living.
Three different brackets, three different set of standards, what do you think?
Three different brackets, three different set of standards, what do you think?
#115
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Eden, Utah; originally NY
Posts: 357
Just last Thursday night at our quilt guild meeting they were talking about the guild purchasing one of the cutting machines with interchangeable dies. I thought about all the long-arm quilting, etc., and commented that one day soon we'd be able to get up early and flip a switch, go back to bed for a while, and get up and have a new quilt ready to be bound.
To each his own. I, too, love my rotary cutter and Olfa board, etc., but I draw the line at the quilting. Give me a needle and thread and let me leave my personal touch on the quilts I do!
To each his own. I, too, love my rotary cutter and Olfa board, etc., but I draw the line at the quilting. Give me a needle and thread and let me leave my personal touch on the quilts I do!
#116
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2009
Location: California
Posts: 3,502
When I started quilting all I had was a machine, pencils, paper, and cardboard for templates. And wow, was I happy when I found out about using plastic margarine tub lids for making templates! They didn't get worn out by drawing around them like cardboard did. There was many a time when my hands were sore and just about blistered from cutting out pieces with scissors.
The things I wouldn't want to give up... a cutting mat, ruler, and rotary cutter!
The things I wouldn't want to give up... a cutting mat, ruler, and rotary cutter!
#117
I do not think it has become too modern. I made my first quilt 38 years ago. It was cut out with templates and scissors and I hand pieced it and hand quilted it on a quilt frame I bought from a neighbor...the quilt frame consisted of 1" X 6' boards and I tacked denim onto the boards to sew the layers to. I made my second quilt the same way a couple of years later and then for the next 30 odd years did no quilting. I had been wanting to learn how to machine quilt for several years, but the when I tried to drop the feed dogs on my sewing machine, everything locked up. Took it in for repairs and my husband surprised me with an early Christmas present...a new sewing machine that is designed for quilting. I have been amazed at the new products available for quilting...rotary cutter, cutting mat, the grid measurer, not to mention all the new techniques. I have learned a LOT in the past two months and I am pleased with how all these"new"tools allow you to make a really nice looking quilt. Being able to cut the pieces accurately really helps to get everything matched up so much more easily. Paper peicing amazes me! The EQ7 program REALLY amazes me and it is definately on my wish list!
#118
I'd say the modern appeals to more (additional) people vs. just the "old" way. I know I wouldn't be quilting if there was still the not-bright fabric, hand sewing everything, no cool toys. You still have the classic quilters, but you expand your market to the innovators with all the new toys
#119
Originally Posted by Izaquilter
I know I'm reallllly gonna ruffle some feathers here with this reply but I do think modernazation (is that a word) is taking alot out of quilting. Not so much the tools & the sewing machines because that is all I have ever known but the long arms. Sure I'd love to have one but will not allow myself to go to that extent. If you go to quilt shows now, almost 90% of the quilts are all done by long arms & it really really takes the creativity out of quilting. A really good piecer can put a top together & then send it off to a really good machine quilter but let me tell you, I have been going to quilt shows since 1992 & there is NO comparason to the quilts now & the quilts back in 1992. More of them were done by one persons creativity. Now it's who pays the most to their favorite long arm quilter. I know several long arm quilters & have only had 2 quilts done by them. It's just not the same as if you had done it all yourself. I feel like I'm cheating. I now see how my aunt felt going to the quilt shows. She hated it when machine pieced quilts were first allowed! So the old is the best for me!
#120
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Macon, Ga
Posts: 272
Our grandmothers washed clothes in a tub and with a washboard. They cooked on a wood stove. They stayed warm (scarcely) in front of a fire place. Rode in a horse -drawn buggy. We certainly don't want to go back to that! We love our new appliances. So, why should we want to go back to the old way to make quilts?
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