Go Back  Quiltingboard Forums >
  • Main
  • Domestic machine quilting help needed. >
  • Domestic machine quilting help needed.

  • Domestic machine quilting help needed.

    Thread Tools
     
    Old 03-06-2013, 06:17 PM
      #11  
    Senior Member
     
    Rose S.'s Avatar
     
    Join Date: Feb 2012
    Location: Indiana
    Posts: 880
    Default

    I am a puddler, too...I have my sewing machine set in a full sized office desk...I have about 20 inches to the left side and that helps. I also have a shallow drawer on that side and I pull it out as well. I keep wanting my husband to invent something that keeps the quilt from sliding off the end though.
    Rose S. is offline  
    Old 03-06-2013, 06:19 PM
      #12  
    Junior Member
     
    yweinst's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Oct 2012
    Location: Colorado
    Posts: 246
    Default

    For right now I just use a card table to put the rest of the quilt on.
    yweinst is offline  
    Old 03-06-2013, 09:04 PM
      #13  
    Senior Member
     
    omaluvs2quilt's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Nov 2011
    Location: Las Vegas, NV
    Posts: 926
    Default

    I puddle too...I find the roll method too stiff. it also helps if you can put your machine in a corner, that way you can loosely stack any excess.
    omaluvs2quilt is offline  
    Old 03-07-2013, 03:15 AM
      #14  
    Super Member
     
    charsuewilson's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jan 2013
    Location: Virginia
    Posts: 1,203
    Default

    My sewing machine table is fairly large (30"?) to the left of the machine. I usually pull the machine away from the wall to allow the quilt to flop down behind the machine.
    charsuewilson is offline  
    Old 03-07-2013, 04:03 AM
      #15  
    Junior Member
     
    Join Date: Oct 2012
    Location: at the foot of the Ouichita Mountains, SE Oklahoma
    Posts: 273
    Default

    I only have 6 1/2-inches in the throat of my machine and it's only about 5 or so inches high inside there...so rolling was out for me. When I tried that it was like a log and so heavy...so I, also, puddle and only worry about the few inches under my hands as I FMQ.

    If the quilt is any larger than a baby quilt, I spray baste about 1/2 of the quilt (or less depending on the size) into a sandwich and simply hand tack around the outside of the part that has no batting to keep it from flopping around...this way the quilt isn't so heavy. I quilt that part of the quilt ...add back some batting..quilt that part...etc. Makes the weight so much lighter and not so much under that throat.

    I have a 23" x 60" table shoved up to my sewing table on my left. My sewing table is shoved up to a window with a small drop down to a ledge. This handles the weight of the quilt on my left and behind the machine. As for as that part that goes into my lap...I put it up on my chest and a little over my shoulder...this keeps it from dragging on my needle from the front and keeps it from hanging on the edge of my machine table as I feed it through.

    This seems to be adequate for the time being.
    dray965 is offline  
    Old 03-07-2013, 04:01 PM
      #16  
    Senior Member
     
    Join Date: Sep 2010
    Location: NM
    Posts: 989
    Default

    Use a card table, ironing board, chair, dinning table, etc. what ever you have in the house.
    Pat M. is offline  
    Old 03-07-2013, 04:28 PM
      #17  
    Power Poster
     
    BellaBoo's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Jan 2009
    Location: Front row
    Posts: 14,646
    Default

    I move folding tables into place to hold the quilt. Two tables for a queen size works great. You can go professional and have a hook hanging from the ceiling with pullys and take the weight off the quilt that way.
    BellaBoo is offline  
    Old 03-07-2013, 04:33 PM
      #18  
    Super Member
     
    JulieR's Avatar
     
    Join Date: May 2010
    Location: Emmitsburg, MD
    Posts: 1,599
    Default

    Flop and puddle here, too. I set my machine on the far right corner of the table so there's a large area of table to the left and behind, and then slip my ironing board UNDER the table so it is nearly level with it, and that helps with the left and in front of my machine. The basic thing here is just making sure the whole thing is supported so you don't have a bunch of drag to fight. Gravity is a law.

    As for a puddle v. roll, it used to make me cuss when I would bump my elbow on the roll. So I don't do that anymore. (Roll, not cuss. There is still cussing. This is, after all, machine quilting.)
    JulieR is offline  
    Old 03-07-2013, 06:11 PM
      #19  
    Senior Member
     
    alisonquilts's Avatar
     
    Join Date: Feb 2012
    Location: Winston-Salem NC
    Posts: 659
    Default

    Another puddle'n'flopper here. I have my sewing machine all the way to the right on a desk and a home-made elevated bed extension around it so that I have about 36" to the left of the needle, and about 18" behind. Still a lot of dragging and wrestling (and cussing), though. There was a thread last October about different approaches people have taken to extend their machine bed (so not as much weight pulling down) - but of course I can't find it now!

    Alison
    [ATTACH=CONFIG]400411[/ATTACH]
    Attached Thumbnails sewing-machine-table-2.jpg  
    alisonquilts is offline  
    Related Topics
    Thread
    Thread Starter
    Forum
    Replies
    Last Post
    Onebyone
    Links and Resources
    16
    01-24-2016 01:34 PM
    carolstickelmaier
    Main
    3
    02-07-2015 07:41 AM
    Luray831
    Main
    22
    10-20-2013 09:30 AM
    Zoo
    Main
    10
    01-09-2009 03:20 PM

    Posting Rules
    You may not post new threads
    You may not post replies
    You may not post attachments
    You may not edit your posts

    BB code is On
    Smilies are On
    [IMG] code is On
    HTML code is On
    Trackbacks are Off
    Pingbacks are Off
    Refbacks are Off



    FREE Quilting Newsletter