Free motion
#101
Originally Posted by Ceil
Originally Posted by All Thumbs
Lots of laughter to begin with! Practice is an essential and what I found the most beneficial is good dense batting. Some of this thin cheap stuff or high loft thick does not make learning free motion any easier. In fact, I will not use it. If it is worth my time to meander or free motion some stars, hearts and cartoons, then it is worth spending more money for the batting. After that, just draw like you were in the third grade once again! :)
I have been told, however, that when making quilts for the battered women's center, they prefer the lighter weight batting in blankets because it does not take so much time in the dryer. Makes sense to save electrical expenses. For those quilts with less dense batting, I use a walking foot and do a straight cross-hatch stitch for quilting. It turns out okay.
But, like I said earlier, if I am going to spend time doing some nice free motion quilting, it is Warm and Natural every time.
Thanks for asking and good luck.
#103
Junior Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Arizona
Posts: 215
Originally Posted by feffertim
I just started too and found that I really needed gloves because I kept licking my fingers so that I could grip the fabric. A lot of people also told me to have a glass of wine before I start, and they were right, it did help (except I made a bloody mary instead). My first attempts were dreadful, but I am slowly getting it.
#107
Originally Posted by ssgramma
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post