Favorite Quilting Design Ocean Currents #214

I think I’ve stitched a new favorite quilting design and I’m calling it Ocean Currents! This flowing Foundational design is going to add gorgeous texture to our quilts and be perfect for stitching our landscape and art quilts up a notch. Let’s learn how to machine quilt this design together today.

Favorite Quilting Design Ocean Currents

I’m currently updating this quilting tutorial in 2023 and it’s interesting to see which quilting designs became the most popular. Ocean Currents remains one of my favorite quilting designs. It’s so easy and fast to stitch, you can quilt it nicely into almost any area of your quilt, and it always looks great.

See how to quilt Ocean Currents in this quilting video:

Inspiration – These very basic foundational designs are quickly becoming my favorite designs to create and quilt. Other similar designs include Desert Sand and Jagged Plain, but there are a million more variations just waiting to be made.

Difficulty LevelBeginner. This is a very simple design based entirely off a swirling foundational line. Make sure to leave plenty of space within your swirls so it’s easy to fill with echoes through the background.

Design Family – Foundational. To quilt this design start with a foundational line through your whole quilting space, then travel stitch and echo this line, filling the entire background and enhancing the swirling texture. This design will work best in the open, uncomplicated areas of your quilt.

Directional Texture – All directions. I love how much movement this design creates with only one single spiraling line and then rows and rows of echoes.

Suggestions for Use – Need a design to fill the water area of a landscape quilt? This would be perfect! Honestly this would look great no matter where you put it! I’m personally thinking about quilting up some new blue fabric with white thread to create a very interesting, non-traditional baby quilt.

Let’s go quilt,

Leah Day

LeahDay

Leah Day has been teaching online since 2009. She's the creator of the Free Motion Quilting Project, a blog filled with thousands of quilting tutorial videos. Leah has written several books including 365 Free Motion Quilting Designs, Explore Walking Foot Quilting with Leah Day, and Mally the Maker and the Queen in the Quilt.

14 Responses

  1. Just wanted to take a moment to counter balance the " nasty- gram" you obviously got earlier ( based on what you said in your post).. I am SO enjoying your energy for this project and your free motion work has prompted me to kick up the gameon my longarm free motion work. I love passing info about your site onto my students! Keep stitching!

    Maddie
    http://www.longarmvirgin.blogspot.com

  2. Ethne says:

    This is a lovely design – hope all went well at the guild talk you gave and that you let us know what their reaction was to the quilt/s

  3. Teresa says:

    I absolutely LOVE your blog and read it every day. Don't let one or two crazies ruin your "day." (pun intended) I like "Ocean currents" and will definitely be giving it a try.

  4. Barbi says:

    I discovered your blog in the last week and have enjoyed being able to look back at some of your designs…as for me…I'm a beginner!! Thanks for making it look so do-able!!

  5. Sue says:

    Wow! I really love that one and you just make it look so easy:)
    Thank you for sharing another design with us:)

  6. Kay Lynne says:

    I also want to counter balance with a "nice-gram". Keep up the great work! You have a wonderful talent and we're thankful that you're willing to share it with us 🙂 You're doing a great job!

  7. Anonymous says:

    I'm like Maddie, so here's a nice and warm comment: I love your work and thank you SO much for sharing your talents! and I especially like todays design.

  8. Chris says:

    Since my bestie turned me on to your site about 2 weeks ago, I am hooked and a total fan. You are pushing me to new areas that I have really been fearful of. I am taking a free motion workshop from Frieda Anderson next week, so between your blog, her workshop and the designs I purchased and downloaded from you, I should be attacking about 15 tops needing quilting. I inherited a stash in February with many unfinished projects and I am thinking they will be a good place to start to practice. Thank you, thank you, thank you. You are just what I have been looking for for over a year.

  9. debbie says:

    Been on a little family trip and catching up in "blogland". Great to see you are not letting the "negatives" control your very positive life :o)

  10. Nana says:

    I think a lot of us understand your feelings. My dad was an alcoholic, my mom sedated herself with food and telling her young children about their father. But, I knew I was loved. I want to say I enjoy your creativity. I sit down to micro-quilt and go blank (even though I have looked at many videos). You are so imazing! I am practicing the quilting on mini-quilts for Alzeimer's Art Quilt Initiative. Maybe I can make them some money and practice your wonderful designs. Thank you Leah, Susan

  11. sheanatorx says:

    I just wanted to share a variation that I did with this design which works really nicely in a sky. I love echo quilting, but sometimes it lacks definition. So rather than echoing in all the inside spaces, I stippled small areas, about an inch wide by a few inches long. It really makes the echoed lines and swirls pop out!
    I'll post a photo on Flikr when it's finished.
    Thanks a lot for your inspiring work!

  12. blg2240 says:

    Absolutely love this design. I'm working on a king size quilt and believe I'll use this beautiful design. Thank you for sharing.

  13. Still love looking at your quilt designs. I have your book and whenever I want to use one of your designs I come back to your videos to give me the 'edge' on quilting it. I was excited to see you mention the Rutherford Quilt Guild. I remember your presentation to us well, you were then and still are a fabulous inspiration

  14. Rt Sears says:

    This most Gorgeous quilting pattern brought to mind an old question on mine:
    What about quilting with a double needle set-up? I daydream of being able to then easily, in ONE PASS, easily being able to quilt on BOTH sides of a seam at the same time.
    I love the resulting sturdiness of quilting on both sides of seams. And I’ve long been curious that no one mentions double needle usage for quilting??
    Thank you, again & again, for posting such lovely patterns for actually quilting, not just for piecing!!

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