Question Thursday #17

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.

12 Responses

  1. quiltfool says:

    Hey, Leah. One machine manufacturer used a spool of thread in the bobbin. There is an Eldredge "two-spool" sewing machine that does this. The bobbin spool sits in a holder under the machine right where the bobbin would be and winds off as you sew. The bobbin winder is long enough to accomodate the spool instead of a traditional narrow bobbin. I've seen one on ebay and didn't buy it. I haven't seen another, anywhere, in two years. One day, I will find one, tho. Lane

  2. Enjoyed the pic of the Hawaiian inspired block, and also the talk about "wholecloth" quilts. I was hoping you would have a better solution for the thread breaks, though. That is exactly what I have been doing myself. 🙂 Love you blog, BTW, it is my fave read lately. Have a super day!

  3. Thank you Leah ~ Very helpful information! I really appreciate your taking time for us to help us along in our quilting journey! Looking forward to doing our quilt alongs again~
    Godspeed,
    mary

  4. Florence says:

    thank you leah,,,,being a crochet and knitter, you would think that i would have thought of doing this,,,but it never entered my mind,,,,,,tks for being an inspiration, and your wonderful teachings,,,,:))

  5. Hi Leah — I've read that Karen McTavish recommends using batiste fabric for wholecloth quilts and wondered if you have ever used something that lightweight? I've seen it at fabric.com at a 60" width. Also, any thoughts on using linen, which also seems to come in widths greater than the usual 42-44 inches.

  6. thank you for the instruction on 'hiding' the broken thread. that is a much better idea than mine which is to sew over it form a stich back, cut it off and move on! I will be trying your method.

  7. Pat says:

    What an awesome explanation for thread breaking! Thank you!

  8. Molly says:

    what about a high quality cotton sheet for a wholecloth quilt? I have used them for my quilt backs before and if you wash them and then trim off all the sewn edges they work great- I haven't had any issues. I imagine they would work fine for the front too- I always look for 100% cotton in a 300+ thread count and always make sure I can feel them and look through them before buying, which at most nice linen stores isn't a problem. Just a thought.

  9. Leah Day says:

    Lots of great questions about wholecloth fabric! Let's see if I can answer a few here:

    Molly – Personally, I think a high quality bed sheet is just fine. I once asked an older quilter about it and she said the higher thread count would be a problem??? I think she was coming from a hand quilting perspective, but I think it would be a great option.

    Laura – Karen uses batiste for shadow trapunto where the batting intentionally shows through the quilt. Personally I didn't like the flimsy nature of this fabric and had trouble marking it and keeping everything from going wonky, so I prefer organza, and I don't mark the organza, I mark the shadow fabric (you'll need to check the Winter Wonderland Pattern for more info on that).

    When it comes to using different fabrics, I've created wholecloths using both silk crepe and crepe back satin. Both weren't much fun because the fabric just wanted to slide and slither away from me.

    If you feel like a challenge though, there's really a whole world of fabrics to play with! Just jump in and have fun figuring out what works best for you!

    Cheers,

    Leah

  10. Linda says:

    "If only machine manufactuers would figure out a way of making machines take a spool of thread in the bobbin as well as the top so we wouldn't run out of bobbins anymore!"
    Leah, you are a genius. This thought had never occurred to me until I read that line in your post. Why CAN'T they do this? I think it can be done. I don't know why I think this, but I do. If enough of us launch a campaign toward the sewing machine manufacturers, maybe they WILL do it!!!

  11. flavia says:

    ciao Leah! come si fa ad avere regolarità e lunghezza dei punti sempre uguali????
    Flavia

  12. Judith Gale says:

    Very useful info

Leave a Reply to Can't Stop Stitchin Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *