Question Thursday #25

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. Rosie1925 says:

    Practice: Hot pads for the kitchen. Placemats. Tablecloths. Doll quilts for children. Blankets for homeless/women's shelters. Lap quilts for the poor elderly. Electronic/appliance covers. Stack'em up and sew a button through for a strange pin cushion. Coasters. Mug rugs.

  2. I thought "prewounds, how convenient" and bought lots. Brand name, great thread, but guess what – tension issues because the tension seems to change so much from the beginning to the end of the bobbin! So I end up winding my prewounds off onto my metal bobbins. The thread is not the problem in – it's just the winding!

  3. Great advice as always Leah! Tagging onto your advice to "practice" on a real quilt, being a new FMQ'er like so many I find it hard to start a new design on a quilt I've spent days piecing, so my version of a "real" quilt is a practice piece of approximately 15×24 inches or thereabouts, that I'll do my warm-up practices on, then bind it up and donate it to a local animal shelter for their cat cages. Something to practice on, something real, and a charity quilt to boot! If I find the fabric for 25 cents at a yard sale, so much the better!

  4. Malini says:

    How I practice? Since there were couple of people worried about wasting fabric with practice quilt/sandwich. You could buy fabric when it goes on sale or clearance and use them to make your practice quilts and probably donate them to local charity or use it at home. Or use as playmats for your kids and use it when you go out for picnic. For myself I feel this a better alternative for quilting on a high profile quilt. And the pressure if off. At the same time I'm getting my practice done and also making use of the quilt I made.

  5. Amanda says:

    I love your advice about just trying a design on a real quilt. I just got my longarm and kept getting bored while practicing, so I would switch from one design to another too quickly. I just did my first FMQ on a baby quilt and while it wasn't great, I felt a huge sense of accomplishment.

  6. Karin says:

    I get around the 'wastage' of fabric by taking on the challenge of doing it on an actual quilt whenever I can. In order to overcome the common 'fear' factor, I then sometimes declare the quilt a practice quilt, hence it does not matter if it has mistakes in it (when in reality it will become a real quilt). I know this sounds slightly mental, however this little self talk works for me.

  7. Leah
    Thank you for answering my question. I am quilting on a real quilt…..it's not pretty but my cats won't care. I find that your blog and comments make my brain go off in all kinds of directions …I like the idea of shelter blankets too.
    I thought I would never be able to do FMQ but I find my fear is decreasing and my skill increasing. Keep leading and I will keep following

    Donna

  8. jacob says:

    Oh yes…for practice I always used real quilts…but they were small, like 2 foot square give or take a little. I learned applique, FMQ, binding, I learned all of it on practice quilts and then donated them all to the local animal shelter….I call them "Table Scraps", and the dogs and cats couldn't care less how they look!

  9. I practice on a good size quilt sandwich 15inx15in. I plan to put all of these in a QAYGQ(per your advise). I have been pretty careful while quilting so it will look good when it's all together. But my thinking is, if one looks really bad, I'm only scrapping a 15in square.I'm getting quite a collection and I'd say I'm half way there for a quilt:)

  10. Anonymous says:

    Wow~tons of great info! Making sure the machine is lint free is so critical! Some machines are way more finicky about this than others (ex:Berninas). Lint will "eat up" the lube oil resulting on parts riding on parts which will result in expensive service visits in the future!!!!

  11. I must admit that I have an issue with "wasting" fabric to practice machine quilting. To be honest, I have been making mug rugs, place mats, table runner/toppers, and small wall quilts for my home and practicing on those. I also have a couple larger quilts (one lap size, one king size) that are for my bed only and I practicing on those (no I am not done quilting them yet). I just figured they are mine, I am learning. I mean how many people am I going to bring into my bedroom when they visit? Ummmm….Next to none.

    I like mug rugs and place mats because they are really small. I can make a set of place mats and quilt in a different design on each. Four place mats, equal four designs practiced.

    When I am making something for someone else, I stick with the designs that I am already familiar with. If it is a gift from me to them, I might practice a design, if it to be purchased, well then it will be a design I can do.

    Walmart has clearance fabric that I use to make practice squared with. at a $1.50 per yard not hard to swallow. As for that batting. I will use my warm and natural, but I use the batting fuse to fuse my little pieces together that I wouldn't use for something else.

  12. Mendy Kay says:

    Leah I love your posts! You could also work with a friend who doesn't FMQ. Maybe they have projects you could quilt. Or there are many sewers that buy that prequilted stuff for making totes or whatever. There is a limited selection of this so you could quilt some cute fabrics together that they bought and will be thrilled with! Soooo much better than the cheap pre-quilted stuff.

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