Question Thursday #19

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.

4 Responses

  1. Jessim says:

    You mentioned bad habits with water soluble thread. When I first started using it I was carefully pulling up my threads and cutting them when necessary to go to new areas, and then realized there was no reason I couldn't just carry the loose thread across the quilt and start sewing again. So much easier!

    I did laugh though- it came with a "not for swimsuits" warning. Really, it seems like it shouldn't be for ANY garments.

  2. Janet O. says:

    I recently had the waviness issue on two table runners I made. I was so frustrated–I had already made several and not had the problem. What was different? I had used a new type of batting, but couldn't see how that would have been the problem. Then the light went on. I had used the water soluble blue marking pen to mark the quilting motifs on the centers of these runners. Though I know you are supposed to "submerge" to remove the marks, I typically spray heavily or use a very wet cloth and saturate the area. But usually the markings have been evenly dispersed over the entire piece that I am quilting. On these runners I had used no marking, or a different type of marker around the outer layers. The "wet" parts in the middle had shrunk slightly upon drying, leaving the outer edges longer and wavy. I submerged the entire piece, pinned it out straight on my carpeted floor to dry (with an old towel under it), and the waviness is gone!

  3. Lisa says:

    Thank you very much for the excellent suggestions!

  4. I ordered your 365 book from Amazon and just received it today…what a wonderful resource! I will still refer back to your posts but as a tactile person, I so will enjoy taking this to my machine! Thanks so much for sharing this all with us 🙂

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