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5 Tips on Travel Stitching

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.

9 Responses

  1. Jane says:

    Thanks for a great, informative post!

  2. Austin1100 says:

    Can't wait for your tips on echoing. I tried to keep my lines even today but it was a real mess. Looking forward to hearing how the pros do it 🙂

  3. Cheryl says:

    This is a fabulous post! So many people think they can't cross the lines of their stitching! Thanks for this!

  4. Kay Lynne says:

    Great tips on traveling! I also think that practice makes perfect!

  5. Linda says:

    Leah, this whole blog project is just awesome!!! And I hope you will stick to your guns and keep taking time off whenever you feel you need it. (I say this PARTLY out of selfishness, because I don't want you to get too tired to keep it going, lol!)

  6. Mishka says:

    This is definitely something I'm struggling with. I need to SLOW down. I'm stitching too fast, at a frenzied pace and that's causing me problems. I've got a baby quilt that I've marked my lines on, usually I just free motion it. This will be a great exercise in slowing down, hitting the lines accurately and attempting to maintain a consistent stitch length. Of course, I haven't made life any easier and am using a contrasting variegated thread. I need to step out of my comfort zone!

    I really appreciate these words of yours:

    In essence – ripping out the bad stitches will only ever make you good at ripping! Keep quilting in order to get good at travel stitching

    Thanks!
    Michele

  7. Anonymous says:

    I like yor work, it is beautiful.I need to do some interesting
    Josefina
    tijerasycuchara.wordpress.com

  8. Roberta Jehn says:

    I could never do stippling. I always backed myself into a corner, and hated it. I learned to thread paint on appliques applied to garmets before I tried quilting. The precise 1/4 seam was the hardest for me. I had fun trying a lot of your designs on squares assembled into a baby quilt. Lot of mistakes, but not seem by the recipient. I told myself "I don't do ripping" as I stitched several placemats. No one sees the mistakes expecially when plates cover them. A fun way to practice and have a finished useable project instead of quilted scraps. Even those become coasters. I am looking forward to trying harder designs. Keep up your great inspirational designs. your site is the first I look at on my computer every day.

  9. hemidancer64 says:

    I will admit it – I totally suck at travel stitching. But you've given me the inspiration to keep on trying! Thanks, Leah!

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