Piecing on the Janome HD 1000

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.

13 Responses

  1. ~Michelle~ says:

    maybe you could keep a running list of high/low shank machines somewhere on your website? (ie, once you've identified it)

  2. Leah Day says:

    Hi Michelle – I'm working on an area of my website to house all the sewing machine reviews. If I can find the information, or if the reviewer knew what the machine was, then that information will be posted with each review. It's a lot to get together and is requiring a lot of research which is why it's taking forever to get started!

    Once it's up it will be much easier to update with more reviews and opinions of more quilters who own each machine. I'm hoping this will help everyone find really good machines for less money and to find feet that work properly too!

    Cheers,

    Leah

  3. Nina Paley says:

    I really love your championship of affordable tools. Sewing machines are like other art supplies: they make some difference, but the real difference lies in the abilities of the artist, not the tools. Very high prices on art tools are a kind of juju – learning is scary, buying is easy, so why not pretend the value lies in the price? I also loved your jab at your college education (I feel the same way!). One learns to be an artist by making art, and that costs more time and attention than money.

    If I had the space, I'd explore free motion quilting on a treadle machine. These are available used at low prices, and are standard in countries where electricity is unreliable, like India. All-mechanical, no electric bills, and last forever – seems like the ultimate affordable tool, and a great stage for the artist's skill. Will you be reviewing a treadle machine?

  4. Unrelated to this post, but I just saw your blog included in the Quilter's Home magazine list of 55 best blogs – Congrats!

  5. JoaninMS says:

    I have a Brother SE 400. It has the multi position needle, a good quilting foot, low shank, and the needle up or down setting. For less than $400 I really like it. Jona in MS

  6. Nina-Marie says:

    Leah – you are too funny when you get a roll about something – LOVE IT! I just want to say something that I love about my Janome – all the feet from my Elna quilter's dream (a 13 yr old machine) fit my Horizon. I've never "broken" a foot – but my cat has "lost" a foot on me! So its nice to know that I can just go to my other machine and grab a fav foot.

    Thanks so much for posting about your dealer's behavior – Quilters really need to start empowering themselves against salespeople like these! Geesh!! Why can't quilting and sewing be all warm and fuzzy???

  7. DianeY says:

    I'm the owner of an older Bernina with a pretty good supply of feet that came with the machine, many of which I really don't use. When I took up quilting a few years ago, I found I was missing a few that would make quilting easier, although luckily I did have a walking foot. After buying a genuine free motion foot, I started looking at generics and bought a few of them from a dealer on ebay. They look exactly the same & perform perfectly in my estimation. So I agree, go for it at about 1/4 of the cost.

  8. jybquilter says:

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge of FMQ. I've learned soooo much from you and your site. I have been a Janome user for a long time and hated their quarter inch foot almost right away. I've been using the Little Foot with success, but now I want to try your generic foot. I didn't know such a foot was out there. I guess we're never too old to learn. As a footnote, can you post more sometime about the bobbin washers? I don't understand the thoery behind their use.

  9. Hi;
    Thanks for such a complete and enjoyable post on generic feet. I'm digging into quilting sewing machines, and was pleased to learn that you don't always have to buy feet from the same manufacturer and the machine.

    cheers,
    JD
    http://quiltingmachinesforsale.com

  10. paulette says:

    Great post with lots of good info!! Thanks for sharing!
    Paulette

  11. Constance says:

    Have you used the generic piecing foot on your Horizon? Does it work well? I'm assuming the snap on foot would fit?

    Thanks for all your great info!

  12. Leah Day says:

    Constance – Yep, the snap on foot works great on the Horizon. I actually prefer it to the other foot I was using because it's easier to see.

    Cheers,

    Leah

  13. Leah, how did you like the 1000 for free motion quilting? Would love to hear how it stacks up against the Horizon in that department.

    Thanks for taking the time to do your wonderful reviews!

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