Make Quilting Easier

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.

3 Responses

  1. shilsenbeck says:

    Leah — all great suggestions. I think these are important set-ups even for modest lap-size or wall quilts. I have a small Horn of America cabinet that my Janome sits down in. The cabinet has a left side extension (table top flips open) and a back extension that flips up. When all are open, that leaves a big square hole in the far left corner. Worse yet, the edges are sharp, which really catches the fabric. What an astoundingly poorly thought out design. I have addressed this by adding on an additional fold-out on the back extension (with an adjustable support leg) that fills the gap. The whole thing is pushed into a corner, as you describe, to form a barrier on two sides and prevent the quilt from falling off the table. I also topped the entire surface with what amounts to an industrial strength super-slider — teflon on the top, fiber-glass fibers in the middle and sticky silicon on the bottom. It makes for a great work space.

    Keep the great advice coming …

  2. Laura Chaney says:

    Having the right equipment definitely helps. I also use the slider that you've recommended previously and love it.

  3. CaroleM says:

    So I've done all this but what I found at the end of the day is that the throat of my machine is just too small. I tried doing a large quilt but physically there was too much bulk whe working in the centre. So I won't do a king sized quilt again for a while. Or I need to learn hand quilting.

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