Satin Stitching Alternatives

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. Anonymous says:

    These posts about applique and particularly this one has been very helpful to me! I have always done patchwork and am new to applique but have been practicing at machine appliqueing some bunnies in the 1930s style with a buttonhole stitch and I've been wondering just how much I should be concerned about possibly fraying of the edges between the stitches.I feel confident to proceed now,thank you!

  2. This has given me the idea (and permission 🙂 ) to do 3 different finishes on my butterflies! I did 4 with the satin stitch…now I'll use a couple of different satin type stitches from my machine. NICE!!

  3. I am also planning to applique my butterflies in various ways. I like raw edges a lot.

  4. Laikabear says:

    Which machine are you using for this now that you have the Juki? No satin stitch on that one! 🙂

  5. Suzanne says:

    You mentioned using a stabilizer prior to satin stitching or perhaps any edge stitching or quilting. What would you recommend for stabilizer for the piece in addition to the Steam a Seam 2 Light for the butterflies?

  6. I mostly use the blanket stitch on my appliqué. Depending on the "feel" of the quilt, sometimes I use black only and sometimes I match the fabric. The type of thread and size of stitch also varies with the style of the quilt. The look is just as "finished" as the satin stitch, but you don't use as much thread and I just like it.

  7. Vivian says:

    Did you still use stabilizer with the decorative stitch? Did you use white thread in the bobbin?

  8. gailliemac says:

    Great inspiration. I am about to start a quilt for my grand daughter and love the idea of using the star embroidery stitch instead of satin. Love it.

  9. Karen Salemi says:

    I'm allergic to satin stitch for all the reasons you mention–takes more time; requires lots of extra thread; and you need stabilize. If I want to minimize fraying I sometimes use a narrower zigzag stitch with no stabilizer (as long as it's not puckering). I prefer the look of raw edge applique to that of inexpert satin stitch and I don't have the patience to become expert at satin stitch. Thanks for helping to "legitimize" raw edge.

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