Day 72 – Little Hands and Fingers

Today’s design is going to be short, sweet, and no-nonsense because as soon as I finish we’re all headed to the North Carolina Zoo!

And what better stitch to feature on a zoo day than Little Hands and Fingers:

free motion quilting design little hands and feet

I recently realized how big my little boy’s hands have gotten. It seems like only yesterday he could barely wrap his fingers around my thumb!

Design Family – Edge to Edge. Little Hands is really worked in rows from one edge of your quilting space to the other. Because it’s so free form, however, it will probably still work in all areas of your quilt like stippling.

Difficulty LevelBeginner. This is really very easy, especially because you can extend the fingers to take up more or less space on your quilt as needed.

Directional Texture – Two Directions. When stitched in rows, this design definitely shows up with a horizontal or vertical texture. However, if you stitched this on the edges of your blocks in just one single row it will give off a flat, directionless texture more like stippling.

Suggestions for Use – Here’s my way cool idea: take the hand print of a whole bunch of kids (or one single kid with a long attention span) and applique or paint their hand shapes onto fabric squares.

Put these together with a thin sashing and stitch Little Hands and Fingers all around the edge of the sashing as though the hands are gripping the block.

Sounds cool to me!

Let’s go quilt,

Leah Day

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.

6 Responses

  1. Angie says:

    this is great that you are doing this. I will be reading daily for new ideas. Thanks!

  2. Donnamo says:

    Oh Leah….I so need your help! I tried freemotion quilting with metallic thread on my Christmas quilt and had trouble with the thread breaking. Any suggestions??????

  3. Julie says:

    Im not sure how I got to your blog but I have been looking in for the last couple of weeks and I have to say how much I appreciate what you are doing here. I am new to Machine Embroidery/quilting and while I am not a traditional quilter I can see lots of uses for the designs and ideas you are creating here. Not to mention what amazing practice it would be to work one of these every day which is what I really should be doing – note to self…. I don't think I can catch up with 72 days worth but I think I shall have to make a start! Thank you again, especially for the videos, it really helps to see the stitch worked in real time. I have you on my bloglinks so I look in every day.

  4. Leah Day says:

    Uggh! I feel your pain Donnamo!!!

    Metallic thread is notorious for thread breakage, especially when free motion quilting.

    I swore off metallic threads for a very long time until I found Yenmet Metallic thread. This is a fine metallic thread that works as smoothly as Isacord.

    Even with Yenmet, I will still occasionally get breakages. Try releasing some of your tension in the top and try using a metallic needle.

    However, if the needle change makes things worse, switch back to what you were originally using. Sometimes machines get finicky!

    I found Yenmet being sold at ericas.com so try there!

    Good luck,

    Leah Day

  5. manelson says:

    So adorable, this design. I like it and hope to use it soon on my nieces' quilts. Thx for the metallic thread tip, too!

  6. Megan says:

    Awww! My crappy free motion quilting (well, my complaining about it, really) inspired a design? *Sniff!* I'm so touched!

    Now I have to go try it and see if this new sewing table is gonna work for me!

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