Quilting Words on a Quilt – Graffiti Art #245

I’ve received a lot of questions about how to go about machine quilting words on a quilt. I’m ready to go with a new quilting tutorial and I’m calling this design Graffiti Art. Of course in classic fashion, the first word I decide to stitch on a quilt sandwich is misspelled!

Quilting Words on a Quilt

Nope, I’m not the best at spelling and I learned a very important lesson while quilting this sample: it really helps to mark the word (and spell check) before quilting it!

I also played around with curving the lines so it looked like cursive writing, but the textures looked so different from the straight lines and sharp angles of Graffiti Art that they really needed to be two different designs. So Graffiti Art Curved is another quilting tutorial you’ll need to check out too.

Inspiration – When creating this design, I wanted a way to write words on a quilt, but not have them too tiny and small to read, or too big and showy that they overwhelm the design.

Stitching the words as a foundation for echo quilting seemed the best balance. By stitching the words first, then echo quilting, you can still definitely read the words on the quilt, but they are not too obvious.

Difficulty Level – Advanced. Writing the words in straight lines and sharp angles is actually harder than writing in cursive because you need to do a little more thinking about spacing the words and shaping them. As I said before, this is one design that it doesn’t hurt to cheat and mark on your quilt first!

Design Family – Foundational. This design is formed by first quilting the words, then echo quilting the whole phrase to fill up your quilting space. If you want your words to stand out a bit more, try stitching them twice (or with a different colored thread), then echo quilting with a single line. The extra thread play will darken the lines that form the words and they will be slightly easier to read through all the echo quilting.

Directional Texture – All Directions. The texture of the design is really created by the words themselves, so the bigger and more interesting the letters, the more interesting the texture will be!

Suggestions for Use – There are many beautiful words to use on your quilts and so many loving, eternal messages you can leave for your loved ones. Use Graffiti Art to make your quilts more personal and add your name, date, who the quilt was made for, and anything else you can think of. In 100 years, your family or friends will be so happy they know who their treasured quilt came from.

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.

3 Responses

  1. Teresa says:

    Hi Leah, your incorporation of words in your Sinkhole quilt is a wonderful idea. It made me think of a quilt made by one of the members of my guild. She is Jill Buckley and she's a multimedia artist who quilts. If you check out her blog at http://thequiltrat.blogspot.com/
    and look up her "Off the Wall" quilt. It's a show winner. And it's beautiful. If you check the process of how the quilt was designed, it uses the phrase "Graffiti, is it vandalism or is it art?" as a basis of the design. She then echoed it and mirrored it until it became the amazing piece of art that it is. I hope you enjoy it, and can use it for inspiration in your endeavor.

  2. Jenny says:

    Love this idea; however, I'm having a hard time seeing the words in the stitching. Would denser stitching help me? Do you plan to post more pictures of Sinkhole so that we can see this stitch in use?

  3. Oferal Rever says:

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