Quilt Along #8 – Quilting a Real Quilt

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. Mike Pearson says:

    I had all of those problems on my last quilt. Busy patterns, matching thread, bulky quilt… I could have practically written this post!!! But, I don't think I would have changed any of it. I found the best solution was very bright lighting so that you can see the stitching. Anyway, love the story about Pepper and I bet you are correct regarding the stippling on this one, that it was the best quilting option. I did not do the quilt along this week, but I have been blogging. Stop by for a visit: http://amateurquilter.blogspot.com/

  2. Chris says:

    The one thing that I struggle with on every quilt is the thread color. Right now I have a high contrast black and white quilt in my machine. I'm just now finishing up the stabilizing grid and getting ready to fill in with free motion. I feel almost paralyzed because I don't know what color thread to use! Black will look too harsh on the white areas. Likewise, white will look dopey on the black areas. I think charcoal gray might work, but it's such a struggle!

  3. Missy Shay says:

    I aappreciate this post! I am trying to quilt a king sized quilt in my home machine. The only other thing I have quilted is a wallhanging, in the ditch. This one is also in the ditch just because I did not have time to practice stippling before quilting it (I only have a week to get it quilted). We did hand stitch the very center of it though, so that has helped. I'm going to share this the blog post with my next update on my blog!

  4. Barb S says:

    It was great to watch you quilting close up. I would like to have also seen the "big picture" – how the quilt was positioned on the table, how you manuvered the bulk of the quilt as you sewed. Maybe we could see this happen in another video?

  5. kupton52 says:

    Hi Leah….thanks again for such an informative and inspirational post. It's nice to see a high profile person (yes, YOU)…admitting they make mistakes! I'm still obsessing over pressing seams open…even though I know the top lies flatter and seams press truer. When you quilt in the ditch with an opened seam do you actually quilt in the seamline where the seam stitches are slightly exposed or do you stitch slightly to one side of the seam?

  6. ANudge says:

    I am starting to press seams open when several seams meet at a spot – as in dresden plate, lone star, etc. It helps the spots not be so lumpy and I find the size is what it's suppost to be.

    As for QAYG, I've been doing these since 2008 and find it's a great way to get a big quilt quilted. I, too, think it's a trade off as to time, especially my last one(which I will post about tomorrow). For charity quilts, I've now found a QAYG way that give me a 36" square or 36 x 42" quilt in about 4 hours.

    Thanks for the confidence and tips, Leah, to tackle a large quilt on my DSM. I'm right now quilting one 64 x 71 and feeling successful with all you've taught us.

  7. Pierro says:

    Rosemary here 🙂
    You are amazing. I am far behind you but learning so much with each video and blog entry you make.
    Thank you for all of your encouragement

  8. cmg1952 says:

    I am new to free motion quilting. Have sewed tons of garments all my life and the last few years have enjoyed piecing quilts. I had always just stitched int he ditch and outline quilted all of my small quilts. I searched on the internet for days watching videos on how to free motion quilt–specifically stippling–and yours is by far the most informative and honest one. I love your relaxed, non-judgemental style. I have since took a yard and a half of fabric and just sandwiched it–and stippled the whole thing!!! It turned out awesome!! I loved doing it and will definitely keep at it. Thanks again for all the help. I did order some supplies from you and they came in the mail today. Yippee!!! I am ready to go again on another quilt.

  9. Daryl says:

    Hi Leah,
    I can certainly top your 4-year old UFO…how about a 40+ year old one! My mother hand pieced a twin size Grandmother's Flower Garden quilt that was intended for my younger sister (when she was a teenager. When the top was done and mom started to hand quilt it, my sister changed her mind and wanted a Biscuit Puff quilt. Mom made her the Biscuit puff quilt. The Grandmother's Flower Garden quilt sat unfinished for years. Several years ago Mom gave that quilt to me to finish. It sat in my UFO pile for close to 10 years. I decided to machine quilt it as she used a poly batting that was a bit too puffy to hand quilt and I knew it would never get quilted if I hand quilted it. So I too did a meandering quilt stitch like you showed on your video only my meandering was closer together. All was going well at first, but then I ended up in a spot where it puckered and I mean really puckered so bad that the fabric had to fold over on itself. Well 1/3 of the quilt was quilted and I was NOT going to rip out everything. So I had to quilt the puckers in. I still have at least 1/3 left to quilt and I feel like this will happen again. I will wash it and hopefully the whole quilt will pucker so much that you won't notice the really puckery area. If I hadn't quilted this quilt it would still be a UFO. How could I have avoided the puckers? I started from the middle of the quilt and quilted out, but then the puckers occurred when I was quilting where 2 areas of quilting came together and that's where the major puckers where that I couldn't flatten it out. I don't know if I was doing something wrong? Sometimes I find moving the quilt around so much when it's a large quilt causes things to shift non matter how much I pin. I wonder if it is better to straight stitch vertically nad horizontally in a few places first before doing free motion? Do you ever do that? Or do you always just free motion only? Sometimes my quilts come out perfectly and other times you'd think I had never quilted before. Makes me wonder what I do right and wrong? If I knew I would always keep those things in mind.
    Love all the help you give on your blog and I really appreciate all your videos. Thanks Leah.

  10. Liz says:

    Thanks for the awesome video, Leah! I liked the tip on how to knot off the end of the thread when the bobbin runs out and to avoid quilting over the area where 4 points meet. Great information!!

  11. Anne says:

    Leah, I've just gone back to what you wrote last week about batting, as I need to buy some – ths project has used all mine! I see that Quilters Dream comes in different thicknesses – which do you use,do you switch between them and if so, how do you decide which is the most apropriate for a particular quilt?
    Thankyou for your answers to my questions this week, especially the info re the open-toed even-feed foot for the 7700: it's on my shopping list for when I come to the States in May!

  12. Thank you for sharing your wealth of knowledge, Leah! You have been such and inspiration! Watching your YouTube videos was just the springboard I needed to build the confidence needed to get started quilting! I have made two pieced quilts so far, and am improving! I am feeling a great deal more comfortable with the stipple, and much more consistent. I am practicing some of the other patterns, but having more fun than success so far.
    Thank you so much for enriching my "me time"!
    I am adding my blogspot link per your constant insistence on your videos! The two pieced quilts can be viewed there.
    God bless you and your family!
    Liz Steele
    Thesassyredhead3.blogspot.com

  13. This is good to know as I am just about to finish Magic Tiles using batiks and am quite excited to do some of your quilting techniques. Up until now I have just done wavey lines – and discovered that it was my favourite part of making a quilt, and not the piecing which I find most everyone else enjoys. Could not understand why people kept talking about sending their quilts to someone with a "long-arm" when this part was the most fun!

    The hard part is trying to decide which beginner designs to choose to work with the batiks. And am very glad to read about contrasting thread as I'll be purchasing that next week.

    As a newbie, I am so glad I found you on the net, you're my new guru.

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