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Bent knees are okay here…

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. Cindy says:

    What's interesting is that what you see as an imperfection, I don't. In other words, it's beautiful work!

  2. Hi Leah,

    Let me begin with "I ADORE YOU"!! You are the most ground quilter I know. It is okay to make mistakes, but very, very few of us accept that. (Said the one who spent three hours ripping out a row of stitching yesterday..me) Anyway, my son forwarded this to me a couple of days ago and yep, we live the try to be perfect life. No wonder my kids are so screwed up!! I've have neighbor, not close friends, but NEIGHBORS tell me I expect too much from people. WELL….you have no idea what I expect from MYSELF!!!! Okay, so I'll try to go with the 'bent knees are okay' theory, try…

    Anyway, here's a link, interesting reading, and keep up the great work gal, we all love you!!!

    http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.psychologytoday.com%2Fblog%2Fsideways-view%2F201402%2Fthe-curse-perfectionism&h=xAQHrnkEQ

    Hope it works….

  3. p.s. Where is that little stone bench/table? I love it.

  4. This is such an affirming post. Thank you. You are a teacher on many subjects, not just quilting.

  5. Leah Day says:

    Lol! It's a little bench in my front yard. We always take James's first and last day of school pictures here and I figured it'd be a nice spot to hop up for this photo.

  6. Jen Barnard says:

    I think you must have posted the wrong photo, there is nothing about that quilting that's a "total mess" to me! It's perfect.

  7. LJ says:

    Great thought and one I work hard on, too. I'm just now getting started on the Building Blocks QAL using the cheater cloth. I struggle with FMQ and knew this QAL was what I needed to FORCE myself to practice – lol. Today was the first time at the machine and I completed 3 blocks so I'm off to a good start now. I am working on doing a good job but I also am trying not to be too tough on myself, either. Ooooh, I'm feeling proud cuz they look pretty darn good – not perfect – and I'm not obsessing about the 'perfect'. 🙂

  8. Sue says:

    LOL. If you didn't over think things, we would not have the benefit of your wonderful work and your generous sharing. Thank you for being who you are!

  9. The wisdom of yoga is profound. I'm a teacher of yoga as well as a quilter, so I know how hard it is to WALK the talk…especially as I am a perfectionist, too. Not always a good thing… and I over-think everything, even when I'm posting comments!! It's reaffirming as a student to see that your teacher is human. Having said that, your quilting is jaw-dropping stunning, and your blog and FMQ website/videos truly inspiring. Thank you!
    Sandra
    email: ephdra(at)gmail(dot)com

  10. Luz2Quilt says:

    Leah – you always ground me. Thank you. You validated what I secretly know but have a hard time practicing. Ironically my daughter shared with me today her new mantra "Progress NOT Perfection" that I immediately adopted!

  11. Leisel says:

    I think your students are more likely to think "I can do this" if they see that even you have some imperfections, at least in your practice pieces, and it's still really impressive. 🙂

  12. Jennifer says:

    I, for one (or many!), am glad you didn't rip anything out. For it is so much more realistic to see "the experts" are human too. Mistakes and all. When the only access you have to someone, and that person chooses to show you the good pieces and the not-so-good pieces, it reassures you that "hey, maybe I CAN do that after all!"

  13. Since I have been doing your free motion course I find that I am more relaxed about errors and imperfections. I showed a friend my quilting of circles the other day and she said "Great – a man on a galloping horse would really appreciate that". So now I sit on a galloping horse whenever I quilt and get much more done with a lot less fuss.

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