Happy Easter and Passover to all those celebrating this weekend! I quilted this block over a week ago and wanted to jot down what I learned before I completely forget what I did. Doesn’t the green airplane look great with the swirly computerized quilting design in the background, but not crossing over the airplane itself?
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Q-Matic Masking Tool for Airplane Block |
Of course there are quilters out there who could freehand quilt those swirls and spirals just as beautifully as the computer, but sadly I am not one of them. ;-) Since a computerized long arm machine is like a talented but blind quilting assistant, it’s necessary to precisely program and “mask out” the areas where you do and do not want the design to be stitched by physically moving the machine along the patchwork seams and clicking at the points to map out boundaries that the computer can follow. This is a slow process, as I learned when I did it on this earlier block in the same quilt:
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Also Done Using Q-Matic Masking Tool |
Looks great, but I learned a lot about what NOT to do with that block! I set up that circles and spirals as a repeating design right across the block as though it was an edge to edge design going across a whole quilt, mapped out the tumbling blocks appliqué, and told the computer to just stitch it all at once. Then I watched in horror as the many many stitches went in to create beautifully round circles and spirals balls, but every time the machine encountered a seam line it stitched back and forth multiple times to travel to the next stitching line. There were jump stitches all over the place that I had to go back and trim and way too many places where the design stitched securing stitches. Not only is this a less tidy look than I hoped for on the back, but it took me a good hour after I’d finished stitching to clean it all up and trim all those jump stitches from both sides of the quilt. Very discouraging!