Good Morning and Happy Friday, my lovelies! It's been a busy week, but I managed to finish another appliqué block for my Stonefields quilt (pattern by Susan Smith). Behold Block #19, "The Oscillator."
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| Stonefields Block 19 "The Oscillator" |
I deliberately did not crop that photo because I wanted to show the difference between my hand stitched appliqué (the green and blue shapes at the bottom of the photo) and my machine stitched appliqué using the stitch I created with the Stitch Designer feature in my Bernina B990 sewing machine. The size and spacing of the stitches is nearly identical and with Aurifil 100 wt monofilament thread in my needle and Microquilter 100 wt polyester thread in my bobbin, the machine stitches really do look just like my hand stitches in YLI 100 wt silk thread, even under inspection with bright lights and reading glasses. I'm glad I took the time to customize that stitch on my machine so that I can switch between hand and machine stitching on the same project without any visible difference from one block to the next.
By the way, even using the sewing machine, this is "slow stitching" for sure. It's like "hand stitching with a machine needle," as Harriet Hargrave said in a workshop I took with her years ago. Very slow and deliberate stitching under bright lighting, one stitch at a time, constantly pivoting to keep those swing "bite" stitches perpendicular to the edge of the appliqué shape just as if I was hand stitching.
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| Size 60 Microtex Needles Leave Visible Holes on Liberty Lawn, But They Will Close Up |
The one thing that distracts me on this new block is that the needle holes are more visible on the machine stitched block than on my hand stitched blocks. I use the smallest size 60 Microtex machine needle for this method, but my size 12 Bohin hand applique needle is skinnier than any needle that could go in a sewing machine. The other difference is that the hand stitched block below used Tilda quilting cotton fabrics, and I used Liberty of London Tana Lawn prints for my Oscillator block. The Liberty Lawn is a much lighter weight fabric with a finer, tighter weave and I think the different fabric characteristics are why the needle holes are so apparent right now. I would expect my machine needle holes to be more pronounced with a batik fabric for the same reasons. The good news is that needle holes close up when you wet the fabric yarns around them, so I'm not worried about it (I promise!). It's just an observation. Every time I step into my studio, my Gemini brain splits into two personalities, The Artist and The Scientist, both asking "What would happen if I tried it THIS way?"


