So no, I'm not quilting any feathers, marked OR freehand, because my trial feather quilting went very badly. Apparently even following along marked feathers with a longarm quilting machine is a talent that eludes me. I'm in a "what-was-I-thinking-buying-this-machine" funk these past few days. It's VERY DISCOURAGING to have worked so hard to match up all of my triangle points and piece everything so precisely, only to feel like my quilting looks like ugly scribbles all over everything. Here is the view from under the longarm frame, looking up at the bottom of this quilt that has been in progress for far too long. The lights on my quilting frame are shining down through the needle holes
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Dogs'-Eye View, From Under the Frame |
Lesson One: Changing thread colors to match all of my quilt fabrics is ridiculous. Like, REALLY ridiculous. It is taking FOREVER, not like switching thread colors when you're hand quilting and you're knotting off individual 18" strands of thread anyway. Each new thread color requires changing the bobbin, either to a different color prewound or winding my own new bobbin. Then I have to check the tension. And I'm having to constantly advance the quilt back and forth, back and forth, top to bottom, as I go through and quilt all the triangles that get ivory thread, then all the triangles that get gold thread, then all the ones that get pink thread... A truly obnoxious amount of additional time and effort, not worth it AT ALL on this quilt. This is why professional longarm quilters typically have an upcharge for multiple thread colors on the same quilt.
Lesson Two: It is better to choose a lighter thread color to go with a multicolor print than it is to choose a darker thread color. Dark thread against lighter areas of the print look like ugly, distracting scribbles:
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Ugly Scribble Quilting. Yuck! Yuck! |
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Lighter Thread Color: MUCH Better! |
Whenever I can work in my rulers for straight lines, it's looking pretty good because even if I'm not exactly on the printed stripe 100% of the time, at least my straight lines look pretty straight when they're sewn against a straight edge:
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Totally Boring, Quilting Along Stripes |
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Clam Shells With Gadget Girls Ruler: Meh. |
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Marking Lines With Stencil, Then Quilting With Ruler |
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Quilting Along Marked Lines With My Ruler |
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Washing the Marks Away After Quilting |
Lesson Four: I think I am quilting this quilt backwards. It feels like I'm driving down the Interstate in reverse. I'm struggling to come up with different free motion or ruler designs that don't compete with the print fabrics, yet you can't really see the quilting designs on the prints anyway. I should have done those straight radiating lines on the print fabrics, and used the solid color triangles to showcase all of these different free motion quilting designs.
Lesson Five: If you are a beginner, do not make the exact same quilt that a zillion other quilters are making. A major buzzkill of making a commercial quilt pattern with the same fabrics used by the designer is that social media is FULL of pictures of other people's quilts that look just like mine, except that their quilts are enhanced by GORGEOUS professional longarm quilting. I know, I know -- "Comparison is the thief of joy," but I just had to show you the beautiful Tabby Mountain quilt that Kim Stotsenberg posted on Facebook yesterday:
This Is What an Experienced Longarm Quilter Can Do With the Tabby Mountain Quilt |
So I went to Kim's web site, Sew-n-Sew Quilting, and learned that Kim has been quilting and teaching quilting for nearly 30 years (I made my first quilt in 2002), she has been longarm quilting professionally for nearly 20 years (I have had my longarm machine for barely a year and this is a hobby for me, just a few hours a week here and there), and she has made so many quilts that she can't count them all. This is only my second quilt on my longarm machine, for Pete's sake, so I have no business comparing my quilting to hers!
Yet there's that still, small voice of doubt in my mind, doing wicked math problems and telling me that I would be better off hiring someone like Kim to quilt all of my quilt tops for me, considering I only finish maybe one quilt per year anyway and if we divide the cost of the longarm machine by the number of quilts I'm quilting it ends up being much MORE expensive to ruin my quilts with my inexperienced quilt scribbling than it would be to hire a really good quilter like Kim to quilt them beautifully for me...
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"Marshal Ney at Retreat in Russia" by Adolphe Yvon, 1856 |
Well, be that as it may, my troops and I are already in Russia so we're just going to have to make the best of things. Maybe I'm just in a grand funk and need to get over myself already and just hunker down. Wasn't it Thomas Edison who said that he learned hundreds of ways NOT to make a lightbulb before he finally figured out how to make a lightbulb that actually worked? So, back to my lessons learned:
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Quilting Inspired By Kim's Tabby Mountain Quilt |
Lesson Seven: This is my top secret weapon in the sewing room, you guys, and I'm sharing it with all of you out there who loved me enough to keep reading through my drivel and self-pity:
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See Where I Careened Off the Red Fabric, Onto the Dark Blue? |
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Oh, Yeah? WHAT Garbage Can?!!! |
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My Secret Weapon: Sakura Pigma Micron 05 Mistake Erasers |
I also use these Pigma pens in machine embroidery, for those times when I get little dots of white bobbin thread showing on top of the embroidery, or if the outline stitching is slightly misaligned or something like that. Yet, for all the times these Pigma pens have saved my projects, I am still using that first pack of markers that I bought at least seven years ago. And I know I've had them that long because I remember using them to fix oopses on my first free-motion quilt that I did on my domestic Bernina machine, the Very Hungry Caterpillar quilt I made for my son Anders' second grade teacher. (Anders is finishing up his freshman year of high school now). So I've been using these markers for seven years, and none of them has dried up yet. I would say they are pretty long lasting (unlike the purple and blue disappearing markers that seem to die within minutes of opening them)!
So... Do YOU have any Top Secret Weapons in your sewing room that you'd like to share with me? Any tips or tricks I should know to shorten my Longarm Learning Curve? If so, please share in the comments! It's midnight now, and I'm singing a duet in church tomorrow so I need to go to bed RIGHT NOW. But I'm planning to spend most of my Mother's Day in my studio, finishing up this quilt. My husband reminded me that this quilt, like all of my quilts, is going to look SO much better, and my wobbles and oopses will be SO much harder to spot, once the quilt is bound and washed and crinkles up a bit. Momma needs a win...
Happy Mothers' Day to all of you mothers and grandmothers out there!