People often ask how to manage the bulk of a large bed size quilt on a home sewing machine. The one I am working on now - Big ZZ - is 95" x 95". I am still quilting the long vertical zigzags in the ditch. I started by rolling the quilt from one side to the center zigzag. I put it under the machine with the roll on the right and the unrolled portion to the left. I wish I'd taken a picture at that point. The roll seemed really big.
After I had quilted in the ditch on both sides of one zigzag, I removed the pins from that zigzag. Removing pins is a milestone for me. Makes me feel encouraged. Then I quilted the next vertical line and got to remove more pins. Another milestone. After I had quilted several more vertical lines and removed more pins, I started thinking the the roll was no longer so big. More encouragement.
This is how the quilt looks right now.
The first thing I ever read about packaging the quilt said to roll up both sides towards the center and to keep the package neat and compact as you worked. Every time you unrolled the right side, you were supposed to roll up the left side. I tried that, and it did not work for me. I spent too much time and effort trying to keep the package neat. My machine sits on top of a table so I don't have a large flat quilting surface. It seemed like the roll on the left kept jerking the package in the wrong direction and making my quilting eratic. Eventually I decided that it was better to keep the left side piled up so it was free to move around and less likely to get caught on the corner of my machine.
Notice the chair pushed up to the table in the lower left corner of the picture. That is a quilting fence. It keeps the quilt from falling off the table and jerking the package in the wrong direction. There are also 3 chairs pushed up to the table on the opposite side, but they are not visible in the picture.
The child in me is wondering how many more vertical lines I have to quilt before I reach the edge. It's an are-we-there-yet thing. The adult in me does not want to unroll the package to find out because it would require me to take it out of the machine and roll it up again. That is not my favorite part.
Back to quilting.
Saturday, May 14, 2011
Tuesday, May 10, 2011
Little zz and big zz
Zigzag, that is. Little zz (17" x 22") is quilted and bound. And very sweet.
Big zz (95" x 95") is pinned and ready to quilt. I would be less than honest if I didn't say that I am feeling...trepidation. It is so much larger than the projects I've worked on lately and very heavy with its 2000 pins. I chose to pin it every two inches to keep the fabric from shifiting and hopefully to keep it nice and square. This is how each 8" block is pinned.
The first thing I will do is (free-motion) quilt the long lines between the red/green zigzags and the lighter ones.
Even though I am feeling that trepidation, I am also excited. Right now I am going to prepare my machine and then get started.
This might take awhile...
Big zz (95" x 95") is pinned and ready to quilt. I would be less than honest if I didn't say that I am feeling...trepidation. It is so much larger than the projects I've worked on lately and very heavy with its 2000 pins. I chose to pin it every two inches to keep the fabric from shifiting and hopefully to keep it nice and square. This is how each 8" block is pinned.
The first thing I will do is (free-motion) quilt the long lines between the red/green zigzags and the lighter ones.
Even though I am feeling that trepidation, I am also excited. Right now I am going to prepare my machine and then get started.
This might take awhile...
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Saturday morning pin emergency
I have pinned the middle 40" length of a 95" x 95" quilt. The supply of pins is dwindling fast. Would my supply of 1300 one-inch curved pins be enough? The blocks are pinned very consistently with pins every 2". I did the math. I need 2052 pins. YIKES!
Time to visit my local quilt shop. Or shops. Whatever it takes.
Question: How much will the quilt weigh with over 2000 pins in it?
Time to visit my local quilt shop. Or shops. Whatever it takes.
Question: How much will the quilt weigh with over 2000 pins in it?
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