Tuesday, May 3, 2011

FMQ Challenge Day 12 of 14 - Diane Guadynski tips


Oh, my!  The third batting choice with the same threads (YLI clear nylon on top, Mettler 50w cotton silk-finish in bobbin, same tension set to 2) did NOT turn out as well as the first two.  The tension was not right for this type of batting and I have a mess on the 'back'.  This is an interesting batt choice...Mountain mist Eco-Friendly Batting Blend of 50% cotton and 50% PLA Fiber (made from corn).  It can be quilted up to 4" apart, comes in 90" and 108" (do not prewash this batting).

Have you ever used this before?

It's really different - Personally, I would chose something else before this.

Here are my results from Day 12:



The good news:  I've done this pattern so often now (third time), I was done really quickly today.
It would be a very good idea to plan your quilting, then practice sketching and making practice squares for three days before actually quilting your quilt.

This is sure a wonky looking back - the tension set at 2 is not correct for this batting.  
You can hardly even tell this has been quilted!

**********

Last night and today, I spent time 'researching' about FMQ and short-arm quilting.

I found the article from "The Quilter" in the Dec. 2010/Jan. 2011 issue pgs. 98-100 from Wenda Coburn interesting.  The title is "Short-Arm Quilting:  What Do You Need?"

The machine requirements list 9" harp space minimum, one straight stitch, ability to lower the feed dogs, a stitch regular and quilting frame and has pictures of the following recommended machines to be your dedicated quilting machine:

Pfaff hobby 1200 GrandQuilter
Janome 1600 Professional
Juki TL-98Q
Viking Mega Quilter
Baby Lock Quilter's Choice Professional
www.wendacoburn.com
short-arm machine quilting educator from Syracuse, New York


Has anyone taken her classes?  Do you short-arm or are you considering it?
I have purchased a Baby Lock Quilter's Designer Series Quest Plus and a Grace frame with stitch regulator.
(Just waiting on the frame installation.)

Can you recommend good websites/blogs for short-armers?

**************


I also read this post about free motion quilting from Diane Guadynski:

http://dianegaudynski.blogspot.com/2010/01/right-foot.html
and noted that
Diane Gaudynski said...
"It is easier to pull the fabric and work smoothly away from yourself than to push and plow. In a marked straight line it doesn't matter, but in many freehand designs it is SO much easier to build them by starting at the bottom of the design and building UP, or away from yourself. Give it a try!


In the first photo, rather than turning the quilt (I try not to ever turn the quilt) I will quilt one of the lines in this double line design towards me, then the second one away from me. It isn't hard at all if you have a foot that lets you see behind it....and I do.

Explore your machines and see what they have that makes quilting better and easier. And also work with what is best for you. You are the final say in anything you do."

I personally have been starting in the middle and working my way out from left top to right top and then bottom left and bottom right.  I will have to give Diane's recommendation a try!

Do you design up or away from yourself?










Monday, May 2, 2011

FMQ Challenge Day 11 of 14 and GIVE AWAY info!


The FMQ Challenge is also The Batting Challenge for me beginning today!

Yesterday I worked with Mountain Mist 100% Natural Cotton Batting (Left)
100% Cotton - no resin
quilt 1/4" - 1" apart.  Comes in 81" x 108"
(Do not pre-wash this batting)

Today I worked with Mountain Mist Blue Ribbon (Right)
100% Cotton Batting
Quilt 1 1/2" to 2" apart
Comes in 45" x 60", 72" x 90" & 90" x 108"
(Do not pre-wash this batting)

Here is my side-by-side comparison for you to see:



I have noted that the Blue Ribbon (right) lays flatter than the 100% Cotton without resin batting.  Blue Ribbon is recommended for an antique look.  It will shrink considerably after washing.  A queen may not be a queen afterwards, so if using this batting that is not pre-washable, then be sure to size your quilt top and back a few inches larger.  1/8" to 1/4" loft.  This would be a terrific choice for a traditionally pieced quilt!  

The 100% Natural Cotton batting without resin from Mountain Mist (left) offers a light loft of 1/4" and will provide a tradition, puckered look, too, after washing.  This needs heavier quilting than the Blue Ribbon.

Neither batting is recommended for tied quilts.



Nicely detailed explanations of when to use which particular batting from Mountain Mist:

...and here's where my FMQ Challenge and my set of sixteen batts from Harriet Hargrave are stored:


Great future reference when making that all-important decision for a quilt!

************************
What's happening today at

My guest blogger for the beginning of May is Linda from http://www.b-bumble.com/Home_Page.php has donated three of her precious patterns for a give-away to be held here at RocknQuilts on Monday, May 16th!  

I've been looking over her patterns and have noticed that they will work nicely with your 
AccuQuilt system...

PLUS Linda features tutorials on her website to help you with freezer paper applique techniques, dying fabrics for faces and hands, and other very helpful information to get you started with her beautiful quilts!

And...if you have scraps - the children's clothing and hair would be perfect to use for those!!  These patterns are also sew fun because they utilize ribbons, embroidery floss and paints, too!

1.  Jesus Loves the Little Children
www.b-bumble.com

...great with your
1 1/2" AccuQuilt strip cutter  
2 1/2" AccuQuilt strip cutter
3" AccuQuilt strip cutter die




2.  Little Cowboy/Cowgirl
www.b-bumble.com

great with your...
AccuQuilt 2" strip die
AccuQuilt 3" strip die
AccuQuilt 4.5" strip die
and
AccuQuilt 6" strip die
and
3.  Little General
www.b-bumble.com

perfect with your...
AccuQuilt 2" strip die
and
AccuQuilt 4.5" strip die
You will have five chances to WIN!

Please connect to the original post from 2 May 11 for the drawing HERE:


Winners will be announced here  on 
Monday, May 16th!

Good luck and happy blog hopping!

The Shop Hopper by Linda Winters
at www.b-bumble.com
Please connect to the original post from 2 May 11 for the drawing HERE:


Good Luck!

Guest Blogger and three GIVE-AWAYs!!!

Today is indeed a day to celebrate here at RocknQuilts.  Please help me warmly welcome a lovely lady from the South who is a talented pattern designer!  


Linda, from http://www.b-bumble.com/, has graciously offered to be today's guest blogger here at RocknQuilts and has donated THREE of her precious, personally-designed patterns for our GIVE AWAY...more about all that later...please allow me to introduce Linda:



Hi, everyone! My name is Linda Winters and I’m living in Texas again after being away for twenty years. I grew up in the colorful city of San Antonio, where Fiesta parades and colorful celebrations made an indelible impact on my tastes. To this day, I have a very difficult time working with soft, muted colors although I often admire them in the work of others.
I have been interested in quilts and quilting since I was a very small girl. My grandmother made a Little Dutch girl quilt that I found fascinating. Every little Dutch girl had a different print dress and her little socks were tinted (probably with crayons) to match! I thought that was just the most wonderful thing! Quilting, though, was on the decline during those years so I didn’t learn to quilt until I was grown. I did learn to sew, though, and as a teenager and young adult I made my own clothes.
I started college with the intention of majoring in art, but was persuaded by my counselor to minor in art and major in education, since that was what most women were encouraged to do in the early nineteen seventies. (Being a compliant type person, I did just that.) I found that my creativity really helped to make me a better teacher, so I didn’t regret that decision. I taught elementary school for twenty years.


Rain, Rain, Go Away!
When expecting my first son, I was part of a group of women at church who met for the purpose of sewing for others. We made quilts for a children’s home and knit slippers for local nursing homes. I have very warm memories of sitting at a quilting frame with women in their eighties and attempting to “quilt” with them. (I wouldn’t be surprised if they had to remove my stitches after I left, but they certainly never let me know about it if they did!) The pieced tops we worked on were beautiful and the stories from their lives were fascinating to a young mother-to-be. From then on, trips to the library nearly always included perusing the needlework aisle and bringing home at least a couple of books about quilting.
 It was when my granddaughter was born that I started quilting in earnest. I lived in Athens, Georgia at the time. Athens is a very diverse little town because of the presence of the University of Georgia. I bought some “how to” quilting books and dove in! My first quilt was a queen sized Grandmother’s Fan with a fancy pieced scalloped border! I had no idea it was not a good project for a beginner. I even hand quilted it, although my stitches were BIG! That quilt is now in our motor home, where only family can see it! I tried another pieced quilt, but this time I added some appliqué that I had designed. It won second place in the beginner category of the local guild quilt show. I had found a way to be creative, so I was hooked from then on. Athens has a great quilt guild called The Cotton Patch Quilt Guild. Those ladies gave me encouragement and confidence when I needed it most. I never heard anyone say anything negative about another person’s big stitches or poor color choices. Every lady who brought in her work to show left feeling validated as a quilter.


Rascal Rabbit
 
After living in Georgia long enough for our three sons to grow up and move on, we moved to Raleigh, North Carolina. This is another great area for quilters. The guild there was HUGE! Big name speakers were brought in for programs. Many of the members there were well known and published in the quilt world. We were only there for two years, but I was encouraged to believe that I could publish my patterns. It was when we moved back to Texas that my sister gave me the push I needed to actually do that. (Thank you, Darla!)
I live with my wonderful scientist husband (of forty years) only thirty minutes from the Alamo and the San Antonio Riverwalk. We are in a small farm and ranch community where the main “industry” is oil, cotton, peanuts, and cattle. I can hear coyotes howl at night and I can see Longhorns and other cattle grazing in nearby fields.  It’s not unusual to see people riding horses along the side of the road. It can be one hundred degrees in the summer, but Fall, Winter, and Spring make up for it by giving us glorious, sunny days with cool (not cold) temperatures.  I spend my days designing quilts, turning them into patterns, delivering them to a couple of area quilt shops, writing my blog, and sometimes teaching classes. (I fill in any idle time baking or gardening!) Most of my quilts are inspired by childhood themes like fairy tales and nursery rhymes. They are mostly appliqué done with a very easy, freezer paper method. I quilt every chance I get with my granddaughter, who is eight, and lives way too far away! She has made three small quilts so far! My three year old grandson was happy to have a Superman fat quarter that he wore as a cape.


Who's Been Eating my Porridge?



I invite you to check out my blog http://buzzingandbumbling.blogspot.com and my website www.b-bumble.com . I would love to hear your comments. I try to keep my blog as visual as possible for those of us who learn best from pictures. After all, I had a second grader once tell me, “Actions speak louder than verbs!” I agree with him.


***************************************************


Now, for the GIVE AWAY part...


Linda has donated three of her precious patterns...


1.  Jesus Loves the Little Children


2.  Little Cowboy/Cowgirl
and
3.  Little General




You will have five chances to WIN!


1.  Be or become a follower of my blog with a way for me to contact you through your blog or e-mail address.  


2.  Go over to Linda's blog http://buzzingandbumbling.blogspot.com and "follow" her, then come back here to let me know for a separate, second entry in the give-away.


3.  Go to Linda's website http://www.b-bumble.com , peruse her patterns and come back here to let me know which pattern(s) you liked best.  


4.   Go over to my sister blog at http://www.rocknrecipes-rocknquilts.blogspot.com and come back here to post which recipe you like best.


5.  For a FIFTH separate entry, let me know which of the three give-away patterns you would prefer to have:  1.  Jesus Loves the Little Children, 2.  Little Cowboy/Cowgirl or 3.  Little General


Winners will be announced here at RocknQuilts on 
Monday, May 16th!


Good luck and happy blog hopping!


The Shop Hopper
Are you a no-reply blogger?  If so, I won't be able to contact you to tell you if you've won and then I will have to pass the prize along to someone else.  So that doesn't happen, please read & follow these directions from Pleasant Home so I can contact you, please:


Have fun and check back on Monday, May 16th to see who the three winners are!
Mary Ann @ RocknQuilts 


Good Luck!

Sunday, May 1, 2011

FMQ Challenge Day 10 of 14 / Sunday

Today I prepared a lot for the coming week.
I received a package from www.harriethargrave.com
including sixteen different 14x14 batting squares - each one is a different batt marked with specific details about each one; i.e., scrim/no scrim, recommended distance apart for quilting, name, company, etc.
In Harriet's book, "Heirloom Machine Quilting", she recommends practicing and keeping a file of your work with specific details like thread(s), needle, fabric, batting, etc. so that when it comes time to quilt a whole quilt, you will have the perfect reference.  You can even measure them before they get washed and then after each following wash to measure their shrinkage, too, before quilting an entire quilt.
You can order sets of batts online here:
http://www.harriethargrave.com/Batting-c14/

For days 10-14, I plan on creating four 12.5x12.5" squares with the same design because I want to see how each different batting "reacts" to the same pattern for comparison purposes.

I haven't figured out the pattern for Day 14 yet, but if I get to practice sketching enough, it might be free-handed feathers as featured by Kim Brunner in her "The Quilter Magazine" article for June/July 2011 pgs. 94-96.



Harriet labeled them all so nicely!
I'm saving the 90%silk/10%poly blend for last...



Went to Office Max and enlarged this 200%

The "Free-Motion Quilting Basics" article in the June/July 2011 "The Quilter Magazine" caught my eye when it arrived in the mail on Saturday.

Look what's in there!  WOW!!
If you like this, please visit www.kimmyquilt.com for more info.
She produces digitized patterns, quilting toold and instructional DVDs for midarm and longarm quilters, plus she teaches!  I'm thankful she was featured so I could practice these in my sketch book this afternoon:

Step 1:






It's obvious I need a lot more time in my sketch book
creating feathers before I can "draw" them free-hand
on my fabric, so....

I traced my pattern with wash away blue marker today...


after having spent time sketching, I began to realize how
to use the "spine" to go back to as a "base"
and then start again from there



This result just blows me away!
I LOVE IT!
:-)
Thank you to all you encouraging FMQers!!!





YLI nylon in top
Mettler 50w silk-finish cotton in bobbin
tension 2
really decreased my speed
clear, open-toe foot
Baby Lock Quest Plus

************

Great ideas from fellow FMQ Challengers - thank you, everyone!

Thread Talk

Free, gorgeous FMQ or embroidery pattern from The Quilter Magazine:
This will be available for a limited time only!

Gorgeous thread for a great price! (Canada)

Harriet's personal favorite thread choices, incl. silk:

Quilter's Template Heaven:

Forest Quilting offers free templates:

May I recommend...







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