It has been a few weeks since we visited with Diane and the HQ Stitch blog. We are following my friend, Diane’s adventures in learning to longarm quilt on her new HQ Capri. If you haven’t read the prior posts you can catch up here. Look on the right side and you will see Previous Blog Posts. We started back on April 11, 2020 with the post titled Getting Started with Longarm Quilting.
Diane has come along way in her quest. She overcame her fear and she has experimented with many types of quilting. She’s gotten familiar with her seam ripper, but learned to either stop before the point of no return if what you are quilting doesn’t look right, or Let It Go. In other words, accept the minor imperfections and know that you will get better the more you quilt. She has adopted the slogan:
Finished is Better than Perfect
So here is what Diane has to say a few months into her adventure:
DH: I’m in the habit of keeping something always going on the HQ Capri, so that when I have a few minutes here or there, I can sit down and quilt! Of course the InSight table can be adjusted for standing, but recently I’ve been sitting.
MBK: Yeah Diane! The absolute BEST way to improve at anything (quilting) is to do a little bit every day. You will build your skills and not lose progress like you would if you only quilted once in whenever. Out of all the things I say when I teach a class, this is probably the MOST important thing and probably the statement that is most ignored. Big sigh.
DH: I was on a roll when I finished the peachy-pink, green and gray baby quilt, so I put another similar baby quilt under the needle next. See Diane’s post about the pink baby quilt here.
DH: This might not be everyone’s cup of tea, but when I made it I was just playing around with half-square triangles and using up stash fabric for the borders. I like the idea that all four sides of a border don’t have to be from the same fabric.
And I’m okay with making a weird quilt. I’d much rather make a weird quilt that’s a little off than make a boring or ho-hum quilt. So this one’s weirdness made it perfect for practice.
Perfect for practice
MBK: When first getting started it really takes the pressure off to quilt quilts that you are not heavily invested in. It’s good to quilt REAL quilts rather than practicing on a piece of muslin. You will try harder on a real quilt. But don’t choose that quilt top that you spent 1000 hours piecing and you want to put on the bed in your guest room. You’ll be way to invested and it will add stress and make you hunch up your shoulders. No one can quilt well with hunched shoulders. Save that one for later when you’re more confident.
DH: I started off with the solid gray areas by quilting connected squares and rectangles with straight(ish) lines. I used a ruler for a few lines but decided I preferred the organic look with less perfection.
MBK: This is a really good call! Ruler work, although precise, is slow. When quilting we have to weigh a lot of choices. One of those is how much time do I want to invest in this quilt? Once you have an idea about that, you can choose designs accordingly.
DH: I slowed my hands down and focused on making straight lines. And guess what?! Before long, my straight lines got a little straighter. And with that my confidence grew.Â
DH: One thing I noticed is that the scale of my squares and rectangles changed noticeably between my first gray area and my last. I’ll tuck that away for future quilts:
The scale for any one motif should be consistent from one area to another.
MBK: A tip for straight patterns with corners: pause in the points. To make things like boxes look good, always pause your hands for a second at the point where you are changing direction. Set your stitch regulator in cruise mode and the machine will take a stitch right in the point making a nice sharp transition.
Consistency in motif size is what makes for nice uniform texture. If some of your motifs are large and open the quilt will poof forward in that area. And if others are small and tight the quilt will be flattened there.
An example of consistency
Let’s say you are doing an all-over meander on a quilt. The spaces in a meander are kind of circular. Notice the red circles placed in the spaces.
When I quilt a meander or stipple (name depends on size) I like to think of a round object that I know the size of, like a pea or a quarter or a golf ball. I keep that image in my brain while I quilt. I imagine going around those oranges with my quilting lines. This does 2 things for me.
1. It keeps my meander consistent so that I get uniform texture.
2. It keeps my meander nice and round and I like a nice round meander.
Here’s what happens: you start out quilting a orange sized meander on a quick project and you get bored or in a hurry. The next thing you know your meander is basketball sized! This won’t happen if you keep picturing an orange in your mind’s eye.
This trick works for other shapes as well, like squares! Think dice or diamond ring boxes. 🙂
I hope you are enjoying following Diane’s adventures in learning to longarm quilt along with tips and tricks to help her improve. What have you struggled with? Let me know in the comments.
by Mary Beth Krapil and Diane Harris
I am still having great difficulty deciding what to quilt on my quilt tops. There are so many choices I get stuck. Novice quilting skills using a Sweet 16. And Do you switch colors of threads when quilting on different colored blocks?
Hi Deb, If you look back on previous posts in this series I think there are some tips that will help you. But do look at as many quilts as you can. On Facebbok and Instagram and Pintrest and (some day soon we hope) quilt shows. You will get lots of ideas there that you can incorporate into your own quilting.
My meander is midsize and I cannot seem to be able to get it down to a stipple and keep it small, no matter how hard I try.
Hi Joy, Try chalking some small circles on some practice fabric and stitch around them in a meander motion. Keep making the circles smaller til you reach the size you desire.
I feel I have mastered straight lines for the most part. I am struggling with diagonal lines. My Avante gets jerky. Any suggestions??
Diagonal lines are the hardest thing to do on a longarm machine because ALL the wheels have to be in motion at the same time. I always use a ruler for diagonal lines. I can get away with horizontal and vertical without a ruler but the ruler always comes out for diagonal lines that need to be straight.
Thank you, Mary Beth. I was really beginning to think it was something that I was doing wrong. Is there a specific ruler that you would recommend? One that you have found to be very comfortable and manageable?? Thanks.
Any of the straight rulers will do the trick. I think my favorite is the ditch ruler. It has little tabs on the end that make lining up the ruler to do stitch in the ditch a breeze!