Saturday 27 November 2010

How to Quilt With a Regular Sewing Machine

How to Quilt With a Regular Sewing Machine

Are you wishing you owned a long arm quilting machine so you could
quilt your own quilts? Have you priced a long arm machine and found
it to be way way out of your reach?

If so, then get a load of this cool quilting method! It's called
"batting buddy", but you can do the same thing for free at home
without purchasing the expensive templates that quilt shops want you
to buy.

The idea is to sew each quilt square as if you were foundation
piecing. The only difference is that you'll be sewing each piece
directly to the back of your quilt through the batting. Follow these
instructions to learn how.

!! Steps !!

* Choose a simple block shape to sew. Diagonals work well, as do
crazy quilt designs. Keep in mind that you'll be limited to
straight sewn lines in your designs (as you would have in a
foundation pieced block).

Various squares You'll need two sizes of squares, one an inch
(2.5cm) bigger all around than the other. The beauty of this is that
you can do all of your cutting with a rotary cutter using your
regular cutting rulers if you like. The large squares will be used
for the backing fabric. The small squares will be used for your
batting and top pieces. The squares used in this example were 7
inches (17.78cm) and 5 inches (12.7cm) square respectively, making
the larger square two inches (5cm) longer per side. Center a
batting square on the "wrong" side of your larger backing square.
You're now ready to place the first block pieces on the top.

* Starting with your first piece Place the first block
piece on the batting, face up. If you want adjacent blocks to line
up exactly, make a cardboard "starting point" template to line up
your first block with.

* Putting the two blocks together Place the second block
piece face down with the seam edges lined up with the first piece.

* Sewing the seam Sew the seam. Sew it through both block
pieces, through the batting, and through the backing, like a giant
sandwich.
Press the seam open Press the seam open and place the
next block piece in the same manner, lining up the edges,
sewing the seam, pressing open, until you reach the edges
of the block. Stop each seam at the edge of the batting.

* Note: If you're using a poly batting, take care to press with a
cool iron, as a hot iron will compress a poly batting. Cotton
batting is best for this project.

* Turn the inch (2.5cm) wide,
unquilted border section of the block sandwich under the block out
of the way. Trim any fabric which protrudes past the batting edge.
If you're careful, this can be done with your rotary cutter and a
ruler as well.
Repeat for all four sides. You have made one block. Create the
rest, and then start to join them together as follows:

* Place two blocks backing side to backing side, with edges lined
up. Feel carefully to ensure that the batting edges line up.

* Sew a seam down the inch (2.5cm) wide flap(s) just barely outside
of the batting. Take care not to catch the batting into the seam,
as this will make the finished seam bunch up.

* Press the seam open from both sides.

* From the front side, fold or roll the inch flaps under
themselves and pin in place.

* Top stitch both of the folded edges down.

* Sew rows of blocks together in this manner.

* Sew the rows together, stitching the flap edges together, and then
pressing them open and top stitching the entire row. The maximum
length of fabric under the neck of your machine at any time will
be 10-12 inches (25.4cm to 30.48cm); this is very manageable for a
"regular" machine.

Roll the outside edges over and top stitch to finish the edge.

* The back of the blocks will already be quilted. No need
to go through the whole quilt frame and long arm rigamarole!

!! Video !!

!! Tips !!

* Use a table to the left of the machine to support the weight of
the completed part of the quilt as you sew.

* This works best with thin batting, but thicker batting can be used
if desired.

* So long as you sew blocks into strips, and then add the strips to
your quilt one at a time, you will have no more than the width of
one strip under your machine at one time.

!! Warnings !!

* Pressing each seam open is essential for a good looking quilt.

* Poly type batting will compress and/or melt if your iron is too
hot.

!! Things You'll Need !!

* Fabric

* Scissors and/or rotary cutter and mat

* Sewing machine

* Quilt Batting, preferably cotton

*

!! Related WikiHows !!

* How to Foundation Piece a Quilt Block

* How to Make Perfect Quilt Borders

* How to Use a Sewing Machine

* How to Quilt a Placemat

* How to Make Quilt Templates

!! Article Tools !!

* Read on wikiHow

*

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