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T O P I C    R E V I E W
catotn Posted - Jun 01 2016 : 09:16:36 AM
I have made a large quilt for my sister. I have finish the top, have the padding and backing. I need help with the quilting part. I have bit off more then I can chew. I dont have a big enough sewing machine to machine quilt it and I dont have a frame to hand quilt it. Please help. This is for my sister new home.

Sara Bell

Farmgirl Sister #6881
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Farmgirlquilting Posted - Jun 11 2016 : 7:01:11 PM
I do long arm quilting. Email me if you need help.

Angie Gordon
#6966 FGOTM June 2016
farmgirlquilting@gmail.com
Marilyn Hartman Sullivan Posted - Jun 02 2016 : 11:56:30 AM
While it is much easier to do nice hand-quilting with a frame, it can be done without, it you take plenty of time to baste the quilt sandwich (top, batting, binding) together -- lots and lots of pins, so that the sandwich doesn't shift while you are quilting, and you take your time and start quilting from the center and work your way to the outside edges. You could also do what we used to call a "tied quilt," where you just tack the layers of the sandwich together every 4 to 6 inches with heavy floss or crochet cotton -- just make a knot close to the surface of the quilt and leave the tails a couple of inches long. Makes the whole thing a little "puffier," but it can be a nice country-looking finish.

If it's an heirloom kind of piece, then hand-quilting is nice, but it is time consuming, for sure. It is really just running stitches taken through all the layers of the quilt to hold it together and keep it from shifting, and our great-great-grandmothers did it riding in a swaying wagon, so it's not brain surgery, but it does take time.

If the quilt is going to be used, then I would for sure find a local machine quilter! The finished quilt will hold up better during use and washing. GOOD LUCK!



Farmgirl #6318
"Where there's a will -- there's probably a family fight."
sherone_13 Posted - Jun 02 2016 : 08:13:48 AM
The quilt shop in our town does long arm quilting. You could mail it to them. Here's the link. http://www.commonthreadswy.com/

Sherone

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HealingTouch Posted - Jun 01 2016 : 9:17:50 PM
In my area some churches do quilting for people. Good luck.

Be Blessed and Be a Blessing,
Darlene
Sister 1922

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quiltee Posted - Jun 01 2016 : 10:03:39 AM
Perhaps you can find a long-arm quilter who can do it for you. Or sometimes senior centers have a group of ladies who hand quilt the quilts. Maybe this will help?

Or check for a quilt guild in your area and contact them. Often they have long-arm quilters who will do it for a small charge.


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Farmgirl #1919
Farm Girl of the Month August 2015
Linda O
Lone Oak, TX

"Women are Angels, and when someone breaks our wings, we simply continue to fly . . . on a broomstick - we're flexible, like that."

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