quilting for embroidery machine on sale
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Re: quilting for embroidery machine on sale
For those of you who do this, how do you hoop a bulky quilt? And how does the machine move with all that bulk on the pantograph arm? And do you add stabilizer? It is intriguing to think of doing quilting using the embroidery machine. I’d love to hear how you do it.
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Re: quilting for embroidery machine on sale
So far I have only used my embroidery machine (4x4) on table runners. If you support the item to be embroidered it should no have any trouble while stitching. The other way would to quilt in sections and then join into a larger quilt when finished.No act of kindness, however small, is ever wasted.
Aesop
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Re: quilting for embroidery machine on sale
Originally posted by Jean Sewing Machine View PostFor those of you who do this, how do you hoop a bulky quilt? And how does the machine move with all that bulk on the pantograph arm? And do you add stabilizer? It is intriguing to think of doing quilting using the embroidery machine. I’d love to hear how you do it.
I only used the lower hoop and attached the sandwich with binder clips in the corners away from the needle path, no stabilizer. I have a large table to sit a machine on and puddled the quilt around the machine to eliminate drag.Claire from Pelham, Alabama
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Re: quilting for embroidery machine on sale
Originally posted by Jean Sewing Machine View PostAnd how does the machine move with all that bulk on the pantograph arm?
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Re: quilting for embroidery machine on sale
Originally posted by Jean Sewing Machine View PostFor those of you who do this, how do you hoop a bulky quilt? And how does the machine move with all that bulk on the pantograph arm? And do you add stabilizer? It is intriguing to think of doing quilting using the embroidery machine. I’d love to hear how you do it.
First, per Amelie Scott recomendations, I do a template of the design on a piece of stabilizer (I use woven, non-fusible stabilizer). I then trim it to fit inside the hoop opening. I pin the stitched stabilizer right where I want it on the quilt, slide the flat bottom of the hoop under your quilt, and feel around to get it to to line up with the template. I then carefully place the top magnetic part of the hoop around the template, remove the stabilizer, and take it to my machine to stitch out.
I then detach the hoop from my machine and head to my dining room table to lay things nice and flat. I again pin the stitched stabilizer on the quilt top—lining it up appropriately with the previously stitched part of the quilt—slide the bottom portion of the hoop under the quilt to line up with the stabilizer, and then attach the top magnetic half of the hoop. Back to the machine to stitch out.
I've seen video of Eileen Roche of DIME actually re-position the hoop while sitting at her embroidery machine, but I'm not that talented.
You ask if we use stabilizer. Other than the placement templates, I don't. The basted quilt sandwich itself is stable enough.
You also ask how does the machine move with all that bulk on the pantograph arm. I'm not exactly sure how to answer this, as I'm using an embroidery hoop, not a pantograph. But I will tell you that I kind of bunch up the quilt on support tables so that the embroidery hoop doesn't have significant drag.
The largest quilt size suggested by Amelie Scott is a twin size quilt. But now that I've done a couple, I wouldn't hesitate to try a full or a queen. Supporting the weight of the quilt would become even more important, but I think it could be manageable.
I love using my embroidery machine to quilt!Toni (Southern California) ... If I keep sewing long enough, will they make their own dinner?
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Re: quilting for embroidery machine on sale
Originally posted by LauraP View PostToni (Southern California) ... If I keep sewing long enough, will they make their own dinner?
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