Showing posts with label FMQ. Show all posts
Showing posts with label FMQ. Show all posts

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Featherweight Quilting Skill Series - Free Motion Quilting, Part 2

Thank you for coming to my Featherweight Quilting Skill Series! There are thousands of us who love our little 221s but need or want a little more "know-how" on using them to their fullest potential. I hope my posts and videos will help you get more know-how and confidence in using your beautiful Featherweight. Enjoy the classes!

Class #6 - Free Motion Quilting, Darning and Embroidery Foot



Class supply list:
Your fully threaded sewing machine with darning/embroidery foot and feed dog cover attached, several practice sandwiches no larger than 12" square.

Let's get sewing!

Saturday, April 2, 2016

Featherweight Quilting Skill Series - Free Motion Quilting, Part 1

Thank you for coming to my Featherweight Quilting Skill Series! There are thousands of us who love our little 221s but need or want a little more "know-how" on using them to their fullest potential. I hope my posts and videos will help you get more know-how and confidence in using your beautiful Featherweight. Enjoy the classes!

Class #5 - Free Motion Quilting, no foot

Class supply list:
Your fully threaded sewing machine with no foot attached



stitch length set all the way down

several practice sandwiches no larger than 6.5"



Optional: embroidery hoop, feed dog cover. I did not use either of these options. 

This is a feed dog cover plate I had from a vintage buttonholer attachment. 


This is a new one I got from April1930s site. 

When you order from them, tell them I suggested you go to their store for accessories!

Let's get sewing!

The one thing I can't say enough about free motion quilting is it takes time to learn with a lot of practice! I have been doing FMQ for several years and I was having trouble doing it on the 221. After I began to feel what the machine wanted, I began to improve. 

You may see skipped stitches, twisted thread around the needle, uneven tension in the stitches, etc. in the beginning stages of performing this skill. Don't get discouraged or give up! This is all part of the learning curve in FMQ on any machine. I'll try to give you tips to keep these things at a minimum!

Oh what power you have! You take control over the fabric and the speed it will flow under the needle. Feeling the right combination of sewing in this manner will come. This is something you will get a feel for over time. Be patient with your progress and learn to work with your machine's limitations!

In order to make things easy for the start of this skill, let's sew straight, or straight-ish, lines. If you know how to draw a letter V, you can do this!

Place your sandwich under the needle and lower the pressure foot lever. 
This seems strange since there is no foot but the lever engages the top tension unit. If it's not down, your top thread will be loose and won't sew a proper stitch and will look like this on the bobbin side of the fabric-
Not the look we're going for!

Now hold the threads and turn the wheel so the needle goes into the fabric. 
Keep holding the threads and form a complete stitch or 2. You can also pull the bobbin thread to the top of the work and hold them from there. 

Now we can determine the direction to sew our first V shape. 
I am going from the top right corner to the lower center edge. 

Place both hands in line with the path you want to stitch. Remember when we did that before for stitch in the ditch? Same idea with FMQ only this time you are actually moving the fabric under the needle.

Slowly, and I mean SLOWLY, press the pedal and begin to stitch forward. Move your hands towards the needle. It feels weird but try to move in an even speed. You will feel the feed dogs moving under the fabric. Let their movement be a help as to how much you move the sandwich. You will need to stop, reposition your hands, and start again in order to get all the way across.

When you get to the opposite edge, stop and breathe! Check the needle to make sure the thread is still inserted correctly and not twisting or wrapping around the tip. Correct any issues now. 

Then Smile! This is only practice time so it's ok if it's not all you hoped for! Or maybe it is! Either way, you're doing it! Yay!

Now you can turn the fabric around and find the corner to sew to in order to complete your V shape. 
Position your hands and slowly sew across to the corner, just like before.

Turn the fabric and make another V shape. 

Keep making V shapes until you arrive back at the beginning of the first V shape. 

Ta-dah!
Wouldn't that be cute all trimmed up with the edges run through the binder? I see a set of coasters or hot pads in the making! Or a sweet quilt-as-you-go border to attach onto a bigger project!

You can sew forward and backwards when doing FMQ. You can try sewing out the same star by starting at the upper left edge of the sandwich, sew to the center edge, then, without turning the fabric, sew backwards to the upper right corner. Turn the sandwich so the needle is in the upper left corner, repeat the V shape all the way around. 
Why do it this way? You will have less skipped stitches when moving the fabric towards the right. Think how you thread the needle from right to left so moving the fabric towards the bobbin area will work in your favor!

How did you do? Admire your work and keep practicing! Show your pics at our Facebook group page for comments of admiration or for help. 

Had troubles? Here's things to look out for:

The thread begins to wrap around rather needle. 
Why it happens: When you sew too fast and the thread isn't unwound evenly, the thread can loop and the excess will wrap around the needle. You may hear your top thread spool spin wildly for a second. There's no way the bobbin thread will be caught and form a stitch because the needle thread is going off to the right instead of to the left. If you see skipped stitches and the top thread breaks, this is what caused it to happen.

How to fix it: Use the correct type of spool on your machine. The black spool on the left is the correct spool for the 221's upright spool pin. It will unwind evenly and won't twist as you sew. 
The gorgeous turquoise spool is wound like a cone (cross wound) and must be unwound from the top of the spool. If it is placed on the upright spool pin, it will twist a little in each revolution and give you problems. Use a cone holder set next to your 221 when using cross wound spools. 

Check that the thread is feeding through all of the guides, especially the one located at the top of the needle.

Stitches are skipped and picked up again. 
This has everything to do with the direction that you are sewing in. The balance of the top and bobbin threads is challenged when the machine isn't in control of movement and fabric position. Sewing from the right to the left (moving the fabric away from the bobbin area) will produce more skipped stitches.

How to fix it: Make a test strip to fnd the tolerance point on your machine. Sew lines moving from the left side of the fabric to the right side, just like when you write. Slowly sew your stitches and get comfortable with the feel of the movement of fabric. Start to sew in an up and down direction. Then sew more incrementally towards the right. When you begin to see skipped stitches, you will know your machine's limitations. 

Stitches look wobbly and loose. 
Why it happens: When a foot is not holding down the fabric, the needle can pull the fabric upwards and the stitches will appear wobbly. Your hands need to be placed firmly on the fabric to keep it down and moving under the needle properly.

How to fix it: If you see the fabric pouncing up and down with the needle while you sew, move your hands closer to the area being sewn. You cannot use a light touch with this method. Your whole hand should touch the fabric, not just your fingertips. Just remember to keep your fingertips away from that sharp point!


Homework: Take your fabric sandwich and practice straight lines. Select a fabric sandwich and free motion quilt the star shape. 

I hope you have been encouraged to use your amazing sewing machine accessories.  Please share your pics on our Facebook group page, Featherweight Skill Series, so we can see your creations! 

If you like the series, share the link with your friends, pin it to Pinterest, join my Facebook group... Most importantly, "Let's get sewing!"

See you next time!

Wednesday, May 13, 2015

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Dancing Butterflies Quilt - Main Block 1 of 12

In this project, there are three blocks in each set. A set of two smaller ones paired up with one large one that has the dancing butterfly on it.

Here is the first butterfly block.

And the back of it.

The pattern called for Ocean Waves to be stitched in the wings and border. When I started, I naturally gravitated towards Paisley in the wings. After one was nearly done, I realized that I did the stitching opposite of what the pattern called for but was quite happy with the way it turned out.
Stitching in the wings is slow going since there is fusible web in there. I could only sew backwards for one or two stitches before the thread began to shred. Once I adjusted for that, it went well.

In the words of Bob Ross, this block wound up being a "happy accident." The bobbin side reveals brown thread for the butterfly. That was on purpose!

Ocean Waves is a beautiful design that wound up mimicking the currents of the wind.

The bobbin has a soft white thread so it separates the butterfly from the sky.


I pondered over what color to use for the blue border. This purpley-pink seemed to fit the bill quite nicely. How can you not love the Paisley design?


In the bobbin, I chose a purpley-blue for this section. It's interesting to see various colors of thread on the back.

The next thing to do is to connect all three blocks together to make one complete unit. Look for the next post about what fabric I chose to join these blocks.

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Saturday, March 22, 2014

FMQ Journey Over the Last Few Years

Here's my very first quilt and hand quilting project that I made ever. It was back in 1997 after my mom said, "you should try quilting", so I did. I don't recall where I got this pattern. I must have thought it looked like something I could make. The sashing and borders gave me trouble; they never lined up very well.

My stitches in the center six-point stars were around 2 per inch. I didn't even know there was such a thing as free motion quilting. I am happy to still have this piece in my possession. I continue to use these color choices to this day. I think I still have one of the fabric's scraps in my stash.

Quite a few years went by where I did no quilting at all. I would sew, make clothes and home decor, but not quilts. Then, I was in the local library and took out some quilting books. One had really cute blocks in it and I started making my first real pieced bed quilt. I had to change the patterns so I could fit them all into the quilt. I called it my calendar quilt, since it had a block that represented something about each month of the year. I stitched in the ditch around each month but still have to do quilting on it.


I remember stumbling onto Leah Day's website as I was searching for a place to learn how to do FMQ. I was making a bunch of blocks and had quite a few of them so I figured they should be joined into a quilt! And I wanted to quilt it! I just didn't know how!


I wanted to learn how to do something other than feed dog sewing. I didn't know anyone who did FMQ; the websites I found were all I had to go on, and there weren't many that helped me very much. So I watched Leah's videos on my phone app over the course of about 6 months before I mustered up the courage to try to learn this new skill for myself.

The day came in December of 2011. I was never so nervous in front of my Project Runway sewing machine! I made my quilt practice sandwich, put on that special FMQ foot that I bought, dropped the feed dogs, loaded up a bunch of bobbins, put on a pair of rubber tipped gardening gloves, and sat in front of this machine I was so familiar with, scared to touch it. Then, I remembered that I had to do a load of laundry...right at that moment. Off came the gloves and down the stairs I went with the wash. Yes, I was stalling. You know how it is.

Taking on FMQ is rough on the psyche. About a half hour later, I was back with my rubber tipped gardening gloves on, and this time I started to sew. I didn't expect to be perfect but I did expect to not have as many problems as I had. Watching the videos wasn't enough. My brain said, yes, but my body didn't know what it was doing!

Fortunately, I saved some of my earliest practice pieces. They were so bad. And I was so frustrated! I knew I could do this. Like the little train, I told myself I think I can! The front looked pretty good...


But the back was all wrong. I examined what was going on in the hot mess on the back of my stitches. "Change the tension dial" came to mind. That's a thought we don't ever want to have! Are you with me?!!!

So I started turning the dial that none of us ever want to have to turn. Press the pedal... make loops...make something that barely resembles stipple shapes. The front isn't too bad. Not better but not too bad...

And my heart would sink when I'd look at the back. "Well, I must have turned the dial the wrong way"...

More front work...

But it's not getting better, it's getting worse... gak! Now there's loose stitches on the front!

And the back looked like a toddler scribbled all over it! I didn't even know my bobbin thread could ever look like that!

I was totally convinced that I broke my machine! My mom, who was a wonderful seamstress, told tell me that most likely wasn't the case. She said it was pretty difficult to break a sewing machine. Then, she suggested to set the machine back up in normal sewing mode and try to sew and see if the stitches looked ok. 

Off to another little sandwich I started sewing... in normal mode... with messed up tensions... turning the dreaded dial... holding my breath...

And finally I saw the lines (on the right side) were back to normal again, so she was right. My machine was fine. It was me who needed the fine tuning and practice! ok, I can deal with that.

Back to my quilt. The reason I decided to learn FMQ in the first place. I had narrowed it down to 5 patterns and this was the one that I chose to do on each of the solid blocks. I figured if they were overlapping, they might stay together longer than if they weren't! Each of the other blocks had some roughly FMQ'd design that I thought matched the feel of the block. The final result was just great. And I was hooked onto free motion quilting!

My tool inventory shaped up too. I got rid of the gardening gloves for real quilting gloves, got bobbin genie washers, a supreme slider, some good isachord thread. I even upgraded to a Viking sewing machine. Yes, I'm hooked!

One smaller project I made, with Leah's online instructions, was this pretty number. We did a modern quilt and FMQ'd zen-tangles filled with various fills.

Basic stippling

Circuit board

Flame stipple (this was a hard one for me)

Loopy lines (this one is an absolute fave and I use it a lot)

And sharp stipple

One day, I got the idea to do practice FMQ-ing on prequilted fabric pieces. No pinning required! If I found any plain remnants in clearance bins, I'd pick it up on the cheap for when I wanted to noodle out stuff like this.

Nothing serious. Just whatever popped into my head would get stitched out. Including the overly large flower on the little tiny stem. What does that remind you of? The man-eating plant from the movie, Little Shop of Horrors? Regardless, the backs began looking much better than they used to!

Another day, I pulled out some fabric that I always pass over when I'm making projects and turned it into a practice sandwich that's ready for stuff like this. Leah Day fans will recognize them!

One of my favorite practice pieces turned into an actual mini-quilt. There are a lot of Leah's designs in this piece. I was getting the binding down on it here but it is done and on a table in my sewing room now.

If you've looked through Leah's site, you would have found, and possibly made, this project. I decided to make it a little smaller than her pattern so it would make a pretty wall hanging. I gave it to my mom as a gift and a testament to what she handed down to me that first time she encouraged me to "try quilting."

Who hasn't heard of Patsy Thompson? Well, I hadn't until late 2012. She was part of SewCalGal's 2012 FMQ challenge. This gorgeous wholecloth design was Patsy's project. I trimmed it out into a square and bound it in burgandy. I was so proud to make this! I have thought it would be beautiful to make a pair of them and turn them into pillows.

Now, I'm part of the FMQ 2014 Building Blocks Quilt Along and am enjoying it so much. Thank you, Leah, for teaching me from afar and giving me the push I needed to learn free motion quilting and for making a place for our community of quilters to connect.

Keep practicing and love what you do, each step of the way. This is an amazing craft and it can bring such life to your projects! I hope this overview of my journey has inspired you. I'd love to hear from you. Thanks for looking!