Beginner's Guide to Free Motion Quilting: What Beginners Should Know Before Starting FMQ + 4 Projects for Beginners to Quilt with Confidence
By Beth Burns
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About this ebook
How to start FMQ and break through the 'stitch-in-the-ditch' barrier, using only your home sewing machine
Are you tired of hand quilting the same patterns over and over again?
Does "drop the feed dogs" paralyze your brain and cramp your fingers?
Do you always feel a lack of control when doing machine quilting?
Are you sick of wasting fabric, thread, and time on traditional quilting?
If your answer is yes, then book is for you.
I, Beth Burns, will teach you the secrets of getting started with FMQ pain-free.
Once you 'get it', you won't go back to other types of quilting.
It's like riding a bicycle, once you learn it, you can do it for the rest of your life.
Inside this you will discover:
- How to make your first FMQ design in 6 steps
- A 5-minute 'hack' to come up with your own quilt design and save yourself from 'quilter's block'
- How to make quilt designs on your home sewing machine
- The top 5 tips you should know before starting your next quilting project
- 11 beginner friendly patterns to get you started with FMQ hassle-free
- The secret to getting the borders and sashes of your quilts to your liking
- How to fill in background space with free-motion quilting, even if you're out of ideas
- A free-motion quilting Christmas special design
Here are the answers to some questions you might have about this book:
Q: I just have a regular sewing machine at home, not one of those fancy long-arm machines. Can I use this book to learn FMQ?
A: Yes, this book is designed for someone with a regular home sewing machine.
All patterns are beginner-friendly and can be made at home using your existing sewing machine.
Q: My ability to decide how to fill quilting space is limited. How do I overcome this?
A: I too faced the same problem when I first started, there is a key to solving this problem of 'quilter's block', and I reveal it inside this book.
Q: I have always felt that machine quilting is too hard for me. Is your book beginner-friendly?
A: As I said before, FMQ is like riding a bicycle or driving a car for the first time. This book ensures that you learn the basics and never fall off of your FMQ bike!
I encourage and power up the reader to break through the stitch-in-the-ditch barrier.
A beginner can go from the very first step of popping up the bobbin thread to creating fabulous whole-cloth quilts, using what I reveal inside this book.
Every day that you delay is another day you are stuck in the pre-free-motion world, left only with a small amount of possibilities of what you can do with your quilts.
Take action now and let your imagination free.
Scroll up and add this book to your cart!
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Beginner's Guide to Free Motion Quilting - Beth Burns
Introduction
In this guide, we will look at all the necessary aspects, from the basics. You will find in-depth information on the tools you need, how to prepare your machine, choice of needles and threads, the use of stencils and markings, basting, adjusting tension, and preparing your own designs. You will only need to make practice a consistent companion.
Some people may find free-motion quilting a bit challenging, especially because you may not achieve the even and perfectly spaced stitches that come with the craft. Besides, things can also get ugly! You can have a mix of small and big stitches spaced as if they had an attitude of their own. In essence, free-motion quilting hands you the power to create as you go, make patterns, give life and beauty to the quilt, and ultimately own it. There is just one rule—there are no boundaries, the sky’s the limit, and this is a hobby that is supposed to make you happy.
Take up the challenge and let us subdue free-motion quilting. Aside from fun, and the everyday purpose of quilts, do you know you can pass secret messages, express your mood, and show your feelings through them? African-American slaves used quilts hung in the open to pass messages. The quilts even included directions and maps. You see how much you can pour out into a quilt?
Let’s get right into it and fill our days with joy, control, beautiful quilts, and a sense of achievement!
Chapter One:
Features of a Free-Motion Quilting Machine
Today, there is a wide variety of machines to choose from. Let us look at the key features you need to look for, irrespective of the size of your budget. You want a machine that makes quilting fun and smooth and not a frustrating affair. A machine that caters to the unique concepts of free-motion quilting.
The basic requirements include:
● Working space—Space is crucial when doing free-motion quilting because you have to move the quilt easily. Therefore, it is necessary that your machine has a big throat. The machine’s throat is the area behind the needle that it encloses, also referred to as the harp. A big throat ensures that you can easily handle the material without having to reroll, reposition, or fold the quilt, since you have space to stuff the material.
A long arm, again the machine’s and not yours, is ideal for free-motion quilting. The arm refers to the distance between the needle and the machine’s vertical part. A long machine arm allows for an easier creation of larger patterns. You can manoeuvre the fabric without much resistance. You are better off with a machine with a long arm and big throat for optimal working space.
● Feed dog—The term does not refer to a dog’s dinner. In a sewing machine, feed dogs are metal-like ridges that begin from a hole on the throat and usually move as you sew. They grip the bottom fabric, helping it to pass through the machine and produce a stitch of high-quality. In most cases, sewing happens with feed dogs facing upwards and visible, but in the case of free-motion quilting, the feed dogs are lowered or covered.
Lowering the feed dogs means that the machine does not grip the fabric’s underside, giving you full control of the length and position of the stitches. In free-motion quilting, that is the ideal situation. Your choice of a machine must make it easy to move the feed. Most machines have a switch to lower the feed dogs, although older versions may have a cover. If your machine does not lower the feed dog, you can improvise by using playing cards or a piece of plastic as a cover. Whatever the feature of your machine, you need to have enough room to move the fabric around without the feed dog inhibiting your movement.
● Presser foot pressure dial—As a free-motion quilter, it is best to use a darning foot. They may differ depending on the machine, but generally, they have a base with a circular opening. A darning foot allows you to manoeuvre the fabric with ease and in any direction. With the clear sole, you have maximum visibility to quilt away happily.
The foot pressure adjustment dial is important in setting the amount of pressure placed on the fabric by the pressure foot. Different fabrics require different amounts of pressure.
Nowadays, there are computerised stitch regulators that, once set, can produce consistent lengths of stitches during free-motion quilting, even with lowered feed dogs.
● Knee lifter—You will need a knee lifter to raise and lower your presser foot without using your hands. Your machine of choice should allow you to use your knee to raise and lower the presser foot. In free-motion quilting, you are the one in charge, and the hands play a crucial role in moving the fabric. You need those hands free and dedicated to the task at hand. Sometimes, it is not a knee press, but rather it might be implanted in your machine in the form of a button or heel press. If it’s in a flywheel, it might be a bit bulky but it’s doable.
● Needle stop down function—You need your needle to stop in your fabric every time you let the foot feed up. The needle stop down function helps the quilt from moving and shifting each time you stop sewing because the needle being down and in the fabric holds and prevents it from moving. You can then adjust your fabric or position it well without losing the pattern. As you choose a machine, this is an important feature to look for.
● Half stitch—This capability is important. You have to bring up a bobbin thread, which you will learn further along in this book.
Accessories
Now that you know the best features to look for in a free-motion quilting machine, you may want to know the extras. We all love something extra, and if you need evidence walk into a store and watch the items that come with something extra fly off the shelf. Even in quilting, it is always nice to have something that makes life more cheerful or eases things.
Although your machine has all the necessary features, there are a few items that you can add to make your quilting journey smooth and pleasant. You don’t have to get them, but it would be beneficial to have them.
● A free-motion quilting foot—If you can only have one accessory, then have this one. A free-motion quilting