Invisible Monofilament SID Halfway Completed |
10 inch Pro and 6 inch ProMini Rulers from Quilter's Groove, Lisa Calle's Ruler Line |
How I Use the Ruler's Reference Lines for SID Quilting |
The Markings Are What Make These Rulers My Favorites! |
Invisible Stitch In the Ditch: The Wonder Bra of Quilting! |
Tedious, Invisible, But Crucial |
Those Needle Holes Will Close Up When the Quilt is Washed |
Love Seeing the Backing Fabric Starting to Wrap Around the Pickup Roller! |
I love seeing the backing fabric start to peek around the pickup roller at the back of my frame as the quilting progresses enough to advance the quilt!
I probably would already be done with the SID if I hadn't had a tension snafu. Despite having tested and adjusted tension off to the side of my quilt before starting, I noticed with the first advance of the quilt that I had some flatlining (top thread too loose or bobbin thread too tight, causing the bobbin thread to lay flat on the back of the quilt rather than meeting the top thread in the center of the quilt batting to form a balanced stitch) on the back.
Poor Tension, Bobbin Thread "Flatlining" |
So anyway, these really lousy tension stitches are very easy to remove from the backing side, just snip at either end of the bad stitching line and pull; the thread comes right out in one piece. However, after pulling out the bad stitches on backing side, I had a horrible time figuring out which of my invisible seams had been ripped out and needed restitching when I got back to the FRONT of the quilt! Really all I could see were the needle holes to begin with, and the bad stitching left holes that looked exactly like the good stitching. I had pulled out the bobbin thread from the bad stitching, but the top thread still needed to be pulled out and clipped away in some cases... I had to check EVERY STINKING SEAM, and I accidentally requilted a few seam lines by accident because I thought I'd pulled out the stitching there even though it was perfectly fine -- just couldn't SEE it. Major time suck!
Testing, Testing, 1, 2, 3... |
These string pieced scraps, above, were good for testing stitch tension as well as for a quick refresher on SID, since I haven't done anything with my quilting machine for a few months. It's also a good way of previewing what my thread is going to look like on a variety of different fabric prints. I'm using the clear monofilament thread rather than the smoke because most of my fabrics are light colors, but the clear monofilament is slightly visible on the darkest blue fabric strips.
Not Quite 6 Months Old, Already 70 lbs of Sweetness! |
So, what are my sewing goals for the coming week?
Tuesday To-Do List:
- Finish SID quilting on Spirit Song
- Change needle from 3.5 (for monofilament thread) to either 4.0 (for Bottom Line 60 weight or So Fine 50 weight thread) or 4.5 (for King Tut or YLI 40 weight cotton quilting thread), rethread machine (thread path is different from monofilament), and adjust tension as needed
- Begin additional straight line ruler work quilting with thread that is meant to be seen!
beautiful colors!
ReplyDeleteI like your explanation of what was wrong with the stitching. I am relatively new to longarm and trying to figure out what battings to use. I always used quilter’s dream cotton and loved it. I sometimes want a little more loft to either show quilting or hide some problems with the top.
ReplyDeleteHi Rebecca! I just started some ruler work today for the first time in ages. I adore the suggestion of using first-aid tape on the back of the ruler! Annoyingly enough, my ruler is too short to span the block I'd like to stitch a straight line across. I eyeballed it . . . and was off a bit so they are not quite straight lines! I like and use all the reference lines, as well. I'll see if she offers a longer version of the mini. I didn't find your post to boring at all - not one bit. And the last photo of Sam the sweetest almost 6-month old puppy is just the BEST. He would probably be a great quilting assistant eventually. I am looking forward to hearing more about the quilting on this gorgeous quilt. Thanks for linking up this week! ~smile~ Roseanne
ReplyDeleteYes, there’s a 10” ruler as well as the 6”. I put an updated photo in showing both sizes.
DeleteI don't do any longarm quilting, but I have to say that quilt is just gorgeous. Your pup isn't bad either! He's already a big fella, but handsome!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Wendy!
DeleteRebecca you are brilliant. Look at those points. Your piecing is perfect. I hope you will post about how to achieve it. You are a quilt artist. Carmen in the Netherlands
ReplyDeleteThanks, Carmen! The secret to perfect points is a seam ripper!! Some of those seams took two or three tries before I got them just right!
DeleteYour ditch work is near perfection! I knew people used rulers to do it, but I had not tried it much.
ReplyDeleteI was wondering about when you said your goal was to do all the ditch work. Does that mean you unroll the quilt to do the rest of the ditch work and then roll it back up again to do filler work?
By the way, I honestly love this quilt! The colors yell, "I am happy!"
Right on stitch-in-the-ditch work! Are you going to fill in areas? With this design, I would have gone with an all-over pattern and been done, but that's me.
ReplyDeleteSpirit song is a beautiful quilt. Love the colors (and the quilting work). I do that first-aid tape thing, too. What a difference that can make with a ruler!
ReplyDeleteAnd thanks for linking up to the party! I love this and just got my 70/30 batting. I don't think it has as much loft as I was hoping, I will keep looking. I think it will be nice in the baby comfort quilts I do.
ReplyDeleteEverything looks so nice! and It sounds so simple but I know it's not. I assume you will switch thread to do the fun quilting. Does this mean you have to change your tension as well, every time you change thread types?
ReplyDeleteSo beautiful, so perfect - my mouth is still open while I drool on my keyboard. I love everything about Spirit Song. And it is because of your attention to detail - Every. Single. Detail. Absolute perfection - no compromises. I will be holding my breath (at least my drool) for the final finish. You rock, as usual!!!
ReplyDeleteSo fascinating to read your process! Thanks for sharing on Wednesday Wait Loss
ReplyDeleteWell done to figure out fairly quickly it was a thread path issue! Your SID is beautiful!
ReplyDelete