Merging Lines is fun!!!

As I mentioned last week, I have stopped trying to keep up with Angela Walters in her newest challenge…. “Free Motion Fillers”. She has been FLYING thru the designs this time and it was simply too much to try to do all of them in one week. Fortunately, all of the videos are on her website so I can go back to them at any time!!

This week I have continued to work on the “Geometric” FMQ designs and found one or two that did NOT tickle my fancy, but found several that are definitely keepers!!

The first one for this week was “Merged Lines”. This is a design that I have seen Angela talk about and it always looked super complicated.

Initially I had trouble figuring the pattern out and literally followed Angela’s steps one at a time. I would watch 15 seconds of the video and then quilt it the same way….watch another 15 seconds and then quilt…….another 15 seconds and then quilt!!

At some point, I had the AHA moment where I understood the design.

Don’t you love it when that happens!!

Also, I was trying to quilt it side to side, but when I switched to a vertical orientation it worked so much better!

Here are the steps…..

Quilt a line that follows one of the edges and then have it veer off at some point…..

This veering leaves an area that you are now going to fill with lines that echo the line that you just quilted……

When you hit a previous line, you simply travel along that line and then repeat the echo until the entire area is filled in……

You then travel outside of the furthest line that you have quilted and start the process over again!!

I can see using this design when I have large areas to cover. I stitched my section at 1/4″ so there is a LOT of quilting in it, but you could easily open it up more and get thru an area pretty fast.

Here is the final……

I LOVE IT!!!!

In this section of the challenge there are TEN different designs to try but Angela only demonstrates seven of them. The other three are in her pdf handout but there is no actual instruction.

At first this frustrated me and I was really concerned about trying designs that I couldn’t see in action.

BUT, as I got to those designs, I found that they were simply variations of one of the other designs and that I could probably figure them out if I tried!!!

The first one was “Blended Lines” and I could see that it was going to work a lot like the “Merged Lines” that I just showed.

After thinking about the design a bit, I stitched my first line from one side to the other, traveled just a bit back over my stitching, and then veered out to one side……

I traveled a bit past the veered line and stitched another line all the way across. This time I traveled a bit further on the line and then veered again. I also had the option to veer BACK to the line before I reached the other side.

The only problem that I hit was that I SHOULD have started the design at one corner and had it flow all the way across the diamond. Instead, I started right in the middle and had to break thread and then work on the other side. This meant that my straight line had to be further away…..

……so that I had a place to insert my “veered” line…..

This is how it looked……

Both of these designs are DEFINITELY in my “use again” folder!!!

Come back tomorrow and I will present two more favorites and two that I will probably NEVER use!!

FMQ practice—the right way!!

As I mentioned in Tuesday’s post, I was concerned that I wasn’t practicing my FMQ in a good way. I was just hurrying thru it to say that I was done!!

So, as I sat down to do the next installment of Angela Walters “FMQ Filler Challenge”, I knew that I wanted to slow down, take my time, and try to do the very best that I could do!!

In this challenge, she is presenting up to 10 different designs each week and that is simply too many to do at one time. So when I had an hour to quilt, I decided that I would work on 3 of them and then stop.

The first one is a design that I have done before. In the course that I teach called “MOVE IT….a Free Motion Quilting Bootcamp” (for more information, see the end of this post), I called it “U-Turn” and taught it like this……

“U-turn”

I worked from side to side and basically worked on one row at a time. It works well, but as you see in the video, it is easy to get stuck at the side and have to do a lot of traveling along the edges.

Angela’s method is interesting……

Firstly, she quilts vertically rather than horizontally because domestic machines have more space to maneuver when you are working back and forth rather than side to side…..SO smart!!!

THEN, she quilts in columns rather than rows, being sure to fluctuate where each of the lines ends.

Here is my first column…..

Then you add another column, meeting the first column at each “U-Turn”and making the ending points fluctuate again…..

The final column finishes the design and fills in the rest of the area…..

I found this to be much easier than the way I was doing it previously!!

I focused on trying to keep the line spacing even and think that I did a pretty good job of it!!

Filler Design #2 was a square meander. In the effort to practice better, I first drew the design out on a dry-erase board and was happy with how it looked……

As I did this drawing practice, I realized that I really needed to think about which way I wanted to travel or I would end up stuck in a corner.

So, as I quilted, I would stop before each new square started and decide which direction that “crossing line” would go. It helped tremendously!!

I was very encouraged when I looked back at this block…..

The 3rd design was the hardest. It involved “nested squares” that, at some point, shot off to the next square!! The first one was easy enough…..

….but I found it difficult to nest them together.

It helped when I finally realized that, once at the center of the square, I could get out going in any of 3 directions……

Knowing that gave some ease to my anxiety and it was easier to finish the square…..

I think that I would only use this design if I could work BIG and had LOTS of room to develop the pattern. But it was still good to learn something new!!

I was very happy with the final result on these three blocks…..

…..and ESPECIALLY happy that I used better form in my practice session and probably learned a lot more than I could have!!!

Now I am excited for another free hour to try three more designs!!

Let’s Swirl…..

Swirl means to “move in a twisting or spiraling pattern”, and that sounds like a great idea for Free-Motion-Quilting. BUT, it is one of the hardest patterns for me to figure out!!

When Angela Walters announced that week two in her “Filler FMQ Challenge” was based on swirls, I groaned loudly and started dreading the week!!

As usual, once I got into the design and started listening the Angela’s instructions, I relaxed, the quilting got easier and it ended up being a fun afternoon at the machine!!

I did this week backwards, starting with the variations and ending up with the swirl meander…..

I really struggle with this design, especially how to make it move freely around the area. I often end up with all of the swirls in a line and all of the curves going in the same direction!! SIGH!!!

My first problem is that I overthink the initial curve….maybe practice will help that!!

The first variation is the “Swirl Hook”…..

….EVEN HARDER for me to figure out!! I did find that it was important to echo the hook in the correct direction, but this just doesn’t look good to me!!!

Sadly, the next two designs were even worse!!!

I couldn’t keep the concentric swirls spaced evenly and THEY…..WEREN’T….ROUND!!

The “uneven concentric swirls” were hard to maintain, especially making it look as if I MEANT for them to be spaced differently……

Things got better when we added some pebbles into the mix…..

I think that having a place to stop one swirl and head into the next one makes it easier for me to fathom.

The “Elongated Swirl Meander” was okay, but I had done it before, so that helped…..

I had learned the “flower meander” in a previous challenge and it was definitely a favorite (I actually started with it)…..

….and the “Wavy Line Meander” is easy and I like how it looks…..

But, this weeks challenge was not ALL gloom and doom!!

There were two designs that I loved!!

The first was an elongated swirl that had a large “pebble” at the center of the swirl. I love how the other quilting made this circle pop out…..

The last design was not even in the video, but her diagram showed how to quilt it. I may not have done it EXACTLY right, but I love the open feel of it……

These last two are designs that I will DEFINITELY use again…..hopefully often!!!

All in all, there were TEN designs this week so I guess feeling a little overwhelmed was to be expected!!!

BUT….the takeaway message here is that, eventhough I didn’t feel good about my quilting, the final product looks great!!!

The other thing that I realized was that I felt rushed when I sat down to quilt and didn’t spend the time and energy needed to do a proper job……. I’ll try again next week!!!

Free Motion Filler fun

This week I was able to make a start on the Angela Walters “Free Motion Fillers Challenge“. Most of you know that I LOVE the way that Angela teaches, really appreciate her challenges and ALWAYS, ALWAYS, ALWAYS learn something new!!

This first week was no different!!

The first week was all about Circle Filler designs…..

We started out with basic pebbles….

I have been quilting those for a long time so picked a small area to practice them on.

Next, came Bubbles….ie, pebbles that are different sizes…..

I love how this one looks but I have trouble spacing my larger pebbles evenly around the block. It might be good for me to mark those in before I start quilting!!

Then we switched to a design where you start with stipple quilting and then throw in a loop (pebble) every so often…..

I do another version of this design which I find a bit easier. Mine uses less stipple and more loops…..

One of the hardest variations for me was overlapped circles….

I found it REALLY hard to keep the circles a similar size!!

Again, I have a version that I call “Bad Hair Day”. It is less “standard” but gives a similar feel…..

Next was my FAVORITE design and one new to me….an Echoed Pebble…..

The idea here is that every so often you make an echo line inside the pebble. I found it an easy pattern to do!!

The hardest one for me (and probably the filler that I will NEVER use) was an oval design.

I found this one very hard to work thru and to keep even as I went. When Angela works this design, she “travels” around every one of the ovals but that was too much traveling for me. Instead, I rounded the corner and then backtracked to a good starting place for another oval.

AGAIN…..this version was NOT for me!!

I will post a review later, but I am enjoying using my new suspension system. It made a lot of difference to the “drag” associated with FMQ.

I finished this first lesson just in time to watch the next one…..WHEW!!!!