Thanks Rita! That quilt is my Coxcombs Quilt. It is the first
hand applique project that I ever did, and now I absolutely love working on needle-turn projects!
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This was before I got my Handi-Quilter and it is machine quilted on my Bernina 1090, using monofiliment thread on the top and cotton thread in the bobbin that matches the backing fabric. I probably used YLI, but now I also like Superior's MonoPoly and Maderia's Monolon. I just stitched right over everything is a very simple diagonal grid which was how I had seen some antique quilts done...except, of course, they were quilted by hand! The grid was carefully marked with Crayola markers before I pin basted the sandwich.
If I were doing it today, on my mid-arm machine, it would be easier for me to outline the applique (definitely with monofiliment!) and do a fill in the background to add more interest there with a cotton thread. Because the applique pieces are so large on this quilt, I would also quilt details on them to both add interest and to keep the quilting at the same density as the background fill.
When I cross-hatch on my Handi-Quilter, I mark the grid before starting to quilt, and stitch up to each applique element, and use the outline stitching as a travel path to move to the next line. That is the way I quilted my 2008 TQS BOM, Bouquets for a New Day!
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The straight lines you see are basting stitches done with Superior's VANISH, and when the quilt was washed, they all disappeared.
Let me know if you have more questions!