lmcfood wrote:
OOOOPS, meant to ask whether you could use this on a larger quilt, like a bed size one, or would that be too complicated?
Lynn
Lynn,
I asked that same question, because I have a number of quilts that are lap size or larger that I need to get quilted. The teacher said that she hasn't done it on larger quilts, so isn't sure how it would work. She suggested that if you wanted to do a larger quilt to use the quilt as you go method.
The problem I can see with this method on larger quilts is being able to manipulate the quilt to get everything lined up properly before you start to embroider. It was difficult at times to get the small quilt turned just right to get everything lined up, so a larger one would be harder. There would be a lot more fabric to have to deal with. We hooped WSS and stitched out some alignment lines, put thumbtacks at different places, and then lined up the markings on the quilt with those. Trying to move the quilt just a bit, to get everything lined up got more difficult as the quilt was quilted, so a large quilt would take a bit more work.
The way I see it, trying to quilt a large quilt on a home machine (sewing or embroidery) is going to be difficult no matter how you quilt it. You need to be able to support your quilt while you are working on it. Whether you are free motioning a small area, or you are embroidering a small area, the part of the quilt you aren't working on, needs to be kept out of your way, and supported.
If you have a table that is large enough to support your quilt, while you are working on it, I don't know why it couldn't be done. I have never done quilt as you go, and that isn't going to help me get the tops I have already completed quilted, so I still need to quilt finished tops.
I think a lot depends on the quilting designs you want to put on your quilt as well. If you are doing feathers, where there is more than one hooping and have to line everything up, that is going to be more work than taking a few designs, and just placing them in your blocks, but not needing to line them up perfectly.
I'm not good a free motion, so unless I want to stitch in the ditch, or send my quilts out for someone else to quilt, the only way I can get nice quilting designs on my quilts would be to use my embroidery machine. I don't have room for a long arm... I need a bigger house... LOL
Diane