Thank you - gives encouragement to me finishing my earliest quilts that are a wee bit puffy, although not quite on the scale of that vintage one. If it is possible to create a miracle like your quilting, well . . . hope for us all!
The problem when filming alone, the whole quilt needs to be seen at times and then I need close ups at other times. Getting the best angle is always hard. I’m definitely not a techie!
Will the water, start and steam method work for a quilt that has already been starched before they started piecing? I am referring to a newly made quilt
Love all the information. So helpful Thanks for sharing. It’s so encouraging to those of us who are still novices. Thank you
😊😊
Thank you so much for the information you shared with us awesome job❣️🪡✂️🧵
Absolutely!
Jenny Doan says something to the effect of 'finished is better than perfect' . Now it's usable. Now it's a quilt. Great.
Thanks!
Thank you I shall share this to my Simply Sixteen group so that they can see the steps you take and the transformation you achieve .
Thanks!! Helpful to anyone on a longarm!
Thank you - gives encouragement to me finishing my earliest quilts that are a wee bit puffy, although not quite on the scale of that vintage one. If it is possible to create a miracle like your quilting, well . . . hope for us all!
It’s all possible!
A beautiful finish. I look forward to seeing how you decide to finish the edges
I wish we saw more vintage tops here in New Zealand.
Thank you! 😊
Very informative, I think it would work with hand quilting also, yes?
Hand quilting lets you manipulate puckers and wrinkles easier, so yes! The starch and steam wouldn’t be possible unless you ‘block’ the top first.
gorgeous😊
Thank you! 😊
Thank you for this technique 🙌 ❤❤
great tips..perhaps you should mount the camera on the longarm, so it is visible, what you are doing
The problem when filming alone, the whole quilt needs to be seen at times and then I need close ups at other times. Getting the best angle is always hard. I’m definitely not a techie!
Will the water, start and steam method work for a quilt that has already been starched before they started piecing?
I am referring to a newly made quilt
It should, once it’s on a longarm, sometimes all it needs is water then steam.
Do you ever worry about the dyes running in newer fabric when you water, steam and starch the top?
I test in a small area before doing the whole thing.