http://www.goldenthreads.com/howtouse/
Enjoy!
Lynn




bettyannseeman wrote:I use clear tablecloth fabric that I get at JoAnns. I pin my finished quilt to the design wall and then pin the clear cloth over the whole quilt. I use markers that are for white boards. I can try different designs and if I don't like them -- they just wipe off. When I have a design I like, I take the clear cloth to my light table and create stencils - from cardboard boxes--to transfer the markings to my quilt. A good wipe all over with a paper towel and some spray cleaner and my clear cloth is ready for the next time.
Works great and is not too expensive. Leaves more cash in the purse for fabric. Betty Ann in Sunny Florida


kathyst2 wrote:bettyannseeman wrote:I use clear tablecloth fabric that I get at JoAnns. I pin my finished quilt to the design wall and then pin the clear cloth over the whole quilt. I use markers that are for white boards. I can try different designs and if I don't like them -- they just wipe off. When I have a design I like, I take the clear cloth to my light table and create stencils - from cardboard boxes--to transfer the markings to my quilt. A good wipe all over with a paper towel and some spray cleaner and my clear cloth is ready for the next time.
Works great and is not too expensive. Leaves more cash in the purse for fabric. Betty Ann in Sunny Florida
Betty, I do that also. I use the plastic they sell on rolls at Joann, that I also use for applique placement overlays. I put a border of blue painter's tape all around the plastic so I know where the edges are to avoid disaster with a marking pen.
I also sketch on plain paper, and then draw motifs out on paper. sometimes it takes me days to draw out something I like.
I'm just quilting a challenge quilt for the guild that is fairly small. I used freezer paper to make a pattern for it, and then doodled on the freezer paper pattern to find out how to quilt it. I look at Margo's computer renderings and stand in awe!
Kathy


bettyannseeman wrote:The blue tape sounds like a great idea. I hope you didn't learn the hard way about the need for the boundry. Betty Ann



Margo wrote:Kathy, please don't be too awe-struck! What I do is really simple! I find it faster to do a small scale sketch on a photo of the entire quilt than try to work at full size during the early design stages.







QuilterLynn wrote:Y'all are miles and years ahead of me and have such great ideas! I'm just a baby entering the 'quilting' part of the project having done ALL of my quilts by hand prior to this and doing very simple 'fluffy' minimal quilting. I'll probably eventually do heavier quilting but for now I'm really just learning in the phase of visualizing the design on that part of the quilt and figuring out how to do something other than 1/4 inch on the small pieced parts! ha
TQS is such a wonderful resource! Thanks bunches for all the ideas. JoAnns is only 2 miles from my house. ha ha ha



Return to Hand and Machine Quilting
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests