by rehak » Mon May 16, 2011 12:39 pm
I'm one of those weird people who has an HQ16, but still does most of my quilting on my domestic. Since I work full time and love to piece, it's been hard for me to find time to work on quilting the less-important quilts that I want to use for learning on the long arm. So I'm still quilting my gift quilts and important quilts on the domestic and mostly leave the long arm for the future (although I'm inspired again to try to learn after my classes at MQS). When quilting on a domestic, it's important to find the way that works best for you to manipulate all of that fabric and batting. I start in the middle and do my stability stitching first, working that stitching out to the edges of the quilt. This allows me to remove the pins as soon as possible so I can get rid of that weight and also the hassle of the pins catching on things. I do leave in a few pins to mark places that need to be quilted so I don't forget anything. Once the stability quilting is finished, I work on the outer border enough to put on the binding. This again reduces the weight of the quilt by taking away the extra batting and backing and reduces the hassle of the foot sometimes getting caught on the edge of the quilt top when moving things around. With all of this done, I can more easily work on any detail quilting.
There are a couple of important things to figure out when quilting a large quilt on a domestic machine. The first is how you are going to work with the bulk while quilting in the middle. For me, rolling the quilt doesn't work. It is too hard for me to manipulate that way. I find that pooling the quilt around the needle is easier for me. And you have to realize that when working on the middle of the quilt, you will be working on very small areas of the quilt and will have to move your hands more often because you will keep running into the bulk of the quilt. Get good at stopping with the needle down and moving your hands! The other big thing is to learn to do SID with your free motion foot moving in all directions. I do the SID around the borders with the walking foot, but otherwise it's all done with the darning foot so I can move things around and keep the bulk out from under the machine. And, of course, your table is very important. You need to support all parts of the quilt so that the weight of the quilt doesn't pull on the area where you are quilting.