![]() It was a meditative, wonderful, hands-on project that filled my creative soul. I worked on my hand quilting at home while listening to audiobooks, on a long road trip, and while I watched movies with the kids during snow days. (Three guesses which method I chose?) You’re finished. You’re done hand quilting! Hooray! Doesn’t it look amazing? Great work!Īt this point, you’re ready to bind your quilt, which you may opt to do with your machine or by hand. Then, trim all of the extra tails of floss.ħ. When all of the lines are hand stitched, put a small drop of super glue on each of the small knots on the back, securing them surely in place. Begin and end all of your stitching with the knots on the backside of the quilt.Ħ. Repeat the stitching along all of your design lines, changing floss as your design or colors necessitate. When you have 3” of floss left on the needle, stitch to the back of the quilt and make a knot. From there, stitch 1/8” stitches from top to bottom and back again all along your line. The knot you made will remain on the backside of the quilt. Knot one end of the floss and leave the other as a 6” tail through the eye of the needle.īegin by coming up through the quilt at the end of one of your chalk lines. Shorter, and I felt like I didn’t make much progress between thread swaps. Longer than that, they got tangled easily as I worked. I liked working with about 12-18” sections at a time. Begin your stitching by threading a length of floss through your needle. On my quilt I chose to emphasize the pieced pattern with yellow sun rays bending around the sun, and pink rays extending into the blush sky, mountains and trees stitched into the green land piece, and waves rolling throughout the blue ocean.Ĥ. One huge benefit of hand quilting your project is the ability to create dynamic quilting lines that change throughout the quilt, rather than one standard pattern that repeats. Use a piece of chalk or a disappearing fabric pen to mark the quilting lines you’d like to follow. Smooth the layers so they are free of wrinkles, and then safety pin them together every 6 inches to hold the layers while you stitch.ģ. The thinner it is, the easier the hand quilting will be. Sandwich your finished, pieced quilt top with a thin layer of cotton batting and a fabric backing. Embroidery needles, you want the thinnest possible gauge (8-9) needle that still has a wide eye to fit the entire 6-thread floss.Embroidery floss in whatever color(s) you’d like to use. ![]() You’ll want to gather a few materials ahead of beginning hand quilting with embroidery floss: I couldn’t find a specific tutorial online for how to hand quilt with embroidery floss, so I experimented with my own ideas and love how it turned out. I thought hand stitching the quilting with embroidery floss would give the chunky, Sashiko stitching look that I wanted. On this one, I wanted the finished product to look handmade, unique, and special. In the past I have used my own small sewing machine to quilt straight, easy lines on my quilt projects. Once I finished piecing the top, I felt stuck on the quilting. ![]() I am now lovingly referring to it as my “quarantine quilt” and appreciate the sunrise design as a symbol of hope for the future.īefore sewing, I tried out a couple ideas on paper, and then settled on this simple landscape design. While on the site, I was super inspired by these simple, lovely colors and thought they would go nicely together in a modern quilt. Toward the beginning of the pandemic, I saw some amazing fabric online at Dry Goods Design, and ordered it to sew handmade masks. I did not even really set out to make this quilt. In my 30 years of sewing, I have completed three quilts, total ( Eliot’s baby quilt, this American flag denim quilt, a vintage patchwork quilt). ![]() I must begin by confessing that I am not typically a quilter. This easy, hand-stitching technique adds a lot of unique personality to your quilt, with the added bonus that you can complete it anywhere, no cords involved (and definitely no massive quilting machine!) Would you like to add a beautiful, simple, handmade finish to your quilt, with no machine involved? You might love hand stitching the quilting with embroidery floss.
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