Precision

Filed under: Quilting — Cyndi at 4:56 pm on Saturday, February 10, 2007

Went to my first quilting class on Thursday night. The class was great, but I have mixed feelings about quilting. You see, quilting is all about precision. Or at least that’s what I got out of the first class. Precision in cutting your fabric, precision in pressing (not ironing!), precision in sewing a 1/4″ seam, etc. I find all that precision to be more than a little stressful, after spending all day drafting precisely worded documents at work. I need my hobbies to be relaxing! (knitting, anyone?)

That said, I really learned a lot in the class - both quilting and general sewing techniques. My favorite tip for sewing was to start all seams with a piece of scrap fabric, and feed in whatever you are sewing after the scrap. When the “real” sewing is done, finish the seam with another scrap of fabric. That way the fabric doesn’t get distorted at the beginning and end of the piece, and you don’t waste much thread.

I had the same problem as Ruth when sewing my 1/4″ seam. I think pretty much everyone in my class ended up using tape to mark 1/4″ rather than using a 1/4″ foot. Apparently it is difficult to make an accurate 1/4″ foot or something… Weird.

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My nine patch blocks turned out pretty well, I think. They measure 6.5″, just as planned, so apparently all that precision worked in my favor.

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After the class, I talked to my administrative assistant at work (she is an avid quilter) about my quilting precision-related stress. She assured me that it is possible to be accurate without being anal (her words, not mine!), and told me that the minor imperfections in a finished quilt are what give the piece character. Hmmm - I’m not so sure I can deal with that, but it’s good to hear from a seasoned veteran that perfection is not the result that all quilters are trying to achieve.

On a completely different topic, anyone going to Stitches West? I’ll be there on Friday with Lynette, and I think Angela is going to be there that day too. Anyone up for a lunch or dinner meet-up?

5 Comments »

Comment by ruth

February 10, 2007 @ 9:09 pm

Hey, your quilt block is in a similar colorway (light/dark blue) as mine! =) Yea, I talked to a quilter at SnB the other night and she reassured me that I don’t have to be totally “anal” either (which was a huge relief), people can fudge around here and there.
And about the 1/4″ foot - you’d think they would make *something* that would be accurate. Are they all like that? Mine was SO off. =P

Comment by OldRound

February 11, 2007 @ 5:29 am

I think that’s one of the things that makes me wary of quilting too. As if I would try to be imprecise. As if I would purposely cut crooked, sew crooked. My only quilting experience was in elementary school. It was stress free. Don’t remember any exhortations about precision.

Comment by stacey

February 11, 2007 @ 8:02 am

I have made many quilts and I’m what you’d call accurate, but not precise….you can fudge a little with quilts like you can with knitting - once you learn what you’re doing, you learn where you have that wiggle room…

Comment by pixie

February 11, 2007 @ 8:09 am

I learned to quilt on my own and i never stress about it being perfect unless i am in the mood to make it perfect. If i mess up a sqaure i rip it or throw it away, and that doesn’t happen too often. You can always trim the sqaure if its off a bit, at the end. If you dont go super fast, it won’t be terribly crooked. The times i went speed on purpose I wound up with a crooked blanket but the time i just went at a happy natural pass, and didn’t stress at all, they turned out great for my perception of great :)

Who teaches you and what they teach you can make a big difference, so take it all in stride. Some people take quilting very serious, I don’t, it’s a fun hobby!

Comment by carolyn

March 21, 2007 @ 4:51 am

obviously your blocks CAN be done very precisely and look perfect and yadda yadda yadda.

on the other hand, a quilt made with some crooked seams and some non matching corners and some places where things don’t like up…WILL STILL FIT YOUR BED!!! it’s not like knitting where if it doesn’t fit your body, it can’t even be worn, must be ripped or given away, etc.

and if you sew the whole quilt on the same machine / just use your 1/4 foot whether it’s really 1/4 or not. all you really want is all the seams to be consistent. if they’re a tiny bit more or a tiny bit less, it won’t really matter.

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