Hi everyone! I'm back with another
Five Friday Favorites post. This time I'm sharing my favorite free motion quilting (FMQ) designs. These are the ones that are my go-to designs. My favorites and the ones I use most often. Any of these could be done on either a long arm OR a domestic machine. I promise! I know, because I've done them.
First, a little about me. I started doing FMQ on a small Brother machine, bought from my local Costco. Man that little machine was a workhorse. It did everything I asked it to - I even quilted a queen sized quilt on that thing! Then I graduated to my Juki TL-2010Q - which has a much larger throat space and faster speeds. Then a few years after that I bought a used HandiQuilter long arm.
I've tried all of these designs on several different machines, so I know that they work. If you can drop the feed dogs on your machine, then you can try FMQ too! Now, by no means do I profess to be an expert. You'll see in my photos that my quilting is far from perfect. I've always enjoyed quilting my own quilts, and these are just my most-used and most-loved designs!
#1: Mod Dotz (or Curly Cues)
This design is available as a pantograph from
Urban Elementz but it's a fun one to do freehand! I love how this one flows as I quilt it. As I go, I try to keep each loop about the same size. As you can see, sometimes I'm better at it and sometimes I'm not :) But it's okay! That's what I love about the non-computerized quilting - it has personality! You can see
more of the quilting on this quilt here on this blog post.
#2: Geometric Lines
#3: Basic Meandering
I hear some quilters refer to this as stippling, but to me this is more of a meandering design. If this were really dense then I would call it stippling. Like - REALLY dense. But I'm not the quilt police. So you can call it whatever you want. This still is one of my go-to quilting designs mostly for it's speed. And I don't have to think much about it as I go. When I started doing this one, I would try to make the shape of a puzzle piece - some convex curves and some concave. Keep that puzzle piece shape in your mind as you practice. You can see more of the quilt and the meandering quilting
here on this blog post.
#4: Medium Loops
Recently this has been my favorite. I think I've used this one 6 or 7 times already this year. It's feminine but not frilly or complicated. This design is just some medium (nickel-sized) loops mixed in with some meandering. Add in as many or as few loops as you want, just try to keep the loops all the same size. I like to imagine I'm tracing around the edge of a nickel or a quarter as I go. You can see more medium loop quilting
here on this Little Miss Sunshine Quilt and here on my
Little Ruby Quilt.
#5: Swirls and Shells
This one is the most complicated design that I do free-hand. I call it Swirls and Shells, although it probably has a whole bunch of other names. This one takes me the longest to do, but I love it the most. If you're new to this one, I would recommend practicing just doing swirls, swirls and more swirls. Then try adding in a shell or two here and there.
You can see some great videos that are similar designs
here,
here and
here.
You can see more quilts that use this design
here and
here.
So there you go - my five favorite FMQ designs! If you're trying a design for the first time, my advice would be to practice, practice, practice! Get some paper and a pencil and try drawing it first. Get the feel of how you will move through the space. Then make some little sample quilt sandwiches (like 20" square or so) and try the designs out on the machine. For each design I'll go through 3 or 4 quilt sandwiches before I feel confident enough to move to the final quilt.
Oh and before I sign off, I'd like to announce the winner of the Christmas Kitsch fat quarter bundle. Congratulations to Lorri! And thank you to all who entered!