![]() SPORTS Footballs Just Footballs AF Football Football, basketball, baseball T urtle Sports. 015 Star Wars Two little hands Sunglasses Thunder Truck-Bulldozer-plane Turtle Sports UFO’s Antique Trucks Wizard Sky Kids / Cutsie American Flyer Anchors aweigh Anchors away J ust Apples Apples April Showers Apricot quackers Baa Baa Baby bear Baby Stars Moon Baby Yoda Beach umbrella Big boy toys Blast off Built tough Catch that horse Camping Crocodile Tears Dave’s seashells Elephants Simple Every-Which-Way Gears Giraffe Happy Birthday Jungle Babies Lady bugs Loopy Owl Meander dragonfly Mouse Ears Muscial notes Musical notes Planes in the sky Puzzle-Broken Rockets Quilters tools Stars and Circles Sailboat panto. ![]() Ribbit Rubber ducks Sea Creatures Turtles Sea Turtles Siberian husky Turtle Pano Turtle Sports Wander Paws Where the buffalo roam Dog Paw Star Dog Treats Dolphin Dance Elephants Simple Friends in the Woods Forest Animals Frog on a Pad Giddy Up Giraffe Gold fish Swift Hummingbirds Jungle Babies Loopy Owl Lounge lizardz Love Elephants Love paws Mamma Llama Mice and Hearts Momma baby bears Monkey jungle Mouse Ears Oscar Owl Old McDonld Over The Moon Paws2 Rabbit pano. ![]() I’ll be guest-posting here at We All Sew again, but in the meantime, please join me over on my blog and join my Free-Motion Quilting Idea Facebook group for other free-motion quilting ideas.Animal Crackers Baa Baa Baby bear BEE Bees Jessica’s busy bees Beagles & buddies Bone Yard Bronco Heads Butterfly Kisses Catch that horse Chicken Little Coyote Moon Debs Dragonflies Dog Bones. It can definitely be done! You can use the BERNINA Stitch Regulator to help keep your stitches even. thread, but you can definitely do these on a domestic machine or on the BERNINA Q 20 as well. I did these samples on my beautiful BERNINA Longarm machine Q 24 using Aurifil 50 wt. Sewing Machine block with an open swirl backgroundĭress Block with a swirl/feather background Scissors block with a swirl and waves background I used quite a few variations of swirls in this one. I recently debuted my new block-of-the-month pattern, Sewing Room Sampler featuring my Sewing Room line for Benartex, at BERNINA University. Swirls look especially great when contrasted with other, more uniform types of quilting, like circles and crosshatching. I echoed the inner swirls and filled in the center with pebbles. ![]() I used the open swirl pattern on my Twinkle quilt, featuring my Sparkle collection for Benartex. I know…I don’t like it either, but we really need to stop and then move our hands. In the case of swirls stop when you get right into a swirl’s center, before you start heading out, or stop once you have completed a swirl before moving onto the next one.Īnd I know we’ve all tried it (myself more times than I’d care to admit) but it doesn’t hurt to remind ourselves that, while we think we are smooth enough to reposition our hands WHILE we are quilting (as opposed to stopping before repositioning), SADLY, most of us are not. You want to stop where there is a natural corner to the design, so that when you start again little differences in direction are not noticeable. When stitching swirls (or any motifs, for that matter) think about where you need to stop or start when repositioning hands (or feet in the base of long arms).
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