This May Be A Stupid Question, But...
#21
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Manchester, NH
Posts: 701
For FMQ, most quilters use a "hopping" foot that has a spring in it. The foot holds the fabric down while the stitch is being formed, but hops back up in-between stitches so you can move the quilt. There is another type of FMQ foot that doesn't hop, but I've never used that one. As others have said, that one keeps a minimal amount of continual pressure on the sandwich to stop it from popping up when the needle moves up. These feet are usually not expensive at all. Most sewing machines have either a short shank or long shank, and a generic darning foot of the correct shank type is all that is needed.
Oh, and it's not a stupid question at all! The only stupid question is the one that doesn't get asked.
Oh, and it's not a stupid question at all! The only stupid question is the one that doesn't get asked.
#22
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Location: Chapel Hill
Posts: 1,086
#23
This is it exactly. Also it is safer ... and much easier to use the proper foot for FMQ.
ali
#24
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Southeast Wisconsin
Posts: 1,070
I finally took a class in FMQ and this was what worked for me: Presser foot tension to 0, stitch length 0, open toed applique foot (to see where you are going). Feed dogs up. I can now FMQ! The hopping foot drove me crazy but this method works like a dream! The class was taught by a local award winning quilter who quilts all of hers on a domestic machine.
#25
Thanks everyone for your replies! A lady in my quilters guild let me use an older machine of her's so I could practice FMQ on it. I took it by the shop where she has it serviced and the foot I was told I needed was $38.99! I couldn't afford to pay that even if I actually owned the machine! She did show me how to raise the shank so the foot isn't touching the fabric though, so maybe I can practice a bit using the regular foot?
Donna
Donna
#26
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
Thanks everyone for your replies! A lady in my quilters guild let me use an older machine of her's so I could practice FMQ on it. I took it by the shop where she has it serviced and the foot I was told I needed was $38.99! I couldn't afford to pay that even if I actually owned the machine! She did show me how to raise the shank so the foot isn't touching the fabric though, so maybe I can practice a bit using the regular foot?
Donna
Donna
#27
Two reasons: The sandwich has a tendency to pull up with the needle as it comes out and you end up with strange tension and stitches. The second reason, so you don't sew/stab your finger, hand or arm.
Some embroiderers don't use a foot - with special care and tension but is is not usually recommended.
Some embroiderers don't use a foot - with special care and tension but is is not usually recommended.
#28
I finally took a class in FMQ and this was what worked for me: Presser foot tension to 0, stitch length 0, open toed applique foot (to see where you are going). Feed dogs up. I can now FMQ! The hopping foot drove me crazy but this method works like a dream! The class was taught by a local award winning quilter who quilts all of hers on a domestic machine.
#30
If you don't want to use a darning foot...you can buy a needle with a spring on it. Any fabric store will have them on the notions wall. It keeps your fabric from hopping up and you can thread paint with it quite well. A rather cheap alternative to an expensive foot. It does take some practice to get the technique right but if you have some experience with free motion the learning curve is short.
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