Useless Quiling Gadgets & Other Boondoggles
#191
Member
Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Colorado
Posts: 55
I've read a few pages of this thread and don't think we should be pointing fingers or laying blame on anything. First, go look in the mirror and point a finger at that person. I've done it plenty of times. I'm kind of a gadget girl and I'm guilty of "being sure" that I'll use that new cool ruler or "thingy" that the video showed was so darn easy and neat to use .... ha! I know good and well not to buy it until I've used half of what I already have. And sometimes I do it anyway. :-)
I say - you buy cheap, you usually get what you pay for. Do a little research - we have computers and the capability to do that or we wouldn't be on this thread. Let's look at ourselves first before we lay blame. Besides, if we didn't have the money, we wouldn't have purchased that "worthless piece of something we don't like or use". Maybe it was the attack stratagy that didn't sit well - how about a thread with information on items you've purchased, what it was supposed to do and your experience with it. Now for the pins - there are 100's of pins and prices. I paid nearly $9.00 for a box of the fork pins because a professional quilter and LA'er t I know and totally love her work, loves them. She showed us how to use them - I hate them. But that doens't make them bad - they just don't work for me. I spent $9.00 on some Clover Patchwork pins - they are .4mm shaft and slide like butter. I also paid $5.98 for some Dritz pins .4mm (for 150 vs. 100 Clover) that also slide like butter. Be extra careful when looking for the Clover pins - they have some that aren't the Patchwork .4mm shaft but still have the yellow and light blue glass heads. I bought them the same day. The Dritz are #172 Ultra Fine Glass Head Pins with navy blue glass heads that won't melt. I'd been using .5mm shaft pins and they were pretty nice until I read and tried the .4mm size. I'll use both - it just depends whether I'm piecing a quilt or hemming denim pants.
Let's try to be a little more positive and informative than the total blame game - JMHO. Lynne
P.S. - when you buy, keep the receipt and return it if it doesn't work.
I say - you buy cheap, you usually get what you pay for. Do a little research - we have computers and the capability to do that or we wouldn't be on this thread. Let's look at ourselves first before we lay blame. Besides, if we didn't have the money, we wouldn't have purchased that "worthless piece of something we don't like or use". Maybe it was the attack stratagy that didn't sit well - how about a thread with information on items you've purchased, what it was supposed to do and your experience with it. Now for the pins - there are 100's of pins and prices. I paid nearly $9.00 for a box of the fork pins because a professional quilter and LA'er t I know and totally love her work, loves them. She showed us how to use them - I hate them. But that doens't make them bad - they just don't work for me. I spent $9.00 on some Clover Patchwork pins - they are .4mm shaft and slide like butter. I also paid $5.98 for some Dritz pins .4mm (for 150 vs. 100 Clover) that also slide like butter. Be extra careful when looking for the Clover pins - they have some that aren't the Patchwork .4mm shaft but still have the yellow and light blue glass heads. I bought them the same day. The Dritz are #172 Ultra Fine Glass Head Pins with navy blue glass heads that won't melt. I'd been using .5mm shaft pins and they were pretty nice until I read and tried the .4mm size. I'll use both - it just depends whether I'm piecing a quilt or hemming denim pants.
Let's try to be a little more positive and informative than the total blame game - JMHO. Lynne
P.S. - when you buy, keep the receipt and return it if it doesn't work.
Last edited by blessingscounted; 04-13-2013 at 04:21 PM.
#192
Respectfully, I have a different opinion than blessingscounted~
I for one, think I've read every post in this thread. I didn't read the posts in general as pointing fingers or laying blame on products but reviews of products that have not worked for quilters. I also see what works for some haven't always work for others. It's the sharing of experiences with products isn't it?
However, when I've seen multiple times, the same product has gotten a negative review or people have had a bad experience in trying to use them, then I won't be buying it to experiment to see if it will work for me.
So I view threads like this one with great interest and value the time that people take in leaving positive reviews, and yes indeed the negative reviews of the products too. Both help me in making decisions on my purchases.
One of the reasons I like Amazon.com so much for purchasing quilt books, and quilting items is because of the reviews. It doesn't take long for a quilt book, for example, to have less than stellar reviews if it is poorly written and there are plenty of other books with great reviews that I can spend my money on that other quilters have left good reviews.
So though I agree positive is better, I don't read this thread as negative.
I'm a gadget girl too! :0) This too is JMHO.
I for one, think I've read every post in this thread. I didn't read the posts in general as pointing fingers or laying blame on products but reviews of products that have not worked for quilters. I also see what works for some haven't always work for others. It's the sharing of experiences with products isn't it?
However, when I've seen multiple times, the same product has gotten a negative review or people have had a bad experience in trying to use them, then I won't be buying it to experiment to see if it will work for me.
So I view threads like this one with great interest and value the time that people take in leaving positive reviews, and yes indeed the negative reviews of the products too. Both help me in making decisions on my purchases.
One of the reasons I like Amazon.com so much for purchasing quilt books, and quilting items is because of the reviews. It doesn't take long for a quilt book, for example, to have less than stellar reviews if it is poorly written and there are plenty of other books with great reviews that I can spend my money on that other quilters have left good reviews.
So though I agree positive is better, I don't read this thread as negative.
I'm a gadget girl too! :0) This too is JMHO.
Last edited by onaemtnest; 04-13-2013 at 06:33 PM.
#193
Hello Kaye ~ I'm not sure if you are asking how to make it yourself or the pressing stick itself. Here is the link to the actual pressing stick http://thestripstick.com/buy_products and she has a video that explains the pressing stick in detail, both sizes.
I read how much BellaBoo liked the strip stick and several others commented that they liked it too, in a thread a few months ago. So I purchased the longer one 45" and love it!!!! I guess I could have made it myself but would I ever get around to making it? Probably not... :0)
So if your question is about making it yourself, I'll be of no help. But I can tell you that for right at $20 with shipping the strip stick for pressing seams was well worth my money.
Last edited by onaemtnest; 04-13-2013 at 06:53 PM.
#194
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Saratoga, Arkansas
Posts: 1,909
I too see these comments as honest reviews of gadgets that haven't worked as expected. When I commented on one that had not worked for me, several members gave me suggestions of ways I might could make it work. If it had worked after I tried their suggestions, I would have been so happy. But it didn't. Also those of us who named a gadget that didn't work, we explained what we had expected it to do and all the steps we took to make it work for us. As Onalee said, when several people have had the same experience, good or bad, we can better judge whether we want to take a chance on it or not.
#195
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 1,325
We are all different for sure, some can do something and make it look so easy, until someone else tries it. And it does not really matter the product. I have picked up items to use in the kitchen and wish I had left them. At the same time someone else raves about the item. Sewing and quilting is the same thing. That is the way the world works.
#198
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Jozefow, Poland
Posts: 4,474
Me either. I find this kind of thread enlightening and a helpful response to the media blitz and hard sell ads that we are presented with everywhere we turn around.
it is nice to hear (read) others' honest evaluation of things that worked for them, but in the case of this thread, things that didn't work for them. Too often we are told we "have to have" this item if we are going to do this and this and then buy it and it didn't work like it was supposed to.
I think anyone reading this thread understands that it will be "whatever works for you" and "we are all different". I appreciate the honesty in this thread.
it is nice to hear (read) others' honest evaluation of things that worked for them, but in the case of this thread, things that didn't work for them. Too often we are told we "have to have" this item if we are going to do this and this and then buy it and it didn't work like it was supposed to.
I think anyone reading this thread understands that it will be "whatever works for you" and "we are all different". I appreciate the honesty in this thread.
#199
Most of the tools I have bought, I use often but one of my expensive mistakes is the Sashiko machine. It doesn't have a good stitch and the machine company I bought it from knows nothing about them. On top of that I have two Bernina machines that has about the same type of stitch. Live and learn, I guess!
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