Can someone please help me to understand
#1
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: DFW / Texas
Posts: 1,254
Can someone please help me to understand
The difference in when to use the walking foot & when to use the skinny foot with the home it. (I was told by the place I bought my machine that this foot was to be used for the FMQ) not the walking foot. So I'm confused b/.c I thought the walking foot was what u used for FMQ.
BTW: I have a Janome Dc2012.
Thanks for the help!
BTW: I have a Janome Dc2012.
Thanks for the help!
#4
Super Member
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Orbiting
Posts: 1,448
Here's some video's showing people who are free motion quilting: http://www.youtube.com/results?searc....1.OoSQIUmKh_M
#5
O.M.G......ok the walking foot is used primary when you have a fairly think piece to sew....like a top, batting and backing and you are going to be sewing in straight lines....either stitch in an ditch or like on a diagonal or such....the walking foot has 'helpers' on the top like your feed dogs to PUSH the fabric thru...... then there is your regular foot and then there is your 'darning' foot which is usually a large circle, sometimes an open toe and when you lower it down it usually does not touch your sewing.....now when you lower your feed dogs....you can move the 'fabric sandwich' around with out touching either the bottom or the foot....that is 'Free Motion Quilting"...............
I hope that helps ....
I hope that helps ....
#6
Don't forget that a walking foot helps the binding go on much easier than using a regular foot. You can do curves with a walking foot I do all the time. Slow and steady wins the race. I also love to use my specialty stitches on my machine for quilting! Luann in CT
#7
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 11,276
The walking foot is used for SITD, channel quilting (straight lines) or gentle curves. Check with the manufacurer, but many are made to stitch forward only. The feed dogs move the fabric from below and the grippers on the foot move the fabric from the top, so thick layers are pulled evenly from top and bottom. The foot is also called an even feed foot for that reason.
FMQ is where you don't rely on the feed dogs to move the fabric, you do. you use a hopping foot, or darning foot .
FMQ is where you don't rely on the feed dogs to move the fabric, you do. you use a hopping foot, or darning foot .
#8
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 9,563
I have to disagree with the poster who said the walking foot is also known as the quilting foot. The walking foot helps you feed fabric IN A STRAIGHT LINE ONLY. When you attach it to your machine, you are essentially adding feed dogs to the top of your fabric. Feed dogs on both bottom and top of your sewing will help feed your pieces evenly. You CAN quilt with this foot, but only in a straight line, or (if your walking foot has a wide enough needle hole) using your machine's decorative stitches.
However, if you want to do some free motion quilting, which means moving the quilt in all directions to make swirls or whatever, you will want to drop your feed dogs and put in a different foot. This foot has several different names; free-motion foot, darning foot, quilting foot. Some people call it a hopping foot because it hops as it sews. The reason it hops is because it has to lift between stitches so you are able to move the fabric in all different directions. If your foot does not lift or hop, you will not be able to do any free motion quilting on your machine.
Hope this helps.
However, if you want to do some free motion quilting, which means moving the quilt in all directions to make swirls or whatever, you will want to drop your feed dogs and put in a different foot. This foot has several different names; free-motion foot, darning foot, quilting foot. Some people call it a hopping foot because it hops as it sews. The reason it hops is because it has to lift between stitches so you are able to move the fabric in all different directions. If your foot does not lift or hop, you will not be able to do any free motion quilting on your machine.
Hope this helps.
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