Getting Through the Tough Parts
#21
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Grass Lake, MI and Bradenton, FL
Posts: 785
#22
Member
Join Date: Nov 2017
Posts: 30
#23
That is what chocolate and wine are for! Also take a break for a day or 2 if you can. I am working on a quilt with a difficult block. I need 8 of them. I made 3 that are nearly perfect. I can't make them any more. I have ripped so many times I have ruined the fabric. It is all bias edges. I had to order more fabric. I threw it aside for a few weeks. Hopefully I can do them now. I am using my precious stash of Kaffe Fasset fabric for this quilt. I have another quilt I want to use it for and I can't start that until this one is finished.
#24
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2011
Location: Durham, NC
Posts: 851
I am just a utility piecer for charity quiltsl. If there's something I don't like doing, I either don't do it or hire it done by my betters and most all of you are my betters, LOL! My talents and my pleasures are in cutting and piecing simple tops for those in need and/or crisis. On the rare occasion I need to do something I am not confident of, I look here or on Youtube for help and that helps me get it done and behind me. Trust me, at my age, I don't let that happen often but this help is there if I need it. I am grateful and blessed to be part of a charity bee that has many, many talented people who love doing different parts of the process. I love being able to do what I like and only that for many hours each day. You'll get there. {{{Hugs}}}
#25
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: British Columbia
Posts: 2,363
Listening to an audio book is a good idea - especially if the work is simply tedious and repetitive. I see myself in so many posts here. If I push too hard, I get sloppy. If I walk away too often, it doesn't get done. I'm pretty good at working in short increments to stay focused on a project. But sometimes, quilting loses its pleasure.
#28
Super Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: kansas
Posts: 6,407
Thanks, Jokir, I'm actually quilting geese, using a ruler, but that's a good idea.
Thanks everyone for the great ideas. I'm going to take a break and go back to it after a bit.
I've been staring at it (Thanks, Bearisgray) and I think it will be easier if I start from the other end of the line.
I'm doing it on my DSM and I watched a video on the ruler before I bought it but they were using a long arm. It sure looks a lot easier, with the long arm! (If, of course, you know how to use a long arm.)
Watson
Thanks everyone for the great ideas. I'm going to take a break and go back to it after a bit.
I've been staring at it (Thanks, Bearisgray) and I think it will be easier if I start from the other end of the line.
I'm doing it on my DSM and I watched a video on the ruler before I bought it but they were using a long arm. It sure looks a lot easier, with the long arm! (If, of course, you know how to use a long arm.)
Watson
Last edited by quiltingshorttimer; 11-05-2017 at 06:13 PM.
#30
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: Central Florida
Posts: 1,472
I have to say I forge ahead. One year shortly after I started quilting I signed up for a free BOM. At the time, I hadn't realized it was a modern quilt which I don't care for. By forging ahead with it, I learned a whole lot of new things about quilting & when the top was finished & I was about to have a burning party, my granddaughter asked for it as she really liked it. So I got a backing I could deal with and quilted that side for her. She still loves it and takes real good care of it. Sometimes the lesson learned is just perseverance! :-)
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