Help with a stitch on Janome 6600P
#1
This is going to sound so dumb but I still don't know how to do most of the stitches that most machines are capable of. It is a simple stitch that I want to do.
I want to top stitch seams together - it is on something that no one will really see - actually corn bags - but the seams have to be very strong. I actually tried a zig zag stitch but it didn't seem like it would hold very well. I don't want corn falling out all over the bed - LOL.
The reason I don't want to sew it on the wrong side and turn it is because I want to make a good many different channels and fill them as I go - fill them and make another channel. Does that make sense? I'm enclosing a picture (not a very good one) to show you one I made and had a heck of a time having made it the way I explained - sewing and turning it - then filling it with corn and trying to make channels.
Oh well, maybe someone will understand and come up with the stitch I should be using. Thanks!
Pat
I want to top stitch seams together - it is on something that no one will really see - actually corn bags - but the seams have to be very strong. I actually tried a zig zag stitch but it didn't seem like it would hold very well. I don't want corn falling out all over the bed - LOL.
The reason I don't want to sew it on the wrong side and turn it is because I want to make a good many different channels and fill them as I go - fill them and make another channel. Does that make sense? I'm enclosing a picture (not a very good one) to show you one I made and had a heck of a time having made it the way I explained - sewing and turning it - then filling it with corn and trying to make channels.
Oh well, maybe someone will understand and come up with the stitch I should be using. Thanks!
Pat
#3
I can't help you with your machine, but with a corn bag idea. I sew mine, turn it right side out, and then topstitch partial channels. Then I fill one end and shake them down until I have room to stitch the end shut.
#8
I too make corn bags. I love the way you do them. It is so much fun to learn from all of you. Your stitching ideas are great too. On my Pfaff there is a "quilting" stitch, which also goes back and forth. This may be similar. By the way, we sew ours and turn them and have never lost a kernal of corn. Funny though, I was heating up two of them (quite hot) to put in a cooler to keep a nail gun warm and I heard a couple of kernals pop. Why were we keeping the gun warm, you may ask? Because we were using it in -9 F degree weather and they say they only work to 29 degrees or so. The cooler and hot corn bags worked like a charm. Who knew???
#9
Originally Posted by quiltstodo
The triple stitch on the machine is #5 that works great for this sort of thing
Pat
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