Quilting clamps ~ to use or not?
#1
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Ohio... wanna build a cabin in the woods and live off the land... and quilt all day!
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I am referring to those grippy u-shaped thingys that help hold your WIP to the right of the needle, so your quilt doesn't unroll while FMQ or SID...
Just curious if anyone else uses them? I bought a few pairs because they seem like a good idea... trying to finish a UFO, and the rubber coating on them seems to "grab" the surfaces of my machine bed ... a little frustrating! (I am doing SID at the moment on my Sapphire 850, which has a wide 10" throat just for quilting large quilts).
Just curious if anyone else uses them? I bought a few pairs because they seem like a good idea... trying to finish a UFO, and the rubber coating on them seems to "grab" the surfaces of my machine bed ... a little frustrating! (I am doing SID at the moment on my Sapphire 850, which has a wide 10" throat just for quilting large quilts).
they look just like this, only mine have a red rubberized coating on them
[ATTACH=CONFIG]155865[/ATTACH]
#3
Most people here say that "bunching" works better - and so far that's been the case for me. However, an old quilter told me of a better "product" to roll quilts in the throat --- plastic headbands. Little quilts = girl's size headbands. They will slide easy too.
#4
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Ohio... wanna build a cabin in the woods and live off the land... and quilt all day!
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yeah, I'm having a little "steering difficulty" now that I'm getting to the middle of the quilt... that's why I got the clamps out. I bought them on sale when I worked there, so not an option to return them... ya know, these problems only happen at midnight when you have a few hours of peace-n-quiet to sew... :roll:
I will try the accordian fold and see if that works for me... once I'm past the 1/2 way middle, I'm home free... until I start FMQ'ing that is...
I will try the accordian fold and see if that works for me... once I'm past the 1/2 way middle, I'm home free... until I start FMQ'ing that is...
#8
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Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Ohio... wanna build a cabin in the woods and live off the land... and quilt all day!
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Part of my problem is that the quilt is set on point ~ so bunching was getting on my last nerve (thin bunch to thick bunch to stress relieving thin bunch, was making steering straight difficult). I have 4 pairs of these, if they were the metal only, I think they would be fine... I may take one tomorrow and pick off the grippy outer layer and see if its better.
#9
Bought them because they seemed like a great idea. In theory maybe, but in practice I find they are more trouble than they're worth. It is quicker for me to fold or roll my project as I am quilting. The only way I can see them being helpful is if you are quilting a design that runs the entire length (or width) of the quilt bfore you have to turn your quilt. Hope that made some sense-lol!
#10
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Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Utah
Posts: 8,847
I have some exactly like the ones in your picture as well as the ones with the red coating. I don't use either one. Maybe I'm doing something wrong but they don't stay on the quilt. Plus I've since found that I like the bunching method better than rolling. There's less bulk to the right of the needle and I don't have to manage that big log.
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