menu.html
Tonya:
About Tonya

Contact Tonya

Tonya's Blog:
Lazy Gal Quilting


Spell It Out!
Lessons in letters!

Page 1
Intro To Letters
H, I, T

Page 2
L, U, C, O, P, R

Page 3
J, E, F, B

Page 4
S, G, V, Y

Page 5
A, N, Z, M, W

Page 6
D, K, X , Q

Page 7
Putting It All
Together!

Strip Widths!

Taking The Leap!
X's & O's Challenge quilt!

Lower Case Letters!

Page 1
i,j,h,y,b,d,p & q!

Page 2
t,f,a,e,g,r,n,m & w!

Gallery!
More Lettered Quilts!


Free-Piecing Fun!
Basics!

Asterisks!
Free Form Fireworks
or Snowflakes!

Housing Projects!
Funky Freehand Houses!

Wonky Hearts!
Lopsided and Loveable!

Tonya's Tea Party!
Tea Cups!

Drawing Teapots!

Sewing Teapots!



Quilting Tonya Style!

Completely Hoopless!
Quilting Out Of The Frame!

Fantabulous Fans!
Freehand Fandango!


Threads!
Dare To Stitch Boldly!




Tonya's Pages
©2006-2007 Tonya B Ricucci
All Rights Reserved


Quiltville Custom Quilting
http://www.quiltville.com


"Hooplessly" Devoted to You!



Although I did learn to quilt in a frame, I was never very good at it, and I ditched the hoop shortly after attempting to use it. It felt so natural to me to quilt without any of that, but I've had a very hard time trying to explain it well. It's one of those things I just do without thinking.

I swear by quilting without a hoop. It's possible to get much smaller stitches this way.

The quilt sandwhich has to be well-basted, more so than quilting in a hoop. I layer the backing, batting and top, but don't stretch any of them. Since I'm rather lazy, I put pins in every three inches-ish to stabilize the piece and put even more in the area where I'll be starting. As I remove safety pins in the area I'm working on, I move them over to the place I'm going next.

There is no tension on the quilt sandwich as I'm working. I don't pull it taut or stretch it in any way.
 
I hold the quilt in my left hand between my thumb and palm. Not the middle of my palm - that would be uncomfortable -- but the area below my index finger (the finger closest to the thumb).  The second picture is what it looks like from underneath the quilt.
 
And another (obviously more recent) shot, this time without my thumb peeking out.  My left hand doesn't do much during the quilting. Most of the fingers just help hold the sandwich up. The middle finger is important though. First it gets "stabbed" by the needle. The needle goes down and hits my finger which then acts to push that needle back up. (Not by the pointy bit of the needle, but the shaft very close to the point.)

On my right hand, I use a thimble on my middle finger to push the needle. My right thumb is crucial. As I rock my hand, my thumb works to first help the needle go down and and then come back up. For the down motion, my thumb is behind the point of the needle, helping to push the shaft down.


For coming back up, the thumb moves forward to help the needle back up. The middle left finger is pushing up on the shaft of the needle, the right thumb is pressing the quilt sandwich down and back against the tip of the needle to make the stitch.

I take several stitches onto the needle and then pull through.

I suppose the one drawback to quilting like this is that markings tend to get rubbed off, at least when I do them. So I never mark my quilting designs in advance, always just do a bitty bit as needed. Or, as in the case with my free-hand fans, I quilt without marking anything at all.

I swear by my "Thergonomic Hand-Aids" - they really do work. I don't have nearly as much pain in my hands and wrists as I used to get. Just make sure you buy the kind that have a wide wrist band. I throw them in the wash with my usual laundry every week and into the dryer as well (even though the instructions say not to) because that helps get them tight again.

Anyone else who quilts without a hoop have anything to add? Any clarifications or helpful hints?

Please ask any questions you may have and I'll do my best to come up with an answer.





                                




© Tonya B Ricucci 2006-2008 All Rights Reserved. No part may be used, copied or otherwise
              altered without express written permission from the webmaster.
This page hosted by Quiltville Custom Quilting.