Thanks for a great video. I am a new Q20 owner and a bit intimidated by the creative process. You made it look doable, with some practice. Loved it all, thanks.
I just want to thank you for sharing your amazing talent and not bogging it down with a bunch on talk, but letting your grace show through your quilting. It is almost a meditation for me to watch your videos. I just watch and relax and feel the movement. absolutely love your video!
This was amazing! It finally "clicked". You don't have to come out the same way you came in as long as you complete the circle!! Now I won't get stuck somewhere and trap myself in!
Baptist Fans! very well done by you, of course! clam shells (you probably already know this) are a single curve ... oh, boy! How to describe them: Each single curve is offset from the row before (has always looked to me that they are worked across the width of the quilt) so that the highest point of the curse is above the lowest point of the two shells below it ...I tried <g>. You definitely think fast on your feet, girl!
They read the movement of your fabric and regulate the stitches. They are not on when working in manual mode. The red light are different, but after a few minutes of quilting you don't notice them.
And, I have another question ... with all that light right on the fabric, how much can you see, and how much are you doing with muscle memory? ... I have manual ... it was supposed to be regulated, but the regulator never actually worked, so I ended up quilting at top speed. I am not as experienced as I should be or could've been.
Do you mean the red lights? Or just the light in general. The red light is how the machine functions for regulated mode. The other light is how I like to quilt with a matching thread. Helps cast a shadow to see the quilting.
@@adriagoodlongarmquiltingco1719 I don't know what the red lights look like on your side of the video, but to me, it totally blocked the view of what you were actually quilting. I have seen one quilting machine that had a single laser, and that one was a point, a bit bigger than a pin head - - not so on your video - - but, you may have not seen it that way while stitching in person. I probably shouldn't have said anything, since I really have no plans to buy a computerized quilting machine. (Just too old to justify a "real" quilting machine <g>)
Going slower must really make you tense. I can definitely see the difference. With that much light on the surface, how in the world are you seeing ahead of where you are stitching? Maybe just watching makes it more intense, but I think I would opt out of anything that needs that much laser light .... I admire your testing and playing with it ... I won't even look at this quilting machine at my local dealer ... if I were looking for a quilting machine. I have a retro-fitted Singer 221 that is a mid-arm ... this machine does not attract me at all.
This video reminds me of when I first found you on here. Watching you stitch and the perfect music I would get so relaxed and inspired and I was and still am amazed at you quilting talent and teaching talent. Thank you so much for all you share.