Needle turn applique is the "old-fashioned" way to applique. It's a lot of work - and the results are gorgeous. More info and links at wendigratz.blogspot.com/2011/0...
Wendi, This video changed needle-turn applique for me forever. I gave it up 14 years ago because the way I learned it was so difficult to execute. I have so many things that I want to do thanks to the ease with which the stitching is done in this tutorial. Thanks. Wendy
Thanks Wendi ... that's great! When you are on a limited budget it's really good to know you can achieve things without having to outlay extra money on buying things like fusible fabric.
I really like your technique of ladder-stitching to appliqué, because it makes the stitches just about invisible! You have perfect stitching, I'm green with envy! ;-) But you have given me the inspiration to try needle-turn. Thank you, Joey xx
wow I love how you stitch so tiny stitches. I dont have the patients but im gonna have to learn, and your video is inspiration. Im working on a glass stain window with the Lord and his people and Im using silk fabric, im machine quilting and hand quilting. But when I struggle with a certain step I put it away until I can come up with a certain way to sew it perfect, Thank you for that hand applique.
I kept trying to do it with other people's videos and it wasn't getting better or easier and then I watched your technique and it WORKS! Excellent video with great Camera angle And just enough explanation minis all the freezer paper, type of scissors etcetc... Gosh watched one video that said it was the secret to needle turn and it was literally 4 mins of a lady telling me to use my eyes...😜
Oh my goodness, I am SO excited about this technique. I have never been happy with my machine appliques, unless the piece is very plain and easy to sew. I also LOVE to hand sew, as I find it very relaxing. Now that I am sewing for four grandchildren, 5 and under.... I can't wait to make them some appliqued clothing. I am also considering doing some name art hangings for their rooms. This would work so well for this!
I've seen another technique and think I prefer yours. Your video is very helpful because it is concise and doesn't have all the pre-amble of how to cut the template, etc. Thanks for a very good tutorial.
This is so helpful! I've been interested in Hawaiian needle turn applique for ages but I've never been able to understand what's going on from still pictures and descriptions.
Ellen again - I wash everything I make - fabric on hot, then in a hot dryer, then iron. If I make a whole quilt it has to be washable in a washing machine, so any applique would have to be tough. I can't imagine never being able to wash a quilt that you use!
Que buen tutorial, soy novata y no estoy contenta todavia con mi puntada escondida, me gusto su estili lo probare seguro es el mejor, no lo habia visto antes, gracias, desde Colombia un saludo
Thank you Wendy - that's made the technique seem a whole lot easier than I thought it was. Don't think I'll start with a Baltimore just yet (:-) lol!) but I'll certainly give it a go. LAK Sarah
Sometimes. And that's definitely the traditional way to do it. But I feel like leaving the extra fabric there makes things a bit stronger - and since I'm usually making stuff for kids that will be washed and dried A LOT, I err on the side of extra strength. :-)
I don't have one especially about scallops - but they're not too hard. The trick is that you need to cut a slit in the seam allowance right up to the deepest part of the notch between the scallops. Watch this video shinyhappyworld[dot]com/2012/02/new-video-how-to-machine-applique-part-2[dot]html to see. It's not needle-turn, but you'll see what I mean about cutting into the notch.
Perfect video, which answers my question about how to turn around a point - a star, for example. I learned to hand embroider when I was 7, (I'm 66 now) and when there weren't machines that could embroider, except for the Featherweight. I don't consider myself or this type of embroidery "old school," and I like it a lot better that covering raw edges with machine embroidery; I wince at zig zag, although I have tried zig zag with metallic thread. My Featherweight actually sewed metallic thread better than my first computerized machine! So, I figured that turning a point would be how you did it, but I would have used a running stitch that would barely show, unless I wanted it to. I like the stitch and hiding it in the seam. Question: Could you use washable fabric glue? You would use Roxanne's tiny dots of glue; it would have to be able to accommodate sewing through it. So you would glue the turned down material, leaving a space to go through the fold, and it would help with fabrics that fray easily. I'm just trying quilting and I got some Roxanne's to which to experiment. I'm interested in what you and others think.
Thank you so very much for demonstrating this method, I can read all about it and just not quite get it. By the way Good job on the video you have a good voice for teaching. 5*