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  Quilting design marker/tape/chalk???
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Quilting design marker/tape/chalk??? Sign In/Join 
posted
What is best to use to mark the quilt design on the quilt so you know where to quilt? Thanks!
 
Posts: 418 | Location: Tennessee | Registered: Jan 31, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of quilting wifey
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There are many ways you can choose.

I have used stencils with pounce powder (white only, others have had problems with the colors not coming out), there are the air erasable pens, water erasable markers, I have used washable kids markers (they may need more soaking to remove) There are chalk pencils, again watch and test the colors first.


Madelyn
 
Posts: 5738 | Location: SE MN | Registered: Jan 02, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of LisaP8
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I like the Sewline pencils.

Lisa Smile

This message has been edited. Last edited by: LisaP8,


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"I know how you turn a blanket into a quilt, Mom. You add some love to it." ~ J., 7/08, age 7
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Posts: 8812 | Location: NY | Registered: Feb 25, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of NYlady
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If its straight lines I'm wanting to make I use the blue painter's tape.. Its reusable too
 
Posts: 3137 | Location: Staten Island, NY , USA | Registered: Sep 24, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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It would depend on whether you are marking the whole quilt at once or marking as you go. Chalk probably wouldn't last if you marked the whole quilt first. I also like the sewline pencils. sandy
 
Posts: 954 | Registered: Apr 29, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I like soap slivers and WASHABLE Crayola Markers...just make sure they say washable.It depends on the project as to what I use.


May
"In Michigan"
 
Posts: 9289 | Location: Michigan,up North,the west side of Perfect | Registered: Sep 14, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I agree with a couple of others that the Sewline mechanical pencils are good to use with stencils. Many of my older handquilting friends use plain old #2 pencils because they have trouble seeing anything else - works great until you try to remove the marks!
 
Posts: 6155 | Location: Illinois | Registered: Nov 10, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of LisaP8
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I found that eBay is a good place to get the Sewline pencils and refills at decent prices.

I also like the washable crayola markers, but TEST IT FIRST!

I had no luck with the pounce pads.

Lisa Smile


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"I know how you turn a blanket into a quilt, Mom. You add some love to it." ~ J., 7/08, age 7
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Posts: 8812 | Location: NY | Registered: Feb 25, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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I bought one of the Sewline pencils and two colors of leads. Then I bought a cheaper mechanical pencil from Wal-Mart that takes the same size lead to use for one of the colors so I don't have to switch colors in the Sewline one. Works just fine!
 
Posts: 6155 | Location: Illinois | Registered: Nov 10, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Auntie Reba
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Again, I brought a topic back to life. Ricky Tims just showed photocopying the design to get extra copies onto his Stable Stuff and stitched it on with dissolvable thread (water soluble) and then dampening it but the bobbin has marked the top where you have to quilt. Does anyone do this method and if so do you recommend it?
 
Posts: 9081 | Location: Always Moving A Bit | Registered: Jan 27, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Bumping up for input!
 
Posts: 9081 | Location: Always Moving A Bit | Registered: Jan 27, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Ricky stitches twice that way? Trying to picture it.

Last time I did FMQ, I wanted certain shapes here & there (like a "flower with petals" shape). I simply cut those shapes out of notebook paper & stuck them onto the quilt with blue painter's tape underneath. I winged it between shapes, but when I got to a shape, I had a paper guide to stitch around. I cut the flowers slightly smaller than I wanted their finished size to be, so I wouldn't sew through the paper. That was all the marking or "training wheels" I needed to get the quilted shapes I wanted. Very easy to do, and left no marks or threads to deal with later.

But speaking of marking pencils, I recently found that Dritz has a green & white one, white "lead," with a built-in eraser. The white lines show up easily on dark things but erase very well with the eraser. I've switched to using it for most of my marking while sewing.
 
Posts: 4457 | Location: About 28,000 Light Years From Galactic Center | Registered: Jul 23, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Thank you StarrySky that's a fantastic tip. I have a child's quilt that I need to get started quilting on although DD doesn't want it for the baby quilt gift she needed. Maybe I can sell it?

This message has been edited. Last edited by: Auntie Reba,

 
Posts: 9081 | Location: Always Moving A Bit | Registered: Jan 27, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of quilting wifey
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You can also cut freezer paper into the quilting shapes that you want, press them on to the quilt.


Madelyn
 
Posts: 5738 | Location: SE MN | Registered: Jan 02, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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Freezer paper is a great idea! Unfortunately, my hands reached for paper & tape first (freezer paper is on the other side of the sewing room...) and my brain thought, "Problem solved!" -- so it shut down and went back to sleep! Big Grin
 
Posts: 4457 | Location: About 28,000 Light Years From Galactic Center | Registered: Jul 23, 2004Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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