Sunny
"Sunny" <wrote> Do any of you use a silicone sheet for free motion quilting?
I am a little skeptical (the easy to dispel variety); such a sheet
would help things directly on it, but there will still be drag due to
the weight of the quilt off the sides. We were just reading something
about an attachment or something for FMQ in a generic book. If that
would help, let me know & I'll try to dig it out. (It's a little
buried...)
Doc
Well, I'm no help. Never used one. In fact, I've found that most of the
things that are "supposed" to make my FM quilting easier, don't. Most of the
time they are just a hinderance to me and get in the way. The quilt itself
is enough to manage without silicone sheets and special gloves, etc.
Maureen
Sunny, I've tried them twice -- once very unsuccessfully, and once
*very* successfully. <G> The unsuccessful version was a very early type,
and the tape I used to attach it to my machine bed came loose. I
stitched the sheet to the quilt. :O
The second one came several years later, and only after I'd actually
tried a loaner first. ;) I now use a SewSlip II and love it! It really
does reduce "drag" and also smooths out the little join between machine
and table. I know there are other brands, but AFAIK this one is the only
one with a large opening for the needle. That little bitty hole some of
them have makes me rather nervous. ;) These newer versions don't use
tape at all, so the chances of the sheet getting stitched to the quilt
are rather small. Whew! <g>
--
Sandy in Henderson, near Las Vegas
sw.foster1 (at) gmail (dot) com (remove/change the obvious)
http://www.sandymike.net
(The first one I used had to be taped down - when the tape came loose
and the sheet shifted I ended up stitching thru it - just like Sandy.)
Allison
amy in CNY
I enjoyed your story about sewing the silicone sheet to your
quilt :-). In fact I thought it was so interesting that I read it to
my DH and he turned around and suggested that I get one too :-).
Bev in TX
ROFLOL!