I started laying out the quilt sandwich on my bedroom floor but soon got very tired of crawling around down there. I'm old. I enlisted DS#2 to help me carry the layers into the sewing room and I worked on it in sections on my cutting table. Quilt basting spray is immensely helpful for this, and I also did pin it at regular intervals. I know this is supposedly not the ideal way to do this, but it worked fine for me.
Finally, I was ready. Or so I thought. I originally wanted to do freehand meandering on the blocks and spent a couple of hours practicing that. I have done it before so it wasn't completely new, but I had to play with my machine to find the best settings again. The built-in free-motion stitches are rubbish.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhRygMpm87fVsTqGMtCn4TI1acO6ggfrJf5y260tq1CzfEnXWF5WsRH8bRwNXOqiamRUD6B9AxXZAsJ08NxwGT_bE7_49yYqbaR1u8sBRBR4jJVKuSwIwBArQalLCil1kpGcwCkRA/s400/123109_blocks_07.jpg)
Free-motion practice went well, but once I had the quilt at the machine and started wrestling it, I knew the meandering was not going to be a wise choice for my foray into machine quilting something bigger than a table runner. I decided to opt for straight line, NOT in the ditch, quilting - following the shapes of the block pieces and attached my walking foot to give it a go.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0-3wBQYwD1oI4caRzTT5bGU-o2-KaHoumU_SSyJ_ZXg_KZ5LJLFlVbJAZnGyMjhuy3ybKVlFvXbh1QP3qAtZOUgT35BNH_kjs-yBtB90ajS0W2-YE0zUxaj3pKYVrQF-VvmLlRg/s400/123109_blocks_08.jpg)
I spent a few hours wrestling it like this …
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhby6BeyWhofsWA-Yhv0qq4klSTxZQN9_56sDhDMuH1UjVQ-DF8H1hM5u4SDRfWqiEK_f4Yx3xo2JoiM5uBw9klypWaLV8mvqrZwxeb_VCNCyLg26n2Kyu700xRmLhLUXZzvnv49A/s400/123109_blocks_04.jpg)
… but I did finally get into a rhythm.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi7Sw0kf8Oyj9ev0Dp2e7MD8Qp7tOI0Qjdo-IfA5Nk5dzzsVy8FFgsPIQlobX-ipohSlX-F9deZ6OBKo_wRmemjFwShyphenhyphenyVtouOE9U_5f0gESpi1AHwbQsgLab7L2W1CcqY8bA827w/s400/123109_blocks_06.jpg)
I first tried rolling up the sides but that was actually harder to manage than just keeping it flat and moving everything around as necessary when pivoting at corners. As you can see, there is actually an extension table under there, which is a curse and a blessing. The curse part is because the quilt gets caught on the back corners of the extension table when I'm turning it. I may have to move this operation to the dining room table where I can have more tabletop behind the machine, but I'm resisting that because I don't want it on my dining room table for the next year. ;-)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgi55rFyM2d1Gg1fPb150fWecPsUGPaHNCq2HyGVI3_HuZ3bjOSDCKRcm8gFKhmJdYYsmH0yJNaZdJVKFg72Da_pp1XG9al43aYLnd2srTOx4PKpT12SawMkrkUd956-PaZPYIaVg/s400/123109_blocks_05.jpg)
I now have a grand total of three quilted blocks. At this rate, I might finish in 2015.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi7aF-1bLEuoLojr2vI77voQswV4n47XwMX76s5EeOAX7eYXVtZ2Oi3pFy6VZPyUT0ONo1vf8Ba3PjswvSKi8bjMq49tPaqLuF_W7CGzpq97gtdlS84D37Ke4dv-nZnnwLg-jvL2A/s400/123109_blocks_09.jpg)
Can you tell which blocks are done? The near blue/white pinwheel, the green/plaid star above it, and the blue/pink basket on the right of the star.
Oh, and while my machine was at the hospital, it developed a squeak that is driving me CRAZY. But I don't want to take it back in and be without it again so I'm hoping it works itself out. You're not supposed to oil Vikings so I don't want to start squirting into it willy-nilly. If it doesn't stop soon, I'll be forced to give it up again because this is something I can't live with, like I did with its previous problems.