Stash Bandit
  • Home
  • Booking Inquiries
  • Blog
  • Ideas & How-tos
  • Trunk Shows
  • Classes
  • Galleries
  • About
  • Contact
  • Calendar
Stash Bandit

Posts Tagged ‘binding’

Learn My Machine Binding Method!

Written by Diane Harris on December 8, 2020. Posted in Blog, Classes, How-tos and Ideas

I’ve been binding my quilts on the machine for more than 20 years with a technique that’s fast, beautiful and sturdy.

Are you free on Saturday?

Join me for Mock-Hand Binding by Machine, a live class with me, Diane Harris from Stash Bandit, from 9 am to 12 pm Saturday, Dec. 12.

The fee is $35.

(Yes, this will be offered again and next time it won’t be so early for people on Pacific time.)

Go straight to registration

or read on for details.

This all-machine technique imitates a binding sewn down by hand, but in a fraction of the time. I’ve been binding my quilts with this method since the 90s so I know the tricks to make it work along with the pitfalls to avoid.

PLEASE NOTE: It’s best if your sewing machine has a blind hemstitch, but you can make a regular zigzag work if need be. I’ll also show you other binding secrets to make your quilt look its best!

Blind hem stitch is used for this technique. Lots of machines have it!

I have 36 years of quiltmaking experience along with many years of teaching. From beginners to pros, everyone in the US* is welcome in this class, which will be a live demonstration of the technique along with written instructions and photographs in the handouts. You’ll leave with everything you need to start binding your quilts quickly and beautifully. Let’s do it!

*The platform I’m using on Zoom is still in Beta (testing) mode and is limited to US users right now. Word is that it will open to international registrants at some point before long.

Mock-Hand Binding by Machine

9 am to 12 pm CST

Saturday, Dec 12, 2020

$35

Click here to register.

You’ll get a link to the supply list when you register. I look forward to seeing you on Saturday!

Quilt on,

  • Continue Reading
  • 4 Comments

Judging Quilts: Not for the Faint of Heart

Written by Diane Harris on July 13, 2017. Posted in Blog, How-tos and Ideas, Quilt Lifestyle

I had a new experience this week: judging quilts and textile arts at a county fair about 70 miles from home, somewhere in Nebraska.

Judging quilts at a small county fair in Nebraska. My scribe’s face is blurred for privacy.

These were open class entries, that is, not 4-H entries which are judged by an established set of standards. Which may have been why it was so difficult, even though it was a small show. There was nothing to guide me—no established judging criteria. I had to rely on 50 years of sewing experience and 30+ years of quilt making.

There were about six long tables full of quilts, plus a few knitted and crocheted items, one stitchery in a frame and several other types of hand made textiles.

I am not a certified quilt judge, but I accepted the job because I knew it would broaden my range of experience. I thought it would be interesting and fun.

I was right on the interesting part. On the fun? Not so much.

Nobody tells you that even with a small set of entries, you’ll have to make hard decisions. You’ll have to ignore some really great work because you can only recognize a few entries.

You’ll have to make comments on work that is truly awful, trying not to sound terribly critical and unforgiving. When I wanted to say “This binding is a hot mess,” instead I prodded “Strive for neatness on your binding.”

When I wanted to say “Stitches this long should only be used for basting,” instead I encouraged “Shorten stitch length for machine quilting.”

Stitches this long should only be used for basting.

I had a scribe who cheerfully wrote down each comment, handled the paperwork, and maintained the flow of items to be judged. A scribe should be a silent helper, and while mine was very helpful, she was not silent.

Without intending to derail my objectivity, she shared information that complicated my thought process considerably. An example: “This quilter is at least 80.” Or “This person really needs encouragement.”

Which brings me to the biggest problem of all: How much weight to give each aspect of the work. Here’s what I mean. The quilt below was fairly typical of the entries.

It was purchased as a kit. Most entries were commercially quilted (which means the maker paid someone else to quilt it). This leaves very little on which to judge a project. The only things you can evaluate are the piecing and the binding. Typically the quilts were made of squares and rectangles—no points to cut off. Which narrows even further what there is to compliment or criticize.

Here are the questions I smacked into over and over:

  • Is it worth more for a simple quilt of squares and rectangles, where someone else chose the fabrics and did the quilting, to be well executed, or is there more value in a creative piece where a person conceived an idea, worked hard to bring it to life, and executed it with obvious “mistakes”—but clearly had a vision and pursued it creatively? Which is better?
  • Is a king-size star quilt with flaws made by a person over 80 years of age to be recognized over a square, flat, nicely bound throw-size quilt of squares with no imagination, made by someone who is under 50? What if the king-size quilt is made by someone who is between 6 and 17? Which of these is preferred?
  • Because I prefer flat quilts with low-loft batting, should I dock those with puffy batting? Is that a personal preference or a legitimate criticism? There were many personal preference questions.
  • Some entrants had many items in the competition, and these various folks had consistently good or bad work. If the work was good, should the judge recognize them over and over? Or begin to recognize other good work that is slightly less perfect? If the work was bad, I began to admire their spunk. Hey, at least they are trying! They know they are going to be judged. Lots of people would never put themselves through it!

This is just the tip of the iceberg but you get the idea. The day was full of frustration for me. I had to keep moving in order to complete the task, and I couldn’t sit and ponder for long.

This was a piece that I loved, based on the Cindy Brick idea of using vintage hankies to make a small collage-type quilt. I wanted to give her a special prize for bravery—cutting family hankies apart is terrifying. She layered them in clever ways, and she embellished for added interest. She labored over this, and while it’s not perfect, in my book it was top notch. I’ll choose creativity over technique every time.

I was puzzled by the fabric choices in this small quilt, until I noticed that it was made for an ugly fabric challenge. It wasn’t clear whether I was to consider the challenge factor or not.

This piece was for the same ugly fabric challenge. It was more successful at making the fabrics work together, in my opinion.

There were some things that just left me wondering. This quilt had heavy weights straight-pinned to its bottom edge. They were wrapped in pieces of fabric, edges left raw. Another piece (not pictured) had food stains and a hole, among other problems. Why would you enter this at a fair?

The most often seen easy fix was this: Always go over the entire surface of your quilt, front and back, and clip off any stray threads. Hardly any of the quilts (good, bad and in-between) were cleaned up from random wisps of thread. Such an easy thing to do!

This small original quilt was selected as Best in County.

And while I know that some people will question my sanity, I chose this small original piece as the Best Quilt in the County. Here’s why.

  • Original work is always the hardest work.
  • She created great texture both visually and from a tactile standpoint.
  • She attempted to give a sense of perspective.
  • She cleverly used the wrong side of some fabrics, where it served her purposes.
  • She added a facing to the quilt, which is a great skill to have if you’re making art quilts.
  • She quilted it herself.
  • She used a variety of techniques, including painted highlights to suggest snow-dusted trees.

I know that I could defend all of my decisions if I needed to, but that’s another frustration: You never have the opportunity to tell people why you did what you did. Most people will not even know who judged the quilts, let alone what the judgments were based on.

And come to think of it, maybe that’s okay.


Have you ever entered a quilt somewhere? What was your experience? I’d love to know, so please tell me in the comments.

  • Continue Reading
  • 14 Comments

Search

Contact

Stash Bandit
Diane Harris
Bladen, NE
402-756-1541
Email Diane

Sign Up Links

  • Follow the Blog
  • Get Stash Bandit News by Email

Social Links

Popular Topics

antique quilts baby windmills Christmas quilt blocks Christmas quilts classes color for quilters Dresden plate electric quilt electric quilt company EQ8 fabric fabric savvy free quilt block free quilt pattern giveaways guild programs helpful how-tos holiday quilts how-tos improv piecing inspiration International Quilt Study Center and Museum jingle bells trunk show machine quilting make extraordinary scrap quilts one hundred small quilts original quilt designs Quilt Candy quilt design quilt ideas quilting 101 Quiltmaker quilt museum quilt retreat sampler quilts scrap quilts stash bandit trunk shows stash sewing trunk shows UFO UFOs value vintage quilts wagner's quilts windy wonders
© 2017 Stash Bandit     Site Credits: Infuze Creative
  • Home
  • Booking Inquiries
  • Blog
  • Ideas & How-tos
  • Trunk Shows
  • Classes
  • Galleries
  • About
  • Contact
  • Calendar