Spiderwebs and Loopy Meander – Dot Dash
In this course I show you how I quilted spider webs into our Halloween-themed Dot Dash quilt.
I just love how this quilting design turned out, I used a medium sized loopy meander to connect all my spider webs because it is whimsical, so it matches the fabric and is a great way to travel between quilting motifs.
This course ONLY includes the quilting tutorial for this quilt. It is included as part of the pattern course at this link.
The spider webs themselves weren’t that bad either once you establish your path. I started by practicing with a dry erase board to figure out how to create the web and move around the quilt with minimal travels, then just went for it on the quilt.
The first couple looked a little rough, but by the third or fourth, they were looking fantastic as I developed my rhythm and figured out where I was going next.
This is a design my team was really interested in and more than one member of the QAA staff came up to the longarm while I was working on it to see how I was stitching them. One who has a computerized longarm and is a bit intimidated by free motion wasn’t so sure she could do it.
I told her spiders don’t make perfect webs every time in nature, so she didn’t have to either. The best way to learn is just to go for it and keep stitching until you get it.
Syllabus
In this course I show you how I quilted spider webs into our Halloween-themed Dot Dash quilt. I used a medium sized loopy meander to connect all my spider webs because it is whimsical, so it matches the fabric and is a great way to travel between quilting motifs.