You make it look so easy--now I can't imagine doing this without that foot! Thank you!
@kimharrington17647 ай бұрын
The Edge Joining foot is always the first accessory foot I buy with a new machine. I love it for many techniques including this one. My first use of it was joining two pieces of French Lace together effortlessly.
@patl8698 ай бұрын
I love the joining foot. Before you stitch the binding on, stitch around the quilt about 1/8" with fusible thread in the needle [if you are turning the binding from back to front]. Then stitch the binding on the back and when you turn it to the front you can fuse it in place and you don't have to use clips or pins.
@carolmarshall43418 ай бұрын
I wish you has shown a close up of both sides of the binding in the end…
@HeatherValentine8 ай бұрын
Thank you, Carol. That is great feedback. I can add a detailed photo to the website for you to see.
@staceyleecreative8 ай бұрын
Love it!
@HeatherValentine8 ай бұрын
So glad you like it!
@clombard71348 ай бұрын
Hi Heather! Great technique! I have lots of Babylock/Brother machine feet, but how do I not have this Edge Joining Foot? Need to add this foot to my arsenal! Thanks for this tutorial and for showing up close how this foot makes finishing the binding easy!
@HeatherValentine8 ай бұрын
YAY, I'm so glad you found it helpful. These specialty feet really do all the heavy lifting. If you do machine binding, this one is a great foot to add to your collection. I have a feeling it will quickly become a favorite!
@marysuecarl75948 ай бұрын
Wish I could hear it well. The first few minutes were over whelmed by the music. Then just bad microphone placement(?). Wish you had gone over stitch size and thread size/type.
@HeatherValentine8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the feedback. I will be more mindful of editing in the future. As for thread and stitch size- I used standard thread and stitch length as I would when attaching my binding directly to the quilt and then hand stitching.
@GayleHallAZ3 күн бұрын
At the beginning of this video, you said you were going to add a flange to the item you held in your hands. I didn’t see a flanged binding on the piece, so I thought maybe you were going to be doing a new piece and adding a flange. I watched more of your video, then fast forwarded to the end; and you never did add a flange to the binding! It seems you have your binding terminology confused. All you did was add a normal binding to the edge of the piece. Here’s the definition of a flange: “Flange quilt binding is a technique that uses two fabrics to create a binding for a quilt, with a narrow strip of fabric between the quilt and the binding.”