Block Party
Dumb Ways to Die
The "B" List
Non-Traditional Quilting Tools
DIY Maintenance
100

These quilt “birds” don’t honk or migrate south, but they do fly across your quilt in tidy little triangle formations

Flying Geese

100

Great for your truck or tractor, terrible for lubricating your Gammill.

Motor Oil

100

Quilters either love this finishing step… or leave the quilt in a closet for three years.

Binding

Accelerate TIP: Attach binding to the front of your quilt right on the longarm frame for a quick and profitable finish!

100

This kitchen wrap was designed to seal leftovers, but quilters discovered it also works great for auditioning designs or cutting minky 

Glad Press 'n Seal

TIP: Cutting minky? Put Press ’n Seal on the fuzzy side first — it catches most of the fluff before it takes over your sewing room.

100

This simple maintenance step keeps your longarm running smoothly and is the best way to keep your machine happy.

Oiling

TIP: Place a puppy pad, batting scrap, or old towel underneath to catch excess oil.
If it’s not dripping a drop every once in a while, you’re probably not oiling enough.

200

This block spins like the colorful toy stuck in every childhood flowerbed.

Pinwheel

200

Cranking this tension too tight on this doesn’t give you more thread — it just gives you terrible bobbins.

Bobbin Winder

TIP: To make bobbins last longer, use a higher-weight thread!

200

This tiny spool hides under your needle plate but secretly does half the work in every stitch.

Bobbin

200

Ironically, this paper was originally used to record calculations, but now quilters use this long strip to avoid quilt math and stabilize fabric

Adding Machine Paper

TIP: Use adding machine paper to easily divide and subdivide borders for quick placement of quilting motifs

200

These rubber “doughnuts” dry out and crack over time, but luckily they’re cheap and easy to replace. 

O-Rings

TIP: When cleaning your wheels, check to make sure your encoder o-rings aren't cracked.

300

This star block is named after the Buckeye State — proof that this state contributes more than just astronauts and famous marching bands.

Ohio Star

300

Quilters sometimes incorrectly twist this part, hoping to fix tension, but it’s rarely the real problem.

Rotary Check Spring

TIP: To change top tension, twist your Intermittent Tension Assembly!

300

Many longarmers don’t trust these 108" wide precuts for this layer.  One crooked cut and suddenly you’re quilting a parallelogram.

Backing

TIP: Tear your wide-backs to ensure your backing stays square.

300
The marking kit sold in the store is great because you can easily remove the chalk with this. 

What is an iron?


300

Some quilters change this every quilt, some after eight hours of sewing, and some wait until the machine sounds like it’s making popcorn. 

Needle

TIP: When replacing your needle, use the tip of the old needle to clean any trapped lint from the needle bar.

400

This classic star block is called this, because “complicated relationship star” didn’t test as well.

Friendship Star

400

This spool from the back of your drawer seemed like a good idea… right up until the thread started breaking every ten seconds.

Cheap Thread OR Old Thread OR Non-longarm Thread OR Serger Thread.....

TIP: Thread does not last forever. Keep it in a cool, dry, dark place to extend thread life. Use longarm thread for best results.

400

When quilting a dark quilt with a black backing, choosing black this prevents those embarrassing white “pokies” from showing up.

Batting

Tip: Black batting helps camouflage dark threads from shadowing through the quilt top.  

400

Instead of keeping your leftovers fresh, quilters use these kitchen items as circle templates for swags and other circular quilting designs.

Lids
400

When troubleshooting skipped stitches, replacing this tiny fragile part is sometimes the solution.

Check Spring

500

This block layout shares its name with the community event where neighbors came together to build a farm building— kind of like a quilting bee, but with hammers.

Barn Raising

500

Dust bunnies aren’t the real threat to this expensive part — vacuum cleaners and static electricity are.

Controller
500

This tool measures the resistance of the lower thread so you can set consistent stitch balance.  

Bobbin Tension Gauge

TIP: If you get a bouncy needle on your bobbin case, you probably have a bad bobbin or even a bad cone of thread! 

500

This  phone accessory can be attached to  rulers to give your fingers a much-needed grip.

PopSocket / Phone Grip

500

This tiny tool helps you find the correct 5:30 position — even if you forgot your cheaters!

Needle Alignment Magnet

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