Why don't people like the Accuquilt?
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- čas přidán 12. 06. 2024
- In this video we're talking about why people don't like the Accuquilt machine (and why they're wrong). You don't need to like it for YOU, but that doesn't mean it isn't a fabulous tool for others to enjoy!
The following are affiliate links which provide a small commission to me if you make a purchase, but don't cost you anything:
Check out the entire line of Accuquilt Go! machines here: shrsl.com/45rcm
Learn about Accuquilt's trade-in program here: shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=238251... - Jak na to + styl
I was one of the people that thought that there was a lot of waste using AccuQuilt early on when I first started quilting. Over time I realized that there will be waste no matter how careful you cut. So I started building my collection of dies then one day my local quilt shop was closing out their dies and machines at 75% off. They had one Go Big left and I grabbed it and never looked back. It is amazing the amount of time it saves cutting.
I wish when JoAnn's cleared out Accuquilt, I'd known what it was. I'd bought all the dies.
I love my accuquilt! Waiting for the new die to try to show up today! Great video! Thanks.
I got of couple of dies when JoAnne's cleared out the Accuquilt. I love mine, and over the years, I have collected a lot of dies.
I love my AccuQuilt! I cut 80 2 1/2" strips from yardage in less than 45 minutes and I did not have the fabric prepped first! So nice and much cheaper than buying jelly rolls!
That's where I started: Joanns
@@ellenhofer3343
I burst into tears the first time I saw the Go Big demonstrated. I started quilting back when the rotary cutter came on the scene and happily used it for years. But eventually the arthritis in my hands made it impossible to cut anything out. My daughter-in-law gave me the least expensive one to try and I couldn’t even turn the handle.
I bought the Go Big, knowing I’m fortunate to be able to buy it on the spot. Over time I’ve had 4 joint replacements in my hand. I can grasp a rotary cutter and use it as needed, but it’s the GoBig that makes it possible.
The discussion on fabric waste makes sense but I would have suggested that showing how to use scraps would have been useful. Showing how all the pieces for a quilt were cut out by the end of the video was a nifty idea.
When I realized that I could cut out four groups of SIX layers of 2.5” continuous strips I laughed with pleasure. And you can rotate those strips 90 degrees and get perfect squares.
The other thing that I love is that there are no dog ears to mess with. You can make perfect half and quarter square triangles with drawing lines, sewing on either side of the line and cutting the pieces apart.
I love all three of my Accuquilt machines! They have saved me so much time and it isn’t a waste if you place your fabrics correctly in the die! People,who think it wastes fabrics are just not placing their fabric correctly.
I enjoy my AccuQuilt Go Big. I have a lot of trouble cutting straight, even with a ruler! It always slips!! I’m also a relatively new quilter as well. My AccuQuilt is a lifesaver.
Our public library has a Go Big electric and lots of dies. But they were just approved to buy $3000 more!
how interesting...I have never heard of this
Lucky community!
That is fantastic! ❤️
@darlalawton7689 many public libraries have sections where you can check out all kinds of things.
Mixers, lawn mowers, aewing machines - all kinds of things
Wow. I live in a big city and barely any quilting books. Your super fortunate ❗️
I, too, have a LOT of dies and I'm in the process of using them so they don't go to "waste". But also, if you don't want to put your "waste" in the garbage, take them to a recycle place or as I am lucky enough to have a gal at the quilt guild that collects them from us and she takes them to a textile recycle center. I just keep a clean kitchen can under my cutting table and when it's full I take it to the monthly meeting and don't have to "waste" gas making an extra trip. THANX for your videos Carolina!
They can also be sewn into a pillow and donated to animal shelters. Heavy weight thrifted sheets can be used for the cases. ❤
I have added 1/4” tape to mark where I need to place my fabric. All I loose is 1/4” of fabric. I think that’s worth it for the accuracy of cutting. For appliqué it is invaluable.
I Mark my dies 1/4" bigger than the blades with a Sharpie marker, clear to the width of the die.
@cathybarnes8303 clever! ❤️
GENUIS idea! Thank you 👍
My quilt store here in Palm Coast FL, Cut Up and Sew / Sew Fresh, hosted a 10-lesson demonstration about using the AQ. Love love love. Every project I’ve made using the AQ was perfected because of the precise cutting. Starching the fabric before cutting is paramount. This was a great investment.
Love that! ❤️
I had 4 aunts that had arthritis. I bought the Accuquilt before I retired so I would have it when I couldn’t use a rotary cutter anymore.
I did a quilt with half-square triangles, positioned the fabric so I could just carry the die to the sewing machine, pick up two layers of fabric and sew. Such a time saver.
I made a quilt from a kit. I thought it had 110 half square triangles. When I got it home, I realized it was made with 1,100 half square triangles. My husband had gifted me the Go Big due to a shoulder injury I had the correct triangle die in one of my cubes. It made it so much easier to cut and was very fast. I did not cut all the triangles at once, instead cut some, sewed some, and squared some. Repeated this method over 5 days, and finished making the squares. Quilt turned out great and was a gift to one of our sons.
When you are older and have EXTREMELY sore hands, Accuquilt is a boon! My hands and arms were so sore, I actually thought I would have to give up quilting! Then I purchased my Accuquilt! I love it! so quick and easy...great for cutting up scraps too!
I love mine!!!! Perfect cuts Everytime but the half square triangles are the real joy!
I love my Accuquilt. I totally don’t feel like I waste fabric. I do eliminate huge amounts of frustration and miss cut or ill cut pieces.
I was one person that wanted this because of my cutting inability. I hate to cut out pieces for a quilt, until my daughter lifted me a Go Me. I soon saw the Go Big and DH thought it is what I needed. He bought it for me. I traded in my Go Me on the Go Big. Love, love, love it. Bought two dies with points I earned. This has made my quilting life so much easier and fun again.
Thanks. Had not heard of the machine. Interesting to hear about. I learned to quilt from my mid 1930's grandmother. We quilted with scissors and needles, no circle cutters, rulers yes, not 1% of the tools and products quilters today use. I do highly value those we made the old-fashioned way. This is to say I love my gramma, mom, and many friends who have shared the craft of quilting with me, and not at all to say anything against those who do their thing their way. So, if the more recently evented tools work for you, yay-rah, and keep a happy heart. As for those issues mentioned, waste is a matter of planning, no matter the tools used. Yes, the machine is faster, but that only cuts down on the stories told a quilting circle, oh, yes, those are a thing of the past. We always found ways to include people with vision issues, dexterity issues, math issues, language issues, childcare issues, children (boys and girls), even grumpy old grandpas who needed constant supervision without sharp instruments, everyone. We even had plans and included more than one dark doom-saying preacher, who no-one 'believed.' A creative, gracious, loving heart will always find a way. Thanks.
I love this so much! Thanks for sharing!
I do wish we could find more ways to continue quilting as a community activity. ❤️
Those little strings that are left over from cuttings of the accuquilt and rotary too I use as ribbon for gift packaging. I glue them or stitch them together and wind on a paper towel roll etc. I can also crochet or knit with them, weave them. So really no waste if they are repurposed. Twine is another purpose.
Oh! I love that! ❤️
What a wonderful idea!!
I’m working on this quilt now…used this die! LOVE LOVE LOVE. It makes this block so much easier!!!
I bought the Go Baby years ago and didn’t fully use it other than for some appliqué shapes. Time passed and at a quilt show I was drawn to the demos of all the possibilities with the Go Bog-I have arthritis, but would be massively sad if I could not quilt! This machine saves so much time and effort-I totally love it and am using it more and more. I also use it to cut my scraps down into usable pieces and keep th in labeled containers-scrap problems solved and ready to sew blocks whenever I just want to sit and sew! Love it!
Yay! Glad you love yours too! ❤️
I would love an accuquilt but the dies are so expensive, yes for people who want them, need them, and more importantly afford them.
I buy my dies carefully and only when they are on sale. One at a time.
I buy my dies ONLY on sale and one at a time.
Inv…don’t forget how expensive shipping is. I would purchase more die’s on sale if the shipping wasn’t as much as die. Moreover, the mats are outrageously expensive too.
@@constancepeterson6156 start talking to the local library about buying one for loan/use, and to the local quilt guild or quilts of valor group?
i buy on sale and when they have free shipping...
My guild has bought quite a few dies over the years, and we now have two cutters. This is the best way, because we can share the investment. I only use it once or twice a year for example, but as a group a lot of people get to use it.
I purchased the GO! ultimate starter set for half price almost 3 years ago during a sales event in November, just before Black Friday, and got a bonus 12" square ruler - total cost was $250, I would not have been able to afford it otherwise. Since then, for birthdays and Christmas I've asked for gift certificates to buy new dies, I wait for them to go on sale. I've also purchased dies from guild member friends, and we've traded back and forth too. I use mine mostly for strip cutting, I have several widths, to me these are the handiest. I have a few applique dies too, mainly for making children's quilts or to use on totes, beach towels and the like. My local quilt store carried Accuquilt for a long time up until last year, they didn't continue with them this year, said our market was saturated and no one was buying the machines or dies anymore. I think the main reason folks seem to dislike the machines is they have not taken the time to learn how to use them properly.
I use my Accuquilt studio die cutter for some part of almost every new quilt I start. The strip dies are the best. They are also great for cutting 2" or 2.5" strips out of the leftover fabric from a project, which I then use to make scrap quilts.
Had no idea people were hating on AccuQuilt. I see the "waste" as also usable because those strings are just that - strings to play with in a string block. Little pieces are great for using with fusible on postcards or art projects. And yes, I use the left overs from cutting in both the bird box where the birds grab the little bits for their nests and as stuffing. I do wish I had an electric because I have the pro and won't be spending the monies for electric but I do love my AccuQuilt.
People aren't hating on this product... this is a common marketing, advertising campaign.
@Sherry-kz5tr It may be marketing but I hear SO many people hating in AccuQuilt when I go to sew groups and talk with other quilters. I've actually had a hard time understanding how it works because when I'd ask many would say it was just a gimmick, wasted fabric, or was no better than a rotary cutter!
@@Sherry-kz5tr I guess you’ve not been in a quilting group in Facebook when someone asks about which AccuQuilt machine or dies are the most useful…
Even if the person has said they can’t use rotary cutter and rulers due to sight loss or hand/ wrist/ shoulder problems people jump in saying they’re wasteful (actually they’re not as Carolina accurately described the off cuts tend to be what is cut off in squaring or big enough to cut to use in other blocks or scrap quilts); they’re expensive (yes they are but if you buy a the Go and Qube for your favourite block size you get access to 72 free blocks based on a 4 patch (downloadable from the website) and then can of course you can make 72 quilts using just the one type of block, and infinite quilts using 2, 3, 4, etc block types) and the only replenishables are the cutting mats and (which equates with blades when using a cutter).
I love my AccuQuilt die cutter so much. Especially for strip cutting. When a pattern calls for 144 2.5” squares for snowball corners, using the 2.5” strip die both length and width wise makes these squares so quickly. Love the precise cutting of all their dies.
Yes!! Cutting lots of the same unit is a breeze with the Accuquilt! ❤️
My problem with the accuquilt is that I have some that are dull after only using them for 5 quilts. By then I had them for two years and could not return them%
I am so glad I bought one. I have used it for making strips out of my pile of scraps. It definitely helps my wrists and shoulders
Love my Go especially the 2 1/2”, 1 1/2” strip dies that I have. Thank you for this video.
Any fabric “waste” that I have that cannot be cut to other usable shapes go exactly where Carolina said, into the dog beds I make for shelters and homeless dogs.
I had a Go Baby for years but during Covid I started using it daily then upgraded and I fell in love ❤ I also thought it wasted fabric so that’s why I didn’t use it but now I see that it really doesn’t.
Neither of my wrist function normally (they were disseminated in a horrible fall). I also teach quilting at the local High School. Often I have thought about getting something like the AccuQuilt. Now I want to action on it, not just think about it. I am writing a grant this summer for our class for a few new machines, and a few other items. I will,have to see if I can squeeze an AccuQuilt on the list. Many times I cringe giving a student a rotary cutter and others end up having to do myself. Which some days can be very painful. Thanks for the demo. I have watched you several time before, now I am subscribing!❤
Oh! I hope your grant is able to get you an Accuquilt! They really are so useful, especially when teaching kiddos!
Love my Accuquilt. I'm an art quilter, so don't make many traditional quilts. However, I still need strips, squares, triangles, and all kinds of fun shapes. Accuquilt makes the cutting go fast!
I bought and accuquilt go and cube set. I used it off and on and liked it, but I had trouble converting patterns to the dies. Then, I developed carpal tunnel syndrome in my right wrist and severe arthritis with joint destruction in my left wrist. I had surgery on my right wrist and was limited in what I could do. I decided to trade in the go and got several dies. I was able to continue sewing since I didn’t need to use a rotary cutter. I am going to have my left wrist fused and will definitely need the accuquilt system.
I have the hand crank Go, and it is wonderful. My five year old grand daughter loves to turn the handle to "help" me quilt. My next purchase will be a Go Big!
I absolutely love all three of my machines , could not imagine not using them ,if used correctly, little or no waste.
This was the very best explanation of the Accu Quilt system that I've ever heard (including an AccuQuilt sales person at a quilt show!!). Thank you!!
Oh wow, high praise! ❤️
@@CarolinaMoore I’m someone who would have had to give up playing with fabric if I didn’t have my AccuQuilt and dies as I’m medically blind and not into the extreme sport of using a rotary cutter and rulers/ templates.
I love I can using my dies and a guide on my machine sew simple blocks (squares, triangles, etc) and more complicated ones (drunkards paths) and I can cut appliqué (which I hand stitch down).
My grandson was 3 when he chose some fabric which he cut the car appliqué for so we could quickly make a cuddle cushion when he forgot his one when he came for a sleepover. 7 years later he still has his 2 cushions on his bed.
I love that! I believe that the Accuquilt is a fantastic accessibility tool. ❤️
I have had my Studio cutter for about 15 years. It is a wonderful tool.
It is expensive to buy a bunch of dies but buying slowly helps! I think it’s fun!
Yup... and get on their email list so that you know when there are sales! ❤️
Great video! The only problem I have is when I am using my 2.5 inch square die, it doesn’t cut cleanly. I have tried using the pick that came with my Go Big but there is never anything in where the blades are. Maybe I am not laying my fabric down right.
I had that problem with a die. The quilt shop replaced it. Caveat: it was fairly new and I had the receipt.
Love it for some blocks... and my favourite dies are the hearts, circles and stars!
I have an accuquilt and really enjoy it. From the class that I took right after I received it, they strongly advised to ALAWYS cut on the selvedge side at your tummy. And that the only dies to cut straight of grain were the strip dies. Were these cuts that you just made using length of grain? Wondering? Thanks so much.
I’m a dog groomer by day and a quilter by night! I got my Accuquilt to hopefully help save my arms, wrists, and hands so I can do what I love longer! Also all the possibilities the Go Cubes give you for designing your own quilts! Plus how fast it is!! I could go on and on! I love my Go Big! ❤
I love to cut but if i physically couldn't I'm so glad this is an option. I've wondered about owning dyes that you don't use more than one quilt. The speed is impressive
Very helpful video. Thank you. I don’t have an accuquilt because of the cost, unfortunately.
You make a salient point. At age 66, wrist surgery 2 years ago, and another issue with a finger, I am not as good at the rotary cutting as I used to be. My hand is less steady and not nearly as strong, to slice through multiple layers. I have the hand crank model and am now considering a machine like yours. Thanks for the video.
My pleasure! Glad it was helpful! ❤️
I am a longarmer and do binding for my clients. The strip die is a life changer. Cutting wider strips for borders is great.... should I keep going? .... ❤ Accuquilt
This is really helpful to hear. Thank you!
It saves my hands- I have an arthritis at the base of my thumb. It’s also great for getting through a lot of scraps. We get scraps from a seamstress who makes uniforms and also has a shop catering to tourists. We turn these into charity quilts.
The price of the machine and dies is the problem.
Just wait for some really great sales - that’s how I started and I still wait for a good sale on dies. Plus each time yiu make a purchase you earn points to use when you want. I just bought a new ti me die that would have cost me about $75 - I used maybe 25% of my points and I paid about $11 total!!!
How much do you spend on rotary blades? The dies last for a long time before they wear out.
@@marinaabad4995 rotary cutter blades are used on all your projects, the dyes are limited to what you use it for so yes, the price on some of the specialty dyes is extremely high
I understand what you’re saying. But how much is your time worth? We do what we need to do and being mindful of our budgets is very important.
I love my Accuquilt machine! I always wanted to organize scraps, but hated cutting with rotary cutter.
Then I got Tendinitis in my dominate elbow right after I had purchased the Ready Set GO. Thankfully, I was able to upgrade to the Big Electric.
So I cut 10.5 in. Biq Square x 4 layers when I buy yardage to add to my Fat Quarter color sorted bins.
I then cut Tumblers, 2.5 squares, 4.5 x 8.5 rectangles, Half Hexies and Big Crazy Quilt blocks so that I will be able to build up the quantities needed to make quilts.
Cutting borders + sashing on the strip cutters is massively easier, faster + more accurate than using a rotary cutter.
I also Fuze animals + flowers to shirts for my grandkids.
I'm cutting animals in fun foam so that my 3 yr old grand daughters can play with them in the bath tub to stick up on the wall.
I use the Accuquilt almost daily!
I'm so glad I heard about it last year!
I have two Accuquilt. My first machine was the original size. Last year I purchased the mini.
The mini is so hard to turn.
Does anyone have suggestions on how to fix this issue.
My other one is simple to turn and cutout fabric.
I started to get the small Go Me back around Christmas when they were on deep discount, but was concerned I'd be really limited on the dies I could use. Waited too long and missed the sale. I love the idea of quicker and easier cutting though, especially as I'm getting older. Maybe they'll have something similar this coming Christmas.
Sign onto the website for email notifications of their newsletters. They often have demos and sales events where both machines and dies may be discounted. There are often opportunities for winning items, too. Many free patterns are offered as well.
Very informative video, thank you, before watching this video i was totally against buying it, but i wouldbe interest in the type of quilts that require the type of blocks you just
cut, would you do a book of quilt patterns using difficult blocks?
I will never make the drunkards path quilt, its too hard for me to cut, thanks for giving me fuel for thought
Really like the hint with taping the 1/4 inch to use less fabric, that is a hard part, making sure you are on the blades correctly
I bought my first Accuquilt machine when they first came out. That was many years ago. I also bought the Baby. This last year I finally bought the Go Big. I love the dies. I do wish they were a little less expensive. I find I waste less fabric because I get more accurate cuts.
I cut my strips just a tad larger than needed for my dies. I do not waist nearly as much using the Acuuquilt go vs all the mistakes I was making trying to cut by hand.
I save my large pieces for projects later.
Those strips would be great for rope bowl making. The end piece is great for applique. There you go - NO WASTE !
Love this😊❤
Now I want to learn more about these. The English piecing comment you said has me curious.
I have a couple of the dies for EPP - you can cut the papers (I use card stock) and also cut the fabric pieces! Really saves time if the sizes are what you want - I think there are 3 hexie sizes (the website can give you all the info!
I love the EPP dies. They cut both the fabric and the paper/card stock for the templates. So fast and easy..
I’m using the 10 inch square die to make all my yardage that I’ve acquired over the years into useful fabric- most patterns start with a ten inch square.
Its so great for lots of the same shape. Singles I rotary cut.
I wouldn't quilt, near as much as a I do, without my Accuquilt! I love it!
I didn’t realise there were people who didn’t LOVE the Accuquilt!
I absolutely LOVE mine. The accuracy and speed are my fave bits.
The drunkards path you cut - check out the notches it automatically cuts - basically takes all the stress (and swearing) outta quilting. Lol!!!
I love my 10” die. I basically make my own pre-cut packets! But agree, the speciality dies is where it’s probably peak performance.
I know, right?? But they like to leave comments on my other Accuquilt videos... so I made this video just for them. ❤️😆
I love my studio cutter!
Thank, I love all 3 of my Accuquilt cutters. May I ask why your selvage was not at your belly? Does it not matter for drunkard path? Just curious.
I have a Go machine and love it.
I love my AccuQuilt Go Big! It’s faster than rotary cutting and I’m not that great a rotary cutter anyway. I especially love the strip dies. I have a bunch of them. Great for borders!
Have I been using mine wrong all this time! I put the salvage along the long side of the die ? Please let me know! I see you put the selvage on the short side of the die
Hmmmm... this is the way I've always done it? 🤷♀️
But if your way works, I see nothing wrong with it?
I bought my AC Go when the company was still pretty new. I bought it because math isn't my strongpoint, so I thought it would be helpful being able to cut things without having to plan much. It was still a problem. Now that I've made enough quilts to be confident, I've been thinking about using again. The original dies don't cut straight anymore. Some of the plastic boards are worn out. I even bought the long strip dies, but it never cuts straight. I'm just not sure yet whether it will save me time or money. I'll give it another try.
Thank you.
I have the Go and I'm going to purchase the GoBig.Thank you AccQuilt.
Another great thing I love about Accuquilt is that I’m able to use it while seated.
Cool,, friction rub and slide.. I did not know that. I have a Go big.. it is fantastic .
Can you please show how to do the strip dies?
I'll add it to the list! ❤️
I have a manual one and I agree, they are great for odd shapes. I found the dyes were not cutting accurately so I wasted time and fabric on blocks that didn't square up, very frustrating.
I enjoy my GO Big and also have a Go. Got the electric due to evolution of all kinds of arm and wrist and shoulder issues. Huge improvement in my cutting ability. As my carpal tunnel got worse, so did my ability to keep my rulers from slipping, so was losing a lot of fabric from miss-cuts and redoes. I almost didn't watch this video because of the title. I didn't feel inclined to watch someone bashing the Accuquilt. Glad I decided to see what horrid things you were going to say. Good video.
Please please tell me why I have to clip some of the pieces apart. My machine leaves a tiny thread attached. Otherwise I love it. I would not be able to make quilts without it because of pain in my arms.
I'm not sure? I know Accuquilt has fabulous customer support... can you check with them?
You have to remove the threads stuck in the die after lots of use, especially with fabric that frays, even if using a rotary cutter. There are videos on how to do this. See Tammi's Stitches channel, she recently posted a video on removing the stuck threads. That's why the die is not cutting cleanly.
@maryanne2500 there are 3 reasons one is threads caught in the die blade, another is you’re cutting without moving, turning and flipping your mat so the blade is cutting in one place, and the 3rd is even with turning , flipping, etc you’ve worn the mat out. Just like rotary cutter blades and needles the mats need regular replacement.
Question! Anyone. I have trouble with threads stuck in corners. I use all the tools to get them out but it’s difficult and I’ve bent some of the blades. What am I doing wrong? Any helpful hints would be appreciated.
It might have to do with the thread count of the fabric. What quality are you using?
I use tweezers with the angled top-they’re easier for me to use.
@@melindaostergren8115 I use good quality quilting fabric. I may have at some point used batiks but not usually. Thanks for thinking of that and responding.
I adore my Accuquilt…it saves my elbow and time!
Plus, there are entire sets of the same shapes in a much less expensive system from Crafter’s Companion called Build-a-block sets. They have the thin wire dies but very sturdy and you can purchase a set that makes blocks from 4 inch to 12 inch in one box for about $100.
I have had my Accuquilt machine for 7 years. I like the speed of cutting out a quilt and accurate cuts.
I love my Accuquilt, but I am very curious about the very sparkly sewing machine you have? did you do that yourself?
I did! You can get the full story here: czcams.com/video/yjHegaxQLI0/video.htmlsi=e4_GVVANUReXyiYz
Why don't you have the standard dies, like a 2 1/2 cut that finishes 2 inch?
I do have the 2 1/2" strip die. ❤️
Carolina - I just noticed you didn’t give the die (after cutting) a few hand slides across the die - and remember to slide the mat off not lift.
Sometimes I'm impatient. 😉
I have a Go Baby, and I absolutely love mine. I want to buy more dies for mine.
This is the first time I’ve ever heard people hate accuquilt. I like mine. I don’t use it very often, but it’s nice to have when I need it.
I get several hate comments every time I share about my Accuquilt. People just can't keep negative opinions to themselves. 🤷♀️
I wish I could trade in my studio machine. It's a crank I bought back in 2015. I would love to have the big electric one!
Have you asked? I know some shops, as well as Accuquilt, offer trade-ins... but I don't know the details.
Carolina! Oh, I just had a fabulous idea. Okay, what about you designing an AccuQuilt die that has all the Advent Calendar templates on it! Oh, oh Carolina - that could be like an add-on for someone like me...speaking of Advent Calendar 😳
I LOVE the idea of the Accuquilt but don’t understand how you get the dies for a specific pattern. For instance, some quilts might have 3’ square but another requires a 5” square. There are so many sizes and shapes of pieces in different patterns, so how do you make sure you have the right die?
Try going on the website. The basic box sets come with the same shapes: the difference is in the SIZE of the finished block: 6”, 8” and 12”. They come with a fabulous book with lots and lots of basic shapes. There are also what they call companion sets to go with each of the sets. You still wind up with the finished 6 8 or 12 in finished blocks but there’s a much wider set of blocks you can make.
If there’s a quilt store in your area that sells the machines I highly recommend that you go to the shop and get more information. It’s a good idea to go when they are less busy if you can. I also recommend that you start slow! If you get a machine and just the basic box of dies you’ll be able to make all kinds of nice blocks. Then you’ll have a better idea of what you want to explore next.
Can you show us how to do strips on the AccuQuilt please?
Sure! I'll write it down for a future video. ❤️
OKAY, I AM NOT A QUILTER. I DESIGN AND CREATE CANVAS TOTE BAGS AND ACESSORIES. DOES THIS MACHINE CUT FAUX LEATHER VINYL? AND CAN IT BE USED FOR CUTTING PATTERNS FOR BAGS? (IF IT DOES, THIS IS A TOTAL GAME CHANGER FOR ME! I WILL HAVE TO GET IT! )
It cuts through up to 6 layers of quilting cotton. And yes, I have cut vinyl for bag making on this machine. ❤️
It can be an investment - check with local libraries/maker spaces/guilds/shops/friends (and friends of friends) to see if someone has a machine you can play with to be sure it meets your purposes.
Also ... check out the strip dies for making bag straps! ❤️❤️❤️
😂 I forgot I have one with a bunch of dies. I just bought a longarm machine and have been learning. Duh!!! I guess my age is showing! Love mine because I have never been able to cut a straight line no matter how hard I try!
I like my accuquilt except my dies are old and now falling apart. My two inch strip die is ruined. Also my dies are separating. The wood part is coming out of the plastic die covers. Not sure how to save my dies. I’m worried about buying more dies because it’s a lot of money to have dies fall apart.
You can reach out to Accuquilt, their customer service is excellent. I have had no issue with my dies falling apart, but it sounds like they don't get as much use as yours. ❤️
Unfortunately, nothing lasts forever through continued use. I've not just replaced rotary blades, but also rotary handles that I wore out. A friend wore out her seam roller. And my mom's sewing machine had to be retired (I kept the cams from her old machine, you can see them in the background on some of my videos)... if you've thoroughly used them, and would benefit from replacements, I encourage you to do it. You'll clearly get a lot of quilts out of the next set. ❤️
I wanted to make rag quilts using my stash but I knew my hands(had carpal tunnel in both done) would not he happy and time spent clipping would just not be good as I run a bookkeeping business. SO when I found a youtube showing the Accuquilt and making a rag quilt -- well I added one to my sewing business and will be cutting out rag squares real soon.
I love mine , I have really bad arthritis in my wrist and hands, well all my body. My back ,hands, neck, and wrist, is so much easer and less pain with my cutter
What die are you using please?
Here is my aggiliate link for the die: shrsl.com/4kqn5
I love mine but the die-cuts are expensive but doesn't stop my obsession to own them !
I love my accuquilt and I have learned how to have minimal waste and keep my bigger “waste” for other uses. Duh. Love it and will continue to use it
I use it for cutting pieces from my scraps.
Thankyou Carolina!
Love Love Love my Accuquilt, best thing since sliced bread!
Could you PLEASE get Accuquilt to bring back the Half Square Rectangle Triangle die! Why on earth they discontinued it I will never know. It should be a staple geomectric die. Much Appreciated, hugs from NZ :)
I'm not sure how much sway I have over there... but have you let them know? They love hearing from customers! 🥰
Like you like my accuquilt for bias strips and applique shapes. But find some if the dies are not accurate 1/4". Especially HSTs I have the 12" qube and my 3" triangles are 1/8" off when I stitch them using a 1/4" seam allowance.
I “waste” so little with my Go! me or Go! But due to injuries to my legs and shoulder, & arthritis I am waiting on delivery of my Go! Big electric machine. I’d rather spend the short amount of time I have (with minimal pain) piecing my quilt tops! I always use it for cutting scrappy blocks out of small remnants.
I love my big one. Got my granddaughter the next smaller as she quilts.
What a lovely gift! My first GO! was a gift from my Mother in Law. ❤️
I too have a Go! And I do use it at times. Using the log cabin die was amazingly fast!! But there are two issues I have. (1) The dies are very expensive. (2) if you use the same die a lot, like when using it to cut strips, you go through the cutting mat much too quickly…and they too are expensive!
Do you rotate your cutting mats and flip them as you cut. I used a sharpie and labeled each end 1, 2, 3, and 4.
Each time I cut I rotate the mat 180 degrees. After 2 cuts I flip it over, cut, rotate and rinse and repeat. When I’m done for the day I leave the mat oriented in the next position up. I happen to have space to lay the mat flat by the cutter. If you don’t have space and are anal you could jot down the starting number.
I also slightly ofst the mat from the block You can cheat it left or right a bit as part of the rotation.