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Quilt-As-You-Go baby quilt with the PFAFF admire air 5000 Serger

by Margaret Sweete

On my first blog, I pieced a jelly roll quilt on the PFAFF admire air 5000, after figuring out how to set up the serger in my preferred seam allowance (a true ¼” seam). Yesterday, I pieced an I Spy charm pack quilt on the PFAFF admire air 7000. Today, I’m back on the PFAFF admire air 5000, already threaded with gray serger thread, set in a 4-thread wide overlock.

A white and blue serger, set up with 4 spools of grey thread, loaded with a thick sandwich of fabric and batting.

PFAFF admire air 5000 serger set up for 4-thread overlock -wide with grey serger thread and the cloth guide attached.

What would I need to do now, as you ask? Well, I will tell you, and this is very important, our sergers will stitch through anything (practically), but sometimes we can make it easier for ourselves and a better finish to use the settings we have on the serger. Today, I’m quilting using the quilt-as-you-go method, which means most of the time I’m serging through 2 layers of batting, and 4 layers of cotton fabric. I have the Presser Foot Pressure Adjustment on this serger, let’s use it!

What this means is I test the many layers and adjust the Presser Foot Pressure until the fabric sandwich stitches through with a nice seam, and doesn’t ripple the fabric or require it to be pulled through. I found that my setting was almost maxed, as I had picked a cotton batt, the lightest one I could find.

Once I have our serger set up, then it’s on to cutting. I found a few photos of baby quilts on Pinterest that I liked again, and I experimented with strip sizes (remembering that odd numbers look the best), until I found the combination I liked. Mine turned out to be 2½”, 4”, 8½” (finished strip widths) and repeat.

For every strip, you need top fabric, bat, and backing fabric ALL cut the same (3”, 4½”, 9” selvedge to selvedge), cuts.

Cutting board with piles of 3” white print fabric, batting and backing (blue flannel), 4.5” blue batik, batting, and backing, and 9” green bug print fabric, batting and backing. All laid out in order of use.

Piles of fabric and batting laid out in order of use.

It takes longer to cut all of this than to sew it together, dramatically longer!

Start with the first sandwich (white print fabric, batting, and backing), with the fabric good sides out and the batting in the middle. I use Clover Wonder Clips to hold the layers in position. Serge one long edge. I then take it to the ironing board and press. I position the unserged edge flat along a line and take the 4½” blue strip and align the raw edges (good side down) on top of the white strip, and clip. Then, I take the batting and place it on top of the blue fabric, reclip.

Turning the whole sandwich over, I position the blue flannel backing, good side down, on top of the pile, all the raw edges together.  I now have a thick fabric sandwich, consisting of batting, blue batik, white print fabric, batting, blue flannel (the original first strip fabric sandwich), and the blue flannel, all clipped together with Wonder Clips.

Note: It’s a personal preference which side the batting is added (to the front or to the back) in this Quilt-As-You-Go method (or Flip and Turn technique). I added mine to the front.

A quilt started with a white strip, blue strip and print (bottom to top). On the print raw edge is the fabric, batting, and backing all clipped together neatly aligning all the raw edges, with only the batting and clips showing.

Adding the 4th strip to the quilt, note the Clover Wonder Clips holding the whole 6 layers together, with all raw edges aligned and ready for serging.

Continue to add strips in the pattern until you have them all used up (white-4, blue batik-4, print-3) and serge the top edge.

Notes:

  • You may encounter an excess of fabric or batting at the end of each seam. My batting and blue batik were extra long, and I just used scissors to roughly trim them.
  • I pressed these seams so that the fabric/ batting lay flat for adding the next strip.

Strip quilt (from bottom edge) in white tiny print 2.5” strip, blue batik 4” strip, and green bug print 8.5” strip, repeated 3X, ending with a white and blue strip. All selvedges on the right uneven edge showing.

All strips serged together in pattern, now to trim the left and right sides, removing all the selvedges.

I have cut all my strips from selvedge to selvedge, so how wide will my quilt be?? After it’s all serged together, I need to trim the selvedges from the left and right sides. Your quilt width will be determined by the narrowest (width) fabric used. My white print was the smallest and had the widest selvedges. I ended up with a size of 40½” wide by 51½” long. Once these are all trimmed off, go back and serge the left and right sides.

I had my entire quilt done, ready for binding in 90 minutes; it took twice to three times longer to cut, as I had to press all the prewashed fabrics (my choice) and then lay each strip good side up. This helps when you start piecing.

White print, blue batik, green bug print, in (2.5”,4”,8.5”) finished strips repeated 3X, ending on an extra white print and blue batik strip. Serged top and bottom, selvedges removed left and right, and these sides serged, ready now for binding.

The completed Quilt-As-You-Go Strip Quilt is ready for binding.

Today, I created a Quilt-As-You-Go Strip Quilt using the PFAFF admire air 5000 serger, adjusting the presser foot pressure to allow the 6 layers (2 batting and 4 cotton fabric) to pass through with ease.

Tomorrow, I return to the PFAFF admire air 7000 and do a unique runner with serged seams on the OUTSIDE! Join me!

This is part 3 of 5 in this series

Go back to part 2: Make an I Spy quilt fast with the PFAFF admire air 7000 Serger

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