{"title":"How to Machine Quilt: Beginner Straight-Line Quilting","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/quilting/how-to-machine-quilt","category":{"slug":"quilting","name":"Quilting"},"creator":{"name":"my sewing room","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC1WM1F4oJJ74yEc1fj1OMPQ","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-olmxKqv4fE"},"tldr":"Machine quilt your quilt the easy way. Spray-baste, mark with painters tape, and stitch diagonal straight lines on a regular sewing machine.","totalDurationSeconds":536,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Sewing machine","Walking foot attachment","Quilting needles (size 90/14)","Quilting ruler","Fabric scissors","Thread snips","Iron"],"materials":["Pieced quilt top","Cotton or polyester batting","Backing fabric (a few inches larger than the top on each side)","All-purpose thread to match the quilt top","505 spray basting adhesive","1-inch painters tape","Binding fabric"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Spray-Baste the Quilt Sandwich","text":"Lay the batting flat on a clean surface and give it a light coat of 505 spray adhesive. The 505 is temporary and repositionable, which is the whole point - you can lift and smooth out wrinkles as you go without it bonding permanently.Smooth the quilt top onto the batting from the center outward, pressing flat as you work. Then flip the whole sandwich over, spray the other side of the batting, and smooth the backing fabric down the same way. The three layers should feel tacky and stay put without pins."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Set Up the Machine and Position the Quilt","text":"Slide the basted quilt sandwich under the presser foot. Bunch the bulk of the quilt up to the left and over your shoulder if you're stitching across a large piece - the goal is to keep the section under the needle flat and unweighted.Bump the stitch length up a touch from your standard piecing length. A slightly longer stitch reads better on quilting and lets the machine feed three layers without skipping."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Mark the First Diagonal Line With Painters Tape","text":"Pick a corner of a quilt block and lay your quilting ruler diagonally across to the opposite corner. The block seams give you reference points across the body of the quilt, so you can eyeball this line through the pieced section. The borders are where you'll need help.Press a strip of 1-inch painters tape along the ruler's edge across the border. The tape gives you a clean visual guideline without ink or chalk. Stitch right alongside the tape, not through it - the needle will gum up if you sew through the adhesive."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Stitch the First Diagonal Line","text":"Start at one corner of the quilt and run a single diagonal line all the way across, using the block seams as your visual guide through the pieced section. Backstitch a few stitches at the start and end to lock the line.Move at a steady pace. The painters tape on the border keeps you straight where there's no block seam to follow. If you've got a walking foot on, you can push the speed a little; on a regular foot, ease off so the layers feed evenly."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Reposition the Tape and Quilt the Next Rows","text":"Peel the painters tape off the border and move it parallel to the line you just sewed, spaced one block over. Use the quilting ruler to confirm the angle stays consistent.Stitch the next diagonal. Work outward from the center, doing one or two rows at a time and re-checking with the ruler so the lines stay parallel. The block seams keep you honest through the body of the quilt."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Turn the Quilt and Stitch the Opposite Diagonals","text":"Once you've worked through all the diagonals in one direction, rotate the quilt 90 degrees and start the second set of diagonals running the opposite way. This creates the crosshatch pattern that holds the three layers together evenly.Always start the second pass from the center of the quilt and work outward. Starting from a corner can push fullness toward the opposite edge and create a bubble that won't quilt out."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Trim the Edges and Bind the Quilt","text":"Lay the quilted piece flat and use the quilt top as your trim guide. Run a rotary cutter along the edge of the top to slice off the extra batting and backing in one pass. The three layers are now even.Sew the binding strip to the back of the quilt first, then roll it around to the front and topstitch all the way through. Going back-to-front is faster than the traditional front-to-back-by-hand method, and it gives you a clean machine-stitched finish on both sides."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:30:22.832Z","published":"2026-05-10T15:19:51.253Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}