The Smell of Molten Projects in the Morning

Ed Nisley's Blog: Shop notes, electronics, firmware, machinery, 3D printing, laser cuttery, and curiosities. Contents: 100% human thinking, 0% AI slop.

The New Hotness

  • HQ Sixteen: Custom Small-arc Quilting Ruler

    For reasons not relevant here, Mary is completing a friend’s quilt for the family. Part of the existing design involves stitching arcs around each side of a myriad small blocks across the quilt:

    Small arc quilting ruler - block border
    Small arc quilting ruler – block border

    After free-motion quilting a few blocks, Mary decided the peak of the curve looked good at ⅜ inch from the block edge. This sort of thing is generally done by “ruler quilting” with the machine’s foot guided by a ruler, but none of her considerable assortment of quilting rulers had exactly the arc required for that curve.

    The stitch path will be ¼ inch away from the edge of the ruler, as set by the ½ inch OD Handi-Feet Sure Foot centered on the needle:

    HQ Sixteen Handi-feet conversion - Sure-foot installed
    HQ Sixteen Handi-feet conversion – Sure-foot installed

    Knowing the blocks are 2-¼ inch on a side and the arc is ⅜ inch tall, the Chord Equation gives the 1-⅞ inch radius of the circle matching the arc. Using proper terminology:

    With those numbers in hand, producing a suitable quilting ruler is straightforward:

    Judy Quilt - small arcs - LightBurn layout
    Judy Quilt – small arcs – LightBurn layout

    The legends are backwards, because the lines must be engraved on the bottom of the ruler to eliminate parallax through the ¼ inch acrylic sheet:

    Small arc quilting ruler - alignment
    Small arc quilting ruler – alignment

    She can now eyeballometrically align the engraved square with the edges of the block to put the curved edge at the right place to guide the foot:

    Small arc quilting ruler - stitch line
    Small arc quilting ruler – stitch line

    After half a dozen blocks, she reports the ruler works as intended and the duplicated Start / Stop buttons on the improved hand grips let her control the machine with either thumb. She uses Stitch Regulator mode to produce a uniform line of stitches regardless of speed variations around the arc.

    Now she can finish the quilt and have all those curves look the way she wants.

    I knew that laser cutter would come in handy …