Why do I need a serger for quilting?

Why do I need a serger for quilting?

In addition to being great time savers when stitching together blocks, rectangles and strips of fabric, a serger can provide you with some wonderful decorative effects using certain stitches and specialty threads. The stitching a serger provides is fast and precise – something any quilter can appreciate.

Can you use a serger as a regular sewing machine?

Although some projects can be done 100 percent on a serger, a serger cannot replace a regular sewing machine. You will still need a regular machine for facings, zippers, topstitching, buttonholes, etc. A serger cannot do this job.

What can be done with a serger?

Some of the things you can do with a serger:

  • Seam finishing.
  • Making swimwear, T-shirts, lingerie, napkins, tablerunners, etc.
  • Insert elastic into clothing.
  • Decorate garments making flowers or other trims.
  • Finish hem & facing edges with the cover stitch.
  • Seaming on knits more quickly that with a sewing machine.

Can you hem with a serger?

If you own a serger or have access to one, it can be extremely useful to you in the hemming process. A serger creates a cleanly hemmed edge in one single step, so it’s faster than most traditional hems.

When should you use a serger?

First and foremost, a serger is the ideal way to create a clean edge on any seam. Not only does the cutting blade trim the fabric edge, but the upper and lower looper threads wrap around the fabric edge, securing or protecting the fabric edge. Another great function of the serger is for construction.

Are Sergers hard to use?

You’ll learn it the hard way if you start pushing down your feet: the serger goes A LOT faster and when you reach curves or angles it’s harder to control where you’re sewing and go out of way! Being a serger, you won’t only sew on the wrong place: you’ll CUT your fabric… and this is harder to be fixed!

What machine do I need to make blankets?

Knitting machines are perfect tools to make patchwork blankets because they make the process faster. You can knit panels and stitch them together to make blankets as small or as large as you like.

Can you hem on a serger?

What are the benefits of a serger?