No. Thanks, though. Kirby is teaching them plenty - and none of it is
good! Little devil dog, he is! Came in this morning from his morning
backyard romp with a hot pepper in his mouth from my husband's garden. As
soon as he saw me, he took off. I have learned not to chase him. I went
out the side door and trapped him on the deck. He eventually bounded into
the house and up the stairs, but I was so afraid he'd chomp into the hot
pepper. I guess he wouldn't do that again, huh? Of course I won't go into
what he's done to the carpet at the bottom of the stairs and my kitchen
chairs! It hurts just to think about it!
--
Alice in NJ
www.ourcyberfamily.us
"In prosperity our friends know us; in adversity we know our friends."
John Churton Collins
"TerriLee in WA" wrote in message
...
My QIs move the iron. (typically from the board to the floor). I'll
bet they'd teach yours. (VBEG
AliceW wrote:
I generally use steam. I actually have to bring an iron to some of my
classes because they use only dry irons. I will use a dry iron when I
am
dealing with a lot of bias. But I prefer steam.
As far as brands go, I have a Black and Decker that I love. It was less
than $30. I also prefer irons that do not have an auto-off feature.
When
my step-daughter would stay with us every other weekend and we sewed
together, it was her job to move the iron when it beeped (the warning
signal
that the iron was about to shut off). But, she is in college now, and I
have not been able to get any of my QIs to learn how to move the iron!
So,
I now have another iron that I use just for quilting (like I iron
anything
else VBG), that does not shut off automatically. I put a sticky note
on
my sewing machine to remind me to turn it off since I my big board is
set up
in another room so it's easy to forget the iron is still on.
My DH also bought me a steam generating iron (Rowenta Superpress) that I
just love. It has a big tank of water and works with very little effort
on
my part.
--
Alice in NJ
www.ourcyberfamily.us
"In prosperity our friends know us; in adversity we know our friends."
John Churton Collins
"Dustbunny" noneworking@ wrote in message
s.com...
When Pressing,
What is better, Steam or No Steam..
and what is a good Iron that will hold up to long hours of being on
when
quilting..
My 17 year old Iron broke due to high temps/long hours (melted the
base
from
the metal)
I bought a 7.00 iron today, same brand but it is not very good. 40.00
to
me
is a LOT to pay for a Iron.
--
TerriLee Bishop in WA (state) USA
(opinions are wholly owned by the author and don't represent anything)
;-)
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