How to Do Stitch in the Ditch Quilting

Stitch in the ditch machine quilting

Sam Lloyd/Getty Images

Project Overview
  • Skill Level: Beginner

It's easy to learn how to do stitch in the ditch quilting, a technique that places stitches within a seam or a hair's width away from the seams that separate the seams used in quilt blocks and when the blocks are sewn together. Stitching in the ditch is most often accomplished by machine quilting with a walking foot, also called an even feed foot. The photo illustrates stitching in the ditch with a regular pressure foot so that needle placement is more visible, but a walking foot makes the task much easier because it grips the bottom and top layers of the quilt, feeding them through the machine at the same speed.

Tip

Some quilters prefer to stitch 1/8-inch or 1/4-inch away from seam lines, but that technique is called outline quilting because it creates an outline of the patches that the quilting stitches surround.

Even though stitching in the ditch is usually invisible on the top of the quilt, the stitches add depth where they compress the quilt batting and are completely visible on the back of the quilt. All types of quilting stitches secure the three layers of a quilt sandwich. Quilters often hide stitch in the ditch quilting by working with either a matching thread or a very fine transparent thread called a monofilament. Not all monofilament threads are suitable for quilts—avoid thick threads that look more like a fishing line!

Stitch in the ditch can also be used to sew quilting stitches around applique motifs, but outline quilting stitches are more common in applique quilts.

What You'll Need

Equipment / Tools

  • Sewing machine

Materials

  • 2 Types of fabric that meet at the seam

Instructions

  1. Examine the Quilt

    It's helpful to make a stitching plan by examining your quilt before you begin sewing to identify which way the bulk of seam allowances are pressed.

  2. Drop the Needle

    Begin by dropping the sewing machine's needle between the two fabrics that meet at a seam. Bring the bobbin thread to the top of the quilt.

  3. Place the Needle

    Determine which side of the seam is a bit higher—this is the side that the seam allowance was pressed toward. You want stitches to fall on the other, lower side of the line. Nudge your needle just a bit, if necessary, for the best placement.

  4. Stitch a Straight Line

    Stitch along the seam line, pulling the fabrics apart slightly on both sides of the seam as you sew. Sew to the end of the seam on the quilt top. Your seams may not all be consistent. Don't stress—just keep stitching a smooth, straight line, even though the stitches may end up on top of a seam allowance.

  5. Sew Additional Quilting Motifs

    Depending on your quilt, and how large its patches are, you may need to sew additional machine stitched lines in other areas, away from the seams. Read the instructions that came with your quilt batting to determine the minimum distance apart that stitches must be sewn to keep the batting intact when the quilt is used and when you launder the quilt.

Tip

If you find that it's difficult to spread the fabric apart as you sew, take a break. You'll feel more comfortable with longer machine quilting sessions as you practice the technique. Try wearing a pair of quilting gloves to help grip the quilt.